Thirty years ago today, Disney's The Lion King hit theaters, bringing tears, smiles and an endlessly catchy soundtrack. At the center of the craze was Jonathan Taylor Thomas, the Home Improvement star who was on the cover of every teen magazine, gaining even more fame for his voicework as the film's young Simba. In the years since, Thomas, now 42, has retreated from the spotlight. But at the time of The Lion King's release, he sat down for an interview with PEOPLE, charming reporters with talks of technique and teen stardom. Here, read the 1994 story in full.
With his wayward blond hair and denim shirttail hanging out, Jonathan Taylor Thomas looks for all the world like any other 12-year-old. Which he is — with one huge asterisk.
One clue to the difference is that his mother, Claudine, is thinking about hiring a second employee to help answer the hundreds of fan letters her son receives weekly. Says Thomas, a shy smile creeping up one side of his face: "I didn't expect, ever in a million years, to be doing television and movies." To say nothing of being No. 1 in each medium.
On the small screen, the baby- faced Thomas plays Tim Allen's middle son, Randy, on the top-rated ABC sitcom Home Improvement. On the big screen, his is the voice of the young lion Simba in Walt Disney Pictures' animated box-office smash TheLion King.
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"I had to kind of go, 'Oops! Time to be Randy' ... 'Oops! Time to be Simba,' " says Thomas, who for the last two years shuttled between the sets, both on Disney's Burbank lot. "You have to prepare yourself to become this totally different person. I mean, we're not lions, right?"
No, but sometimes lions are us. "Simba's like me," says Thomas, who didn't even need to alter his normal voice for the role. "I just put my natural energy into it. Real curious, fun-loving, always getting into mischief."
Those were exactly the traits thatLion Kingproducer Don Hahn wanted. "We had this role for a scrappy young kid to play Simba, and we looked at dozens and dozens of actors before choosing Jonathan," Hahn says. "But we saw him on Home Improvement and just thought his voice was right. It gives him a very distinctive character."
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Not that Thomas's hour-long sessions in front of a microphone at the Disney recording studio were a stroll through the safari park. "We darn near beat him up when we were recording," says Hahn. "We had to make it sound like he was being flung down chutes in the elephant graveyard and being chased by wildebeests. So we would rough him up at the microphone and try to make him out of breath."
Thomas already had got on-the-lot training for this knockabout action — as actress Patricia Richardson, who plays Thomas's mother on Home Improvement, can attest. "There's a lot of boy humor going down on our set that I try to stay away from," she says, mentioning flying footballs and other projectiles. "I mean it's a dangerous set to walk across."
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Most of the time, though, Thomas's friskiness is dampened by a killer schedule. His 9 1/2-hour days on the Improvement set include a full day's schoolwork (when the show is on hiatus, he's a straight-A student at a Los Angeles public school), and his summer vacation is being spent in Vancouver, B.C., with Chevy Chase and Farrah Fawcett on the set of Disney's Man 2 Man. That leaves precious little time for his favorite recreational activities, fishing and collecting sports cards. (And no time at all, yet, for a girlfriend.)
"You have school, friends, learning your lines and making sure your performance is up to speed," says Thomas, miming a juggler. ''I can't tell you how many shows I've done with full-blown migraine headaches."
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That Thomas can stand and deliver with such precocity is a trait his mother says was evident "even when he was 18 months old. He seemed older than his age, and he was really outgoing. Everyone kept saying, 'Wow! Why don't you get him on television.' "
Born in Bethlehem, Pa., Jonathan was 4 1/2 when he moved to Sacramento with Claudine, his father, Stephen Weiss, an industrial sales manager (who was divorced from Claudine in 1991), and brother Joel, now 16. After beginning in modeling, Thomas landed a Burger King commercial in L.A. when he was 8 and found the prospect of a career in showbiz "pretty cool. So I asked my mom and got signed up for acting lessons. I just thought the whole idea of being on TV, being recognized and having a good time was interesting."
Alas, despite his lion's share of success, Thomas is not the king of beasts in his schoolyard. "The bigger kids like to give us sixth graders a hard time, trying to put us in trash cans and stuff," he says, adding, "I'm just a normal person, I haven't changed."
Hey, even if you're 12, it's a jungle out there.