Lionel Richie

Lionel Richie Musical in the Works From Disney

The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed that Lionel Richie and Walt Disney Studios have teamed up to develop a movie based on the songs from the music legend.

The working title of the movie is “All Night Long,” based off of Richie’s number one selling hit from 1983. The project has Richie producing with his manager Bruce Eskowitz as well as Dana Brunetti (Fifty Shades of GreyCaptain Phillips) and Matt DelPiano, who will produce through their banner, Cavalry Media.

Pete Chiarelli, who worked on Crazy Rich Asians and Now You See Me 2, is writing the original script. Disney picked up the project as a pitch earlier this year.

Disney envisions the project as a theatrical release. They hope to capitalize on the trend of audiences embracing musicals at the box office. In recent years, biopics “Rocketman’ and “Bohemian Rhapsody” have generated big returns and even Oscars. “Bohemian Rhapsody” sung its way to $903 million worldwide and made Rami Malek an Academy Award-winning champion. “The Greatest Showman,” released in 2017 by Fox, was also a surprise success.

This project is being developed not as a biopic, but something more along the lines of “Mamma Mia!,” which took the songs of pop band Abba and built a story around them. “Mamma Mia!” was a West End and Broadway musical before being adapted into a movie in 2008 starring Meryl Streep, Colin Firth and Pierce Brosnan.

The Beatles’ catalog was turned into Julie Taymor’s 2007 feature ‘Across The Universe,” and in 2012 “Rock of Ages,” an adaptation of a stage musical, took on 1980s power rock and power ballads.

Richie, who already had a number of hits via his funk and soul group The Commodores, was one of the biggest artists of the ’80s. Those songs range from “All Night Long,” and “Hello” and “Say You, Say Me” to “Endless Love” and “Dancing on the Ceiling.” He has sold more than 90 million records, won four Grammys, and co-wrote “We Are the World” with Michael Jackson.

Richie is enjoying a late-career resurgence thanks to being one of the judges on “American Idol,” which moved to Disney-owned ABC after years of airing on Fox.