![]() ![]() “It ended up looking super cool, having this mixture of both sides of dance,” says Manheim, who is the son of actress Camryn Manheim, an Emmy winner for her work on “The Practice.” “For ‘BAMM,’ it was really difficult because the zombies are supposed to look super cool,” Donnelly says of that musical number. “Learning the dances was not the hard part, it’s just that the dances were really difficult,” Manheim says. “The fact the zombies are unique and different, I guess that’s what it’s representing: being yourself.”īoth Donnelly and Manheim are featured prominently in the song-and-dance numbers that pop up throughout the movie, and both said those were some of the most fun moments on the set of the film made in Toronto over 10 weeks of rehearsal and shooting as well as some of the hardest work. ![]() “Seabrook is very conformed so everything looks the same, everything looks perfect,” Donnelly says. Like Manheim, she sees the value of the message the movie carries. “When I was 5 I wanted to be in ‘High School Musical,'” says says of the popular franchise from which “Zombies” is a clear descendant. ![]() Being different is not something we should look down on.”ĭonnelly, who’s been acting for much of her life, says playing Addison is a dream come true. “I grew up in doing theater and that wasn’t the norm for boys,” says Manheim, for whom “Zombies” is his first professional role. (You mostly know they’re zombies by their pale skin, green hair, and fresh dance moves.) The set-up for “Zombies” will be familiar to anyone who’s seen a Disney Channel movie before: There’s fear and estrangement between the human kids, who are eerily uniform in lifestyle and personality, and the zombie kids, who are the individualists. “I looked into it more and thought, ‘Wow, this is really cool: zombies with humans, but zombies aren’t liked by humans,'” says the 17-year-old who also appears on the ABC sitcom “American Housewife.” “When I first read the script I was like, ‘Whoa, zombies?'” says Meg Donnelly, who plays Addison, a cheerleader at Seabrook High School where only the human kids go until the zombie teens are transferred in from Zombietown. That’s right, it might be a sign of the zombie apocalypse, it might the moment we reach Peak Zombie, but Disney Channel titled this new movie “Zombies.” It delivers what that promises, but does make the zombies palatable for a Disney Channel audience. 16, it will have many of the elements that viewers know and expect from the network: Teens from different high school cliques, song-and-dance numbers, its characters learning a positive message along the way. When the latest Disney Channel original movie arrives Friday, Feb. ![]()
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