Part of Your World

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"Part of Your World"
Song by Jodi Benson
from the album The Little Mermaid: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
ReleasedOctober 13, 1989
RecordedAugust 16, 1989
Length3:16
LabelWalt Disney
Composer(s)Alan Menken
Lyricist(s)Howard Ashman
Producer(s)
  • Ashman
  • Menken

"Part of Your World" is a song written by lyricist

Eric
, a human prince with whom she has fallen in love, from drowning.

Directly influenced by Broadway and musical theatre, Ashman strongly believed that The Little Mermaid would benefit from an "I Want" song – a musical number during which the main character sings about what they hope to accomplish by the end of their story. Directors Ron Clements and John Musker originally asked Ashman to write a song for Ariel in which she expresses her romantic feelings for Prince Eric, but the lyricist felt that a song that details the character's fascination with the human world would better serve the film's plot. Ashman recruited Benson, with whom he had previously collaborated on the stage musical Smile (1986), to record "Part of Your World", and worked closely with her to ensure that she delivered a desirable performance. Disney executive Jeffrey Katzenberg initially ordered that "Part of Your World" be removed from the final film due to concerns that the ballad would bore young children. However, Ashman, Clements, Musker and animator Glen Keane ultimately convinced Katzenberg that "Part of Your World" is essential to the film's narrative, and the song was spared after audiences appeared to enjoy it during a subsequent test screening.

"Part of Your World" has garnered critical acclaim; both

signature song, which she continues to perform live, "Part of Your World" has been covered extensively by several artists of various genres, including Faith Hill, Jessica Simpson, Skye Sweetnam, Miley Cyrus, Bruno Mars, Carly Rae Jepsen, Jessie J, Olivia Newton-John, and Sara Bareilles. Actress Sierra Boggess debuted the song in the stage musical adaptation of the film, for which she originated the role of Ariel. Halle Bailey performed the song as Ariel in the 2023 live-action film adaptation of the film.[1]

Writing and recording

Written in 1986,

musical motif he composed for the beginning of the ballad as his favorite part of the song.[8] Ashman debuted "Part of Your World" for Clements and Musker at his apartment in Greenwich Village, Manhattan.[3] Only the directors' second time meeting Ashman and first time meeting Menken, Menken provided the piano accompaniment while Ashman sang Ariel's melody himself, instead of their traditional method of Menken singing lead vocals.[2] Moved by Ashman's demonstration, Musker recalled that the lyricist gazed up towards the ceiling as though it were the human world itself as he "became Ariel before our eyes" and "poured out his heart in song", helping them visualize "this far-off place of wonder that so entranced this little mermaid.”[3]

Clements and Musker enjoyed the song but would sometimes disagree with Ashman over its lyrics, which Ashman had insisted be very specific.

King Triton.[2] Ashman's willingness to rewrite both versions of the song's lyrics pleasantly surprised the directors.[2]

Ashman first met actress and singer

reel-to-reel tape with casting director Albert Tavares,[16] which she mailed to Disney.[19] All audition tapes were left unidentified so that the candidates would remain anonymous to Musker and Clements, delighting Ashman when the directors ultimately selected Benson's tape to be the voice of Ariel,[19] about which she was informed one year after submitting the tape.[16] Her first voice acting role, for which she had to be carefully trained on properly projecting into the studio microphone,[20] Benson found the process of recording "Part of Your World" somewhat difficult after Ashman instructed her to approach it as though she was reciting a monologue as opposed to singing a song.[19] Despite being frustrated because she longed "to sing the crap out of it,"[21] she found Ashman telling her exactly how he wanted her to perform his lyrics beneficial to her entire performance.[22] Ashman remained in the recording booth with Benson during the entire recording process, advising her on performing the song with realism and intensity as opposed to belting it and whispering lines to her as she sang them,[22] as Benson sometimes struggled with over-singing.[16] Recorded on August 16, 1989,[23] it was rare for a filmmaker to direct a performer from within the booth, requiring Ashman to move carefully to prevent his gestures from being recorded by the microphone.[24] According to Benson, some of Ashman's breathing can still be heard on the final track.[25] Initially struggling to capture Ariel's "tomboyish-ness and yearning",[23] Benson requested that the studio's lights be dimmed to simulate the feeling of being underwater.[26] Menken and Ashman deliberately selected segments from Benson's recording session that "are not perfectly sung" to include in the final version, ranging from unsustained, incorrect notes lacking in vibrato to spoken words, because the songwriters wanted her performance to sound as "real" as possible.[19]

Context

Background and animation

The scene in which the camera is animated to appear as though it is rotating around Ariel as she sings proved challenging for the animators.

Although Clements and Musker had originally intended to hire animator Glen Keane to animate Ursula due to his history of animating Disney villains,[27] Keane specifically requested that he be allowed to animate Ariel after hearing Benson sing "Part of Your World" for the first time.[7] Captivated by her performance,[27] he decided to make the scene his most important assignment,[28] volunteering to animate the entire "Part of Your World" musical sequence himself and becoming its lead animator.[29][self-published source][30] Animating one particular scene to appear as though the camera is rotating around Ariel while she sings "Look at this trove, treasures untold. How many wonders can one cavern hold?" was particularly challenging for the animators to perfect without the aid of computer animation, taking them considerably longer to complete.[28] Keane described the song as the moment "the audience starts thinking of Ariel as this real, living thing. A girl who's dreaming of something more. And since so many of us feel just like that ... that's when the audience falls in love with this character."[28]

Ashman was aware that writing a ballad capable of captivating young audiences during the "modern era" of animation would be challenging.[31] In an effort to keep children interested, Ashman suggested that Ariel should own a grotto in which she hides human artifacts she has collected from various shipwrecks and refer to them throughout the scene.[31] Disney executive Jeffrey Katzenberg ordered that "Part of Your World" be removed from the film after observing that some children appeared to grow restless during the sparsely animated musical sequence while attending an early test screening of The Little Mermaid.[32] One child in particular spilled his popcorn during the scene, which measured three minutes and forty-three seconds at the time,[16] prompting Katzenberg to worry that children would find the song uninteresting.[33] Bored by "Part of Your World" himself, Katzenberg felt that the ballad only slowed down the film.[34][6]

Nearly everyone involved in the project protested and defended "Part of Your World";

The Wizard of Oz (1939) until they reconsidered.[35][36] Keane argued that "Part of Your World" is essential to the film's narrative[10] and eventually convinced Katzenberg to let the sequence remain at least until the film's next test screening, by which time it would be fully animated.[6] Children responded better towards the song during the second screening,[34] some of whom enjoyed it to the point of which they mimed some of its lyrics.[5] The song even moved some older audience members to tears,[37] who ultimately applauded.[38][39] "Part of Your World" was ultimately spared;[30] Katzenberg eventually admitted that he now feels embarrassed that he had ever wanted to dismiss "Part of Your World",[40] expressing gratitude towards the fact that no one agreed with him at the time because he is now unable to imagine The Little Mermaid without the song.[37]

Sequence and use in The Little Mermaid

Set prior to most of the film's action, "Part of Your World" is the second proper song in The Little Mermaid,[41] and takes place in Ariel's grotto before she meets Eric.[42][43] A character song used to progress the plot,[44][45] "Part of Your World" resembles a monologue[19] in which Ariel expresses her desire to become part of the human world while reveling in her expansive collection of discarded human items and artifacts.[2][5][46] Singing about her interest in exploring the human world and learning as much as she can about it,[42] Ariel performs the ballad while gazing up towards the surface longingly, wishing that she could be human herself and live among other humans,[5] and refusing to believe that they are as horrible as her father describes them.[47] "Part of Your World" reveals that Ariel feels repressed[41] and unhappy in her current environment despite her belongings and royal lineage, "want[ing] to be a part of something else."[48][49] A wind-up toy resembling a woman dancing is used to demonstrate that Ariel would much rather be like her.[50] The character also sings the line "What’s a fire and why does it ... What’s the word? Burn!” to Georges de La Tour's painting Magdalene with the Smoking Flame to indicate a similar sentiment.[50][51]

Georges de La Tour's painting Magdalene with the Smoking Flame (1640) is shown during a portion of the song

Offering character development, the song explores and voices the inner goings-on of Ariel's mind.[52] Ariel's craving for adventure makes it difficult for the character to enjoy her current surroundings while knowing there is much left for her to explore, causing her to grow increasingly despondent;[53] "change", a non-physical concept that can not be purchased or stolen, is the only thing that could make her truly happy.[49] In the meantime, Ariel uses material belongings to fill the void of what is missing from her life,[54] attempting to live among humans vicariously via what she has salvaged from sunken ships.[13] Voicing her frustration over being confined to the ocean,[55] Ariel is not shy about what she wants, choosing to belt out her desires instead.[56] The Animated Movie Guide author Jerry Beck wrote that the song "capture's Ariel's yearning so intensely that when she extends her hand toward the surface we long to reach out with her",[57] ending with Ariel gesturing while sighing longingly and descending back down to the ocean floor.[6]

"Part of Your World" serves as The Little Mermaid's theme song.[58] The entire film is defined around "Part of Your World",[4] which provides the film with momentum within its first 15 minutes.[56] As "the heart and centre of the score," several instrumental versions of "Part of Your World" are heard throughout the film in the form of a leitmotif, overtures incorporated into its orchestral score.[6][59] Although the theme belongs to Ariel, it remains "the film's most consistent thematic idea"[39] and is thus manipulated throughout The Little Mermaid to various affects for other characters as well that range from melancholic to sinister.[6] The film's main title is a choral arrangement of the ballad, performed without any lyrics.[60] After Ariel rescues Eric and returns him to safety on a nearby beach,[61] she sings a shorter reprise of "Part of Your World" to him as he regains consciousness.[62] A distorted version of "Part of Your World" plays while Triton destroys Ariel's items, Eric constantly plays the melody on his flute to show that he continues to be haunted by the memory of the mysterious girl who saved his life, and a brass arrangement of the song is heard while Ursula magically transforms into a human named "Vanessa" in order to trick Eric into marrying her.[6] Lastly, a final choral version, entitled "Happy Ending", is performed after Ariel and Eric's wedding.[39]

Interpretations

Crystal Bell of

third person, Ariel's number "is brimming with agency" to demonstrate the character's thirst for knowledge.[7] Zuckerman credits Ashman's lyrics with providing Ariel with a personality, something she believes Snow White, Cinderella and Aurora from Sleeping Beauty (1959) lacked,[7] while giving Ariel a motive that is not romance-oriented.[68] Additionally, "Part of Your World" is delivered directly to the camera as opposed to an audience of woodland animals; Ariel appears as though she is speaking directly to young girls who are watching the scene.[44]

The context of "Part of Your World" and the fact that it occurs before Ariel meets and falls in love with Eric is often used to defend Ariel against critics who accuse her of sacrificing her talents for a man.

The Odyssey Online wrote that the song proves that Ariel "doesn’t give up her voice only for a guy. She already wanted to be 'part of that world.' The prince was a bonus."[70] Writing for Yahoo! Movies, Gwynne Watkins penned "There’s little doubt that Ariel’s crush on Prince Eric strengthens her resolve to be part of the human world. But crucially, her love of 'the world above' is established long before she sets eyes on the prince" during "Part of Your World".[44] Laura Stampler, writing for Time, agreed that the character "[fell] in love with the human world before she even knew who Eric was" because "she has always dreamed of being a 'part of your world'".[71] Ariel sings "Bright young women, sick of swimmin’, ready to stand" to indicate that she fantasizes about "living in a feminist-friendly society where she can speak her mind freely and grow intellectually",[50] demonstrating envy towards women who are capable of doing this on land.[72] However, Time's Laura Stampler joked that Ariel will find the human world disappointing "considering my dad definitely still reprimanded me (even though I had legs)."[71] In the reprise, the lyrics "part of that world" are replaced with "part of your world" to distinguish that the character is now referring to her feelings for Eric, whom Ariel had not yet met when she sang the original song.[7]

Composition

Music

Written in the key of F major at a "moderately bright" tempo of 135,[73] "Part of Your World" is a yearning,[26] downtempo Broadway and musical theatre-influenced power ballad,[74][75] that gradually crescendos into a "showstopping" conclusion, bolstered by Benson's "powerhouse performance".[5] Variety's Andrew Barker summarized "Part of Your World" as a "slow-building, Broadway-style showstopper" that "moves effortlessly from busy, literate verses to a longing pre-chorus and a belted-to-the-rafters refrain",[76] incorporating "dramatic" violins into its orchestration.[77] Described as a "big ballad", the song pairs Ashman's lyrics about pining for life on land with Menken’s "soaring melody",[60] beginning with a musical motif that resembles the sound of flowing water,[8] described by D23 as "tinkling piano keystrokes".[78] Both the song's music and vocals swell with "passion and longing".[6]

Vocally, Benson performs "Part of Your World" using a whispered, "intense" singing voice as opposed to

normal speech.[79] In addition to singing using "a light, speech-driven ‘mix’",[79] the singer also incorporates "quirky little comments and girly gestures".[59] According to Screen Rant's Turner Minton, Benson's vocals "[add] a rawness to the song, giving a depth of eagerness to Ariel’s voice that makes for a genuine performance",[5] by delivering a vocal track that is a combination of passion, strength, sincerity, angst, emotion and innocence.[6][55][80] Described as "wistful pleas",[81] Bustle's Emma Lord observed that Benson sings the song using a combination of "tomboyish-ness and yearning".[23] Meanwhile, the final line of the song's reprise is sung with "a bit more oomph" than the original,[68] declaring "I don't know when, I don't know how/But I know something's starting right now".[82] Musical similarities have been drawn between "Part of Your World" and "Somewhere That's Green" from Ashman and Menken's musical Little Shop of Horrors, specifically the manner in which the lines "part of your world" and "somewhere that’s green" are sung.[6] The song has also been compared to Judy Garland's song "Over the Rainbow" due to their shared themes about "wish[ing] for something new and different."[83] Kyle Turner, a writer for Vice, observed that both "Part of Your World" and "Over the Rainbow" are gay anthems "that plead for a place where 'the dreams that you dream of [...] really do come true.'[84] Meanwhile, Variety observed similarities between the ballad and some selections from the stage musical Les Misérables (1980).[85]

The Broadway version features the song performed by Sierra Boggess as Ariel. This version was performed in the key of G Major, a full step up from the original. Boggess' vocals span D4 to D5.[86]

The 2023 live-action film features the song performed by Halle Bailey as Ariel. This version saw the key raised by a half step to F# Major.[87] Unlike the original, Bailey makes use of belting, vocal riffs, and opt-ups. Bailey's vocals span C♯4 to D5.

Lyrical analysis

Despite its title, the word "your" is not heard in the song until its reprise.[88] The track's introduction is preceded by a spoken monologue.[89] According to Lindsey Romain of Marie Claire, Ariel begins the ballad by "acknowledging her privilege as a princess ('Wouldn't you think I'm the girl who has everything?')" before admitting to wanting more.[90] Similarly, KQED contributor Emmanuel Hapsis wrote that the character "laments that, despite a life of privilege and spoils, there's still a deep loneliness inside her".[91] Beginning "Look at this stuff, isn't it neat? Wouldn't you think my collection's complete? Wouldn't you think I'm the girl/The girl who has everything?",[73][92] "Part of Your World" is "a plea for a life of discovery" and "inquisitiveness" as opposed to love,[93] using "nonsensical expressions" such as "gadgets", "gizmos", "whosits" and "whatsits" in lieu of various human artifacts.[6]

Lyrically, the ballad employs several "twist[s] and turns",[41] using very specific lyrics to describe both the performer's fascination with the human world and desire to walk among them,[2] including "walking around on those what-do-you-call-them?... feet"[67] and "Up where they walk, up where they run/Up where they stay all day in the sun/Wanderin' free, wish I could be/Part of that world."[36] Comprising "impeccable rhymes" while incorporating the term "thingamabobs"[77] into the line "You want thing-a-ma-bobs? I've got twenty but who cares? No big deal, I want more",[94] "Part of Your World"'s "empowering" lyrics[69] convey several messages, such as facing one's fears, believing in oneself,[53] and wishing for new life experiences.[41] The ballad concludes with a final chorus belted "When's it my turn? Wouldn't I love, love to explore that world up above? Out of the sea/Wish I could be/Part of that world".[56][59]

material items don't lead to fulfillment", building new relationships and friendships, exploring new environments, and the concept of girl power.[53] BuzzFeed's Aylin Zafar described "Part of Your World" as "an anthem for anyone who has ever felt they were on the outside, looking into a place ... that they yearned to be a part of."[74] The Daily Dot's Aja Romano believes that the ballad mirrors "every young girl’s wish to get away from her over-protective parents and explore the world",[95] a sentiment shared by Rebecca Rose of Cosmopolitan who dubbed it "every young girl's lament about wanting to be part of something she idolizes."[96] Donna Dickens of HitFix concurred that the song's lyrics are about "yearning to break free from suffocating parental expectations".[97] Writing for Billboard, Taylor Weatherby identified "Part of Your World" as a song about "fantasizing over living a life you can’t," to which he believes many people are able to relate.[77] Derrick Gill of KXKX believes that the song is also based around the traditional saying "Is the grass greener on the other side?"[98]

Featuring "multi-layered" lyrics, "Part of Your World" has been the subject of various interpretations; common inferences range from an adventurous teenager seeking independence from

Sean P. Griffin wrote that the lyricist uses the song to demonstrate "a gay dilemma of trying to choose between different worlds" by discussing "fantasy, escape and forbidden romance."[13]

International versions

Norwegian singer Sissel Kyrkjebø sang "Part of Your World" in three languages: Danish, Norwegian and Swedish

When The Little Mermaid was released in 1989, a dubbing process was started which, in the space of two years, brought the movie to number 21 dubbings by 1991. In 1998, all existing dubbings underwent a big review process which caused 8 of them to be partially or fully redubbed and a second wave of 8 new versions to be released, for a total of 29 dubbings worldwide. In the following years, 11 more versions were added, raising the number of official versions to 40.[104]

Norwegian singer Sissel Kyrkjebø was chosen to dub Ariel in three Nordic languages: she voiced all Ariel's parts in Norwegian and Swedish, while she only sang for the Danish version and redubbed the songs in 1998.[105][106][107][108] The Austrian German version of the movie is not a full dubbing: only some characters were dubbed, while the rest of the dubbing, including the adaptation of the lyrics, was taken from the German version released in 1998.[109]

Simona Patitucci [it], who dubbed Ariel in Italian as part of the versions released between 1989 and 1991, was awarded by Disney best European Ariel, while Svetlana Svetikova [ru], who voiced Ariel in Russian only in 2006, was awarded best Ariel worldwide.[104]

Danielle Marsh of NewJeans dubbed Ariel in Korean as part of Disney's 2023 localization.[110]

Reception

"Part of Your World" has garnered widespread acclaim from both film and music critics, who continue to praise the song constantly.

The Morton Report, Chaz Lipp agreed that Benson's performance is "positively charming".[112]

Upon release of The Little Mermaid in 1989, Disney was unprepared for the success that would be achieved by both the film's soundtrack and its songs, particularly that of "Part of Your World", which became an instant hit.[113] The studio had not thought to prepare a single version of the song at the time because they did not expect that it would soon be demanded by local radio stations, at which it was heavily rotated.[113] The success of "Part of Your World" has been overshadowed by "Under the Sea" and "Kiss the Girl", two other popular songs from the film.[112] While both "Under the Sea" and "Kiss the Girl" were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 62nd Academy Awards, which "Under the Sea" ultimately won, "Part of Your World" did not receive a nomination, which some critics have viewed as a snub.[114] Benson believes that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences did not recognize "Part of Your World" because "a story song at the time was probably not recognised really as much".[114] Aja Romano of The Daily Dot argued that Ashman and Menken should have won for "Part of Your World" over "Under the Sea".[95] Similarly, GoldDerby's Andrew Carden wrote that "Part of Your World" was "more deserving" of "Kiss the Girl"'s nomination.[115] However, when the film was released to VHS in 1998, Disney included a music video for "Part of Your World" starring Benson that appears towards the end of its closing credits.[116] When The Little Mermaid was re-released to theaters in 1997, The Boston Phoenix's Jeffrey Gantz wrote that "Part of Your World" remains "as poignant as ever".[117] Tracy Dye of Bustle identified "Part of Your World" as her "favorite Disney song of all time."[53] Entertainment Weekly's Esther Zuckerman described "Part of Your World" as "a perfect 'I Want' song," comparing it positively to “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly” from the stage musical My Fair Lady (1956).[7]

In 2013, Disney released a digitally

Flounder is shown sighing while Ariel is singing one line,[118] whose lips are later shown to be out of sync with the words she is singing in the following scene for a few seconds.[112] The edit upset some purist fans who demanded that Disney recall the DVDs.[112] While acknowledging that a "minor oversight" did occur during the editing process that resulted in the switching of two scenes during "Part of Your World", Disney originally assured customers that "There is no impact on the quality or overall experience of the film".[121] However, the studio eventually allowed owners of the defective discs to contact them to receive a free replacement with the error corrected.[118][121]

Live performances and stage versions

Benson continues to perform "Part of Your World" live in concert around the world.

D23 Expo, the actress sang "Part of Your World" live during the Disney Legends ceremony, where she also accepted a Disney Legends Award for her continued contributions to the Walt Disney Company.[125]

"Part of Your World" was featured in the stage musical adaptation of

original Broadway cast album.[131] Furthermore, the actress included a live rendition of the song on her debut studio album Awakening: Live at 54 Below (2013),[132] which was first performed and recorded live at the restaurant 54 Below in Manhattan, New York.[133] Reviewing Boggess' 2017 concert at the State Theatre in Sydney, Australia, Ben Neutze of the Daily Review described Boggess' performance of "Part of Your World" as "physically cartoon-esque, but deeply felt".[134] In the Broadway musical, Boggess was eventually replaced by actress Chelsea Morgan Stock, who performed "Part of Your World" for the remainder of the show's run, describing the song as her "favorite moment".[135] Stock reprised her role as Ariel and performed "Part of Your World" in Dallas Summer Musicals' stage adaptation of The Little Mermaid at the Music Hall at Fair Park in 2014.[136] As part of the production's remagining, Stock sang "Part of Your World" while attached to a harness and hoisted several feet above the stage in mid-air to simulate the act of swimming.[137]

In June 2016, singer-songwriter

Tony Awards in New York.[140] "Part of Your World" was the first cover actor and singer Darren Criss, who appeared in the show opposite Bareilles and Benson as Prince Eric, uploaded to YouTube in 2007 prior to landing his breakout role on the musical television series Glee.[139]

Cover versions and use in media

"Part of Your World" continues to be covered extensively by various recording artists and musicians,

combos while playing "Part of Your World" before advancing to the next level.[149] Miley Cyrus recorded a pop rock version of the song for the compilation album Disneymania 5 (2007),[150] which MTV retrospectively ranked the seventh best track on the album in 2015, criticizing its fast tempo but crowning Cyrus "the Princess Ariel of the OG Disney Channel squad."[151] In 2007, actor Darren Criss uploaded a video of himself performing "Part of Your World" to YouTube.[139] Actress Anna Maria Perez de Tagle recorded a "high energized dance remix" of the song for the compilation album Disneymania 7 (2010),[152] interpreting how Ariel "would sound today".[152] Jack Johnson of E! described Perez de Tagle's cover as "fit for a princess".[153] In 2012, Bruno Mars performed "Part of Your World" at BBC's Live Lounge.[154] Mars introduced the ballad as "the best song ever written", claiming that he has always struggled to sing it without crying.[155] Lyrically, Mars changed Ariel's amount of thingamabobs owned from 20 to 30.[154] Video footage of Mars' performance became very popular on the Internet,[156] which Sally Mercedes of Latina opined "made us love him even more".[157] German opera singer Diana Damrau covered "Part of Your World" in her native language ("Ein Mensch zu sein") for her album Forever (2013).[158] Writing for Opera News, Judith Malafronte dismissed Damrau's rendition as one of the album's "near-misses", accusing her of sounding too "syrupy" and "brassy" on the track.[159] However, Gramophone's Adrian Edwards enjoyed Jason Carr's arrangement.[160]

Young female singer with bangs singing into a microphone wearing a red dress.
Canadian singer-songwriter Carly Rae Jepsen covered "Part of Your World" for The Little Mermaid's Diamond Edition re-release.

In 2013,

The Morton Report's Chaz Lipp dismissed the cover as "bland".[112] Japanese Frozen voice actress Sayaka Kanda
also sang the song in English.

British singer-songwriter

Brooks Atkinson Theatre to entertain audiences while waiting for a production of her Broadway musical Waitress (2015), to recover from a technical malfunction involving a set piece.[174] The performance was humorous and interactive,[175] with Bareilles encouraging the initially confused audience members to sing along with her.[176] Bareilles would eventually perform the same song in a concert adaptation of The Little Mermaid at the Hollywood Bowl, in which played Ariel.[177] To commemorate the film's 25th anniversary in 2014, Billboard published a list of the website's "Favorite 'Part Of Your World' Covers".[178]

In 2021, Apple used "Part of Your World" in an advertisement for their iPad Pro tablet.[179]

Legacy

Considered a "classic" Disney song,

Disney canon,[185] and remains one of the studio's most popular songs to-date.[47]

Den of Geek placed both "Part of Your World" and its reprise at number one on the website's ranking of "The Top 25 Best Disney Songs from the Renaissance Era", with author David Crow referring to it as the song that "defined the Disney formula to come", identifying it as "the heart and soul of The Little Mermaid, and defined the Disney formula to come."[4] Crow concluded that the reprise "brings out better than any 'I Want' song that came afterward the sense of pained and potent adolescent longing, with a bittersweetness worthy of Eliza Doolittle."[4] Mic also ranked the song first, with author Jordan Appugliesi calling it "everything Disney fans want and need."[92] M Magazine concurred, highlighting "You want thing-a-ma-bobs? I've got twenty but who cares? No big deal, I want more" as the magazine's favorite lyric.[94] Variety agreed that "Part of Your World" is the second "Best Disney Song of All Time", crowning it Ashman and Menken's "most flawlessly constructed [Disney] composition".[76] Billboard considers "Part of Your World" to be the Disney Renaissance's eighth best song, with contributor Taylor Weatherby crediting it with inspiring an entire generation to use the term "thingamabob".[77] Ranking the ballad the eighth greatest Disney song, IGN's Lucy O'brien wrote that "Part of Your World" "has since become a shower-staple for girls the world over, with particular emphasis given to 'bet they don’t…REPRIMAND their daughters,' universally."[181] Awarding the song the same placement, HitFix's Donna Dickens wrote that the ballad "spoke to everyone from six to ninety-six" with Ariel becoming "the stand-in for every child who ever felt like an outsider, every teen navigating the waters of becoming an adult, every parent struggling to remember the urgency of adolescence" and "every human who ever burned to do more than exist in a mundane town".[97] ET Canada placed the song at number 11 on their ranking of "The Top 12 Disney Songs Of All Time", joking, "Singing to a fork has never been so memorable".[186]

"Part of Your World" is also considered one of Disney's best "I Want" songs, credited with initiating a trend of Disney heroines singing about wanting more out of their lives.

Filmtracks.com credits the song with "Setting the table for songs like 'Belle' [from Beauty and the Beast (1991)] and several others in the years to come ... becom[ing] a concept that Menken attempted to infuse in each subsequent effort."[39] Decider.com's Tyler Coates believes that the song directly influenced "Let it Go", writing, "While the composition of 'Let It Go' and 'Part of Your World' are very different ... the former would not exist if it were not for the latter."[41]

"Part of Your World" is considered to be a feminist anthem by some.[101] The song is also regarded as a gay anthem,[48][64][84][103][16] with The Guardian's Guy Lodge dubbing it "something of an all-purpose anthem for LGBT not-belongers."[187] Romain "an anthem for anyone whose personal identification might not align with their physical presentation."[90] Part of Your World" is also often parodied in subsequent media.[52] An instrumental version of the song is heard in the film Enchanted (2007) during the scene in which Giselle (Amy Adams) examines the aquarium in Robert's (Patrick Dempsey) office.[188] Benson also appears in the film as Robert's secretary;[188] "Part of Your World" is used to underscore some of Benson's scenes.[189] Video footage showing Ashman coaching Benson during one of the earliest recording sessions for "Part of Your World" continues to garner attention on the internet.[23][169][190]

Charts

Weekly charts

Weekly chart performance for "Part of Your World" by Halle Bailey
Chart (2023) Peak position
US Bubbling Under Hot 100 (Billboard)[191] 19
New Zealand Hot Singles (Recorded Music NZ)[192] 12
UK Singles (OCC)[193]
58

Certifications

Certifications for "Part of Your World" by Jodi Benson
Region Certification Certified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI)[194] Gold 400,000
United States (RIAA)[195] 3× Platinum 3,000,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

References

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External links