Who Wrote The Phrase Long Live The In The Original Script?

2025-08-26 02:41:47 197

5 Answers

Xenia
Xenia
2025-08-27 05:29:49
There's a little detective itch in me when you drop a fragment like 'long live the' — it feels like the start of a big, dramatic proclamation, and the truth is, the full credit depends on the full phrase and the work it came from.

If you meant 'long live the king' in the 1994 film 'The Lion King', that line appears in the shooting script credited to Irene Mecchi, Jonathan Roberts, and Linda Woolverton, and it’s scarred into my memory because Jeremy Irons’ delivery is so cold. If the phrase is from a book or stage play, the author of that work would be the original source — for instance, similar proclamations show up in medieval chronicles and historical dramas long before modern scripts.

If you can drop the rest of the phrase or the title it came from, I’ll happily track down the exact page or credit. I love digging into scripts for those little origin stories.
Yazmin
Yazmin
2025-08-28 12:18:34
I like tracing lines back to their source, and this fragment is a common royal-style exclamation, so attribution depends entirely on the work. Historically, proclamations like 'long live the king/queen' are idiomatic and predate single authorship — they show up in proclamations, chronicles, and many plays. In modern media, you credit the specific scriptwriter(s): for instance, 'The Lion King' screenplay lists Irene Mecchi, Jonathan Roberts, and Linda Woolverton and contains that memorable 'Long live the king' beat.

If your fragment belongs to a TV episode, novel, or stage show, check the writer credits for that episode or the author of the source material. If you want, tell me the scene or the character who says it and I’ll chase the primary source and even try to find a script PDF or citation for you.
Emily
Emily
2025-08-28 15:21:47
Okay, quick and direct: a lot of famous uses of 'long live the...' are context-specific. If you mean the iconic 'Long live the king' moment in 'The Lion King' film, the screenplay is credited to Irene Mecchi, Jonathan Roberts, and Linda Woolverton, though Jeremy Irons’ voice performance made it famous. If it’s from a novel or a different script, the original writer of that work is who you’d credit. Drop the full line or where you heard it and I’ll dig deeper for the exact original.
Gracie
Gracie
2025-09-01 02:50:39
Alright, putting on my casual sleuth hat: that fragment is too short by itself, so it could belong to a few famous lines. The most likely quick hits are 'Long live the king' in 'The Lion King' movie (screenplay credits go to Irene Mecchi, Jonathan Roberts, and Linda Woolverton), or any number of historic or fictional proclamations like those in medieval chronicles or classic plays.

If you were thinking of 'Long live the King' in a TV or novel context, then the original author would be the writer of that script or text — for example, if it came from 'A Song of Ice and Fire' or the 'Game of Thrones' TV scripts, the novels are by George R.R. Martin and the TV episodes were written/adapted by David Benioff and D. B. Weiss among others. Without the full phrase or a title, though, I can only point at possibilities. Tell me where you saw it (movie, show, book, comic) and I’ll narrow it down.
Ben
Ben
2025-09-01 16:46:06
Short version: it depends. That sort of phrase is so widespread that there’s no single creator unless you give the title. If you meant the famous line in 'The Lion King' movie, the screenplay is credited to Irene Mecchi, Jonathan Roberts, and Linda Woolverton, and the line is delivered by Scar (Jeremy Irons). If it’s from a book, play, or another show, the original writer of that specific work is who coined it in that context. If you tell me where you saw it, I’ll look up the exact credit and even the line in the script.
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