Not sure if you have answered this already

but i was wondering what settings you used for your pictures on the lion king and finding nemo show? those are amazing and the lighting looks awesome. any tips would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you for the very kind words!
I'd be happy to share not only the settings but also some things I've learned through trial and error of taking pictures of staged shows in general since I'm hoping to improve upon those pictures I took in January with some different settings. Hope you don't find this too wordy and lengthy.

Also, if anyone else has any tips or feedback for me, I would love to hear them since I'm still learning!
For the FotLK and Nemo pictures, I used an 85mm prime lens with f stop of 1.8. Depending on how far back or how up front you sit, the 85mm focal length may or may not be ideal. It was also at the time the only "fast" lens I had so I went with it. The camera body was a Canon T2i (I have upgraded to a 7D since then and am excited to try out my new camera for October!)
I've only been using the manual mode for just the past 4 months so back when I took these pictures I used Shutter Priority Mode (Tv) for the shows. I chose that mode because I wanted to control the shutter speed during the shows and adapt to the varying speeds of the performances. I started with shutter speed of 1/125 for some of the slower movements and used 1/250 for some of the faster sequences. I should have gone up more on the shutter speed because the monkey acrobatic sequences came out mostly blurry along with some of fast dance sequences.
On the Tv mode, I set the ISO at Auto at first but half way through the show I started picking a specific ISO somewhere between 800 and 1600. I did that because I started noticing that the camera's automated "brain" was not opening up the aperture all the way to 1.8 (it was stopping around 2.8) and instead cranking up the ISO to 3200 which on a T2i creates a tremendous amount of noise.
For focusing I set it at AI Servo (continuous focusing) so that I could track a dancer as he/she moved around the stage.
In my opinion, one of the most important settings for shooting a staged performance is the metering because of the sharp contrasts in the amount of light available on different parts of the stage thanks to the spotlights and stage lights. I learned this the hard way during my solo trip to DLR in October last year. I had set the metering at the default "Evaluative Metering" and took pictures of the Aladdin show at DCA. Since evaluative metering averages out the light available in the entire frame to calculate the exposure settings, the camera created settings that severely overexposed the actors and actresses faces (where it's the brightest anywhere on stage thanks to the spotlights) that was not salvageable in post processing. So after that, I began using spot metering for stage performances and point the metering square in my viewfinder right on the actor's face.
I also had my camera set on continuous shutter mode and took multiple shots in a row during fast sequences.
Finally, if you have the memory card space to spare I highly recommend shooting on RAW format. I always struggle with the white balance during shows that utilizes a lot of color filtered lighting while I'm shooting. Most of the time I keep the white balance on Auto setting and adjust the balance post-processing. You have a lot more flexibility to adjust white balance if you shot it on RAW rather than JPG.
Hope that helps and wasn't too much

For my October trip, I'm planning on using my 7D with a 70-200mm f2.8 and use the Manual Setting. Going to try my best to keep the ISO below 1600 but that might be difficult for some of the fast sequences since my aperture is not as wide as before.