It’s Wheel-y Fun!

According to D23:

Mickey’s Fun Wheel will be open to Guests today after a makeover which added five fab characters on the sides of each gondola and a “pie-eyed” Mickey Mouse overlooking Paradise Bay in Disney’s California Adventure Park.

Special WDWNT Podcast Episode 92 Now Available for Download

Join me, Tom Corless, and a cast including Justin Heyman, Anthony Yacullo, Scott Smith, and Luke Manning for a variety show that celebrates the Walt Disney World Resort and its many fans. So what are you waiting for? Let’s celebrate the 20th anniversary of Disney’s Hollywood Studios and another week of Walt Disney World information and fun on the WDW News Today Podcast!!!

To kick off our Disney’s Hollywood Studios 20th anniversary special, we’ll have another edition of “What were they thinking?”, where we try to examine why certain decisions are or were made by Walt Disney World management. This time around, we’ll try and figure out why Disney would build real, working production facilities in central Florida and why the concept came to an end just a few years later.

Following that and in keeping with a long-running WDWNT tradition, we will present an audio tribute to the Studios that is sure to evoke some fond memories and some listener karoake.

Finally, to conclude our special program, we will wrap-up our long running countdown of the 20 Biggest Moments in Disney’s Hollywood Studios History as voted by you with a look at what took the #2 and 1 spots on the list and just how important these two pivotal events are in our opinions.

To subscribe to the WDW News Today podcast on iTunes, go to this link. If you do not have iTunes, visit our Podcast Download Directory to download or listen to all of our shows.

This episode is also available in an enhanced version. An enhanced podcast is a podcast with added features that standard podcasts don’t have. Enhanced podcasts include many features like Chapter listings, this lets you skip through chapters or see what is in store for this weeks show. Enhanced podcasts also have images to let you differ the chapters by. Enhanced podcasts have one negative feature, you can not play them on most mp3 players. The file format for this is a .m4a which can play on Apple’s iPod and Microsoft’s Zune. You will also need iTunes or Windows Media Player to be able to skip through chapters. If you need or would like the standard edition, download the normal edition listed below this file both on Itunes and in our podcast directory.

Disney’s Hollywood Studios 20th Anniversary TwitPic Report

Yesterday, May 1st, was of course the 20th anniversary of the Disney-MGM Studios, now known as Disney’s Hollywood Studios. Our own Tom Corless, as well as other members of the staff were (and still are) at Walt Disney World for the festivities. As soon as they return from the Resort they’ll be providing great high quality photos with us, but for the time being, thanks to our very own WDWNT Twitter, we have a few photos of the official Disney events, festivities, and merchandise for Disney’s Hollywood Studio’s 20th anniversary:

These banners were hung up at the turnstiles

The 20th anniversary times guide, featurings times and the location for the special “A Look Back at the Creation of Our Park” presentation with Tom Fitzgerald, Eric Jacobson, and Bob Weiss from Walt Disney Imagineering

A special rope drop was held for the anniversary with vice president of the park, Rilous Carter, welcoming guests to the park on this special ocassion

The 20 Years of Magic T-shirt

Inside the Premiere Theatre for the “A Look Back at the Creation of Our Park” presentation

The 20th anniversary cupcakes for sale just on May 1st at Starring Roles

The 20th anniversary cell for sale featuring a 20th birthday cake over the original map of the Disney-MGM Studios

For many more photos from his trip to WDW, please visit Tom Corless’ Twitter, the official Twitter for WDW News Today. And as I said, stay tuned for when our staff members return in the week for many photo reports!

Get a Taste of the Dark Side

The backstage promotional images for this year’s Star Wars Weekends at Disney’s Hollywood Studios have been released, and they’re quite whimsical:

Star Wars Weekends run Fridays through Sundays from May 22nd to June 14th at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.

Remember… Magical Only Runs For 2 Months!

Seems like Disneyland’s new fireworks show Magical will only be running in the summer, with Remember Dreams Come True returning this fall. According to D23:

We already revealed some of the exciting details about Disneyland’s new fireworks show, Magical, last week, but there’s more to this display than meets the eye!

As with every Disney spectacular, Magical integrates new effects and technologies, including floodlights, customized “Magical” fireworks shells (that will burst both pink and blue — during a delightful “battle” between Sleeping Beauty’s Flora and Merryweather), and, for the first time ever, a flying Dumbo!

First off, Magical has an exclusive run: June 12 through August 23. Disneyland’s Remember… Dreams Come True returns for the fall, so you have a limited amount of time to see the magic of Magical.

Along with soaring vocals from Broadway star Eden Espinosa and a lush score from Greg Smith, Magical features beloved Disney songs including (take a deep breath!): “The Second Star to the Right,” “An Actor’s Life for Me,” “Give a Little Whistle,” “I’ve Got No Strings,” “It’s a Jolly Holiday,” “Chim Chim Cher-ee,” “Step in Time,” “Let’s Go Fly a Kite,” “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious,” “Baby Mine,” “So This Is Love,” “Beauty and the Beast” and “Once Upon a Dream.”

As with every Disney spectacular, Magical integrates new effects and technologies, including floodlights, customized “Magical” fireworks shells (that will burst both pink and blue — during a delightful “battle” between Sleeping Beauty’s Flora and Merryweather), and, for the first time ever, a flying Dumbo!

Dumbo’s soaring techniques are similar to those of Tinker Bell’s (who will still, of course, appear in the show). “But it is a whole new type of technology,” explains Disneyland Entertainment Productions Senior Show Director John Addis. “[Designer] Michael Curry’s eyes got really wide when we went to him and said, ‘We want to do Dumbo on a wire.’ But he’s risen to the occasion. I was just up there Monday and he said it was he best puppet he’s ever done to reflect a character.”

No doubt, the experience will be… Magical.

TLT Renovation

D23 has put up a couple of interesting things today that I want to share with everyone. First up, a great look at the Disney’s California Adventure renovation is provided in the Summer issue of Disney twenty-three magazine:

In the summer issue of twenty-three, Steven Clark and Jeffrey Epstein take readers on an exciting walk into the future of Disney’s California Adventure, revealing what Imagineers have in mind for park over the next four years. As you might expect, spectacular plans are unfolding — everything from a brand-new entryway and the majestic Carthay Circle Theatre to the spectacular World of Color nighttime extravaganza, the calypso under-the-sea beat of the new Little Mermaid attraction and an entirely new themed land that will be home to Lightning McQueen and his four-wheeled friends! Happy browsing!

Secondly, they have an interview with Disneyland Entertainment Productions Senior Show Director John Addis about the upcoming TLT Dance Club coming to the Tomorrowland Terrace this summer as part of Summer Nightastic:

If a hot nightspot inside Disneyland featuring today’s most popular music sounds like a familiar concept, you have something in common with Disneyland Entertainment Productions Senior Show Director John Addis.

“I opened Videopolis back in ’85,” John says, referring to the vibrant video dance club that once stood where the Princess Fantasy Faire now resides. “They packed the place. Kids would go and learn dances together.” John says they wanted to bring the concept into 2009, and the Tomorrowland Terrace, which has frequently featured contemporary performances throughout the years, was the perfect spot for the new TLT Dance Club (skywalkers-in-training, have no fear, Jedi Training Academy will continue during the day — TLT will heat up nightly from 7–11 p.m. starting June 12). “We’re going to have plasma screens in the venue, and you can actually text and your text messages will go up on the screen… I’m not quite sure how they’re going to police that,” he says with a laugh. Guests will also be able to text in their favorite song to a posted number. “At 8 o’clock at night they do ‘Celebrate at 8,’ and they will take all of the songs that everyone wants to hear and they’ll do a countdown to the No. 1 song.”

John also notes there will be a host who will keep the night grooving with games, trivia and trademarked Disney fun. Music, of course, will be the heart of TLT, with DJs from Southern California radio stations and local bands keeping things lively. “The asks are out, as they say,” jokes John about possible performers and DJs. “But I haven’t heard anything definite. I’m excited about the live music. Friday through Sunday we’re going to have live bands.”

The bands, notes Disney Entertainment Productions Producer Ray Coble, may be familiar to Disneyland-ers. “We’re welcoming bands that we use and know are very successful like the 80z All Stars and also looking at some new ones.”

Adds John, “I’d love to expose people to new groups. It’s great to have a new group come in, people follow them and suddenly… they’re Rascal Flatts!”

Does that mean Miley may turn up at TLT? “We’re looking into Hollywood Records and Disney Channel emerging artists — and maybe even some established recording artists — coming down during that Friday to Sunday time,” John hints. “What we’ve done is taken an area that needed to have some fun, and I think it’s going to!”

Chuck Canzoneri’s 4/30/09 Photo Report

The photo reports just keep coming in! Here is yet another report from our very own Chuck Canzoneri:

The parks were more crowded than you would expect today. This was taken at 1pm

The park closed at 6pm, but the Animation Pavillion was closing earlier to prepare for a special wine event with John Lasseter and his wife at 6:30pm

Chuck attended Celebrate Austria at the Chef’s Showcase Stage. Here, Chef Marcel created an Austrian Goulash with a Sweet Onion Brioche

Chuck states: “Chef Marcel works at Club 33, and it was embroidered on his shirt. So does that mean I’ve now tried Club 33 food?”

“The goulash looked messy, but it was terrific. The meat was incredibly tender, and the cabbage and touch of sour cream was a nice touch.”

Read More about Chuck Canzoneri’s 4/30/09 Photo Report

“Hooray For Hollywood!”

D23 has a great article looking at back at the first 20 year’s of Disney’s Hollywood Studios in honor of the park’s anniversary tomorrow:

Just hours before Michael D. Eisner, then chairman and chief executive officer of The Walt Disney Company, officially dedicated the Walt Disney World Resort’s third gated attraction, some 40 “A-List” celebrities were on hand to get the party started in classic Hollywood motorcade style, among them Audrey Hepburn, Betty White, George Lucas, Art Linkletter and famed Mouseketeer Annette Funicello. Although the weekend would also play host to thunderstorms and torrential rain, it was “on with the show,” and, with the following words, Eisner officially opened the park 20 years ago today:

“The world you have entered was created by The Walt Disney Company and is dedicated to Hollywood — not a place on a map, but a state of mind that exists wherever people dream and wonder and imagine, a place where illusion and reality are fused by technological magic. We welcome you to a Hollywood that never was — and always will be.”

But the story of the park known today as Disney’s Hollywood Studios begins at a point even further back in time — back to the early days, when Walt and Roy Disney set up shop in their newly built Burbank studio.

EARLY INSPIRATIONS
Film historian Leonard Maltin notes that by the late 1930s, Walt “was written about almost as often as the top movie stars of the day.” And with the enormous popularity of Mickey Mouse and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, a strong fan base was eager to learn about the magic behind the films. However, just before construction of Walt’s new studio was finished, the outbreak of war in Europe cut off many of Walt Disney Productions’ foreign markets and dealt a blow to its overall income. So in an effort to generate quick funds, Walt’s story men began work on an inexpensive live-action film that would incorporate animated segments and a behind-the-scenes look at the studio’s inner workings.

The result was The Reluctant Dragon, the studio’s first live-action film, released in June 1941. In the picture, acclaimed Hollywood actor Robert Benchley visits the Disney Studio (only a year old at the time) in Burbank to meet Walt and pitch a concept for a new cartoon feature. While stumbling upon one department after another, Benchley learns about each step of the animation process. The film’s purpose is made clear in an opening title frame: “This picture is made in answer to the many requests to show the backstage life of animated cartoons.” Although the film received mixed reviews, it delighted moviegoers curious about movie-making magic.

Although Walt originally envisioned a tour as part of the new studio, little land was available to accommodate such an idea, and Disney leadership worried that it could disrupt filming. But by the late 1940s, Walt was determined to build “something to show people who wanted to visit the Disney Studio.” This proposed “Mickey Mouse Park” would be constructed across the street, just between Riverside Drive and the Los Angeles River. The studio artists’ ideas rapidly outgrew the small strip of land and would later become the foundation of Disneyland Park.

Because Disneyland did not include a backstage studio tour, the Disney staff found other ways to show off their backstage magic. Turning to the new medium of television, Wilfred Jackson directed several episodes of the weekly Disneyland series in which Walt discussed the animation process: “The Story of the Animated Drawing” (aired on 11/30/1955), “The Plausible Impossible” (10/31/56) and “Tricks of our Trade” (2/13/1957). These episodes combined looks at the history of animation and at behind-the-scenes work at the Disney Studio, engaging a wide prime time ABC audience.

A STAR IS FOUND AT WED
In the 1960s, Walt made no mention of incorporating a movie studio into his final plan of a “whole new Disney World” in Florida. But as the Magic Kingdom and EPCOT Center quickly made Florida’s Vacation Kingdom the world’s most popular tourist destination by the 1980s, The Walt Disney Company, under the new leadership of President Frank Wells and Eisner, began a long-term, aggressive plan to develop the Florida property.

According to the Disney Imagineers, one of the first concepts that Eisner encountered at Walt Disney Imagineering was a “Movie Pavilion” to be built just between The Land and Journey into Imagination pavilions at EPCOT Center. The pavilion’s highlight would be a landmark journey through classic moments in cinema history. Eisner, who had made a name for himself at Paramount Studios, warmly embraced the Hollywood concept, and Imagineers expanded the idea into an entire movie studio park!

A HYBRID VENTURE BREAKS GROUND
As the studio park concept matured, it was regarded as a hybrid venture: both a third-gated attraction as well as a fully functioning motion picture and television production center. “If you do a studio tour park, you must have a working studio,” explained Bob Allen, director of film and tape production. Guests would be given firsthand access to the production process and receive a “sneak peek” of upcoming films.

On July 8, 1985, just under a year after joining the Company, Eisner announced plans to build the full-scale studio at the Walt Disney World Resort. Except Disney would not work alone in this endeavor. Just days before the announcement, the MGM/UA Entertainment Company signed a deal with Disney, one which allowed Walt Disney World to incorporate certain MGM/UA films into the parks and use the “Leo the Lion” logo and Metro-Goldwyn Mayer name on posters and advertisements. “Both the lion and the mouse will roar,” Eisner said during the press announcement.

On March 27, 1986, legendary actor Bob Hope was on hand for the park’s official groundbreaking on a 135-acre plot of land located one mile southwest of Epcot. Although the park was planned to be relatively conservative in size, its scale gradually grew throughout the planning process. A concept for a small production facility grew into three soundstages (one 13,000 sq. ft. and two 7,100 sq. ft.), a costuming facility and an extensive postproduction area. The production center began its operations roughly a year before the actual theme park’s opening; scenes from the television pilot Splash, Too were shot in February 1988, and production soon entered full-swing for such television series as Siskel & Ebert, The Mickey Mouse Club and Ed McMahon’s Star Search. The production center would eventually see its facilities fully booked by dozens of film and television projects throughout the following years.

Disney-MGM Studios Theme Park opened to a full house on May 1, 1989. In fact, the park was filled to capacity just a half-hour after opening! Park hours were extended all summer long while Imagineering and operational teams found creative ways to improve crowd flow and incorporate new live show performances. Beholding the park’s instant success, Company leaders quickly approved expansion plans.

HOORAY FOR HOLLYWOOD!
Just as Main Street, U.S.A., welcomes Magic Kingdom guests to days gone by, Hollywood Boulevard immerses guests in Hollywood’s glittering “Golden Age” of the 1930s and ’40s. Using the architectural styles of art-deco and streamline moderne, the park’s gateway reflects the flamboyance of movie-making moguls and draws guests to its visual magnet: a full-scale replica of Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. (The park’s icon is now a 122-foot-tall Sorcerer Mickey Hat). In classic Disney fashion, the park pays homage to Hollywood stories and lore, both through tiny details and imposing structures. The colossal Dinosaur Gertie’s Ice Creams of Extinction, for example, is a reference to Winsor McCay’s revolutionary 1914 cartoon character, which Walt had shared with television audiences three decades earlier.

In the Backstage Studio Tour area, trams whisked park guests through such areas as the prop warehouse and the greens and costuming departments. Many elements of this tour, including the thrilling “Catastrophe Canyon” set, are still offered today. An original highlight was a trip down a residential street, which featured façades from films and TV shows, including Adventures in Wonderland and The Golden Girls. (This street would later be host to the Osborne Family Spectacle of Lights and eventually be replaced by Lights, Motors, Action! Extreme Stunt Show).

Complementing the tram tour was a 40-minute Inside the Magic: Special Effects Production Tour, in which Guests caught a bird’s eye view of film production via sound-proofed observation catwalks over sound stages and post-production areas. In The Magic of Disney Animation, Guests could watch an initial 71-member team produce animated segments from an observation deck. (Walt Disney Feature Animation Florida would later expand and produce Mulan, Lilo & Stitch and Brother Bear.) Many Guests fondly remember the tour’s Back to Neverland pre-show film, in which Walter Cronkite and Robin Williams humorously explored the animation process.

A variety of other attractions welcomed guests on opening day, including:

The Great Movie Ride: Based on a pavilion conceived for Epcot and housed inside Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, this ride sends guests through such landmark films as Singin’ in the Rain, Mary Poppins and The Wizard of Oz.

Superstar Television: An interactive show in which participants appeared on stage “alongside” actors from famous television shows. The theater was designed to house actual television productions and used fully-functional equipment.

Monster Sound Show: Presented by SONY, this demonstration of sound effects featured Chevy Chase and Martin Short. Guests could later put their skills to work in a hands-on post-show, Soundworks.

In December 1989, Disney-MGM Studios welcomed Star Tours. Although the attraction had previously opened in Disneyland Park, Imagineers tailored the experience to the studio setting; the entrance resembles a standing movie set on a backlot. In the early 1990s, Honey, I Shrunk the Kids Movie Set Adventure and Here Come the Muppets incorporated even more familiar characters into the park. The Theater of the Stars, host to elaborate shows under leadership of entertainment guru Ron Logan, was relocated from Hollywood Boulevard to Sunset Boulevard, the immersive park addition that now leads Guests to 1994’s Twilight Zone Tower of Terror and 1999’s Rock’n’Roller Coaster Starring Aerosmith.

DISNEY’S HOLLYWOOD STUDIOS
In more recent years, additions to the Walt Disney World Resort’s third theme park have constituted a “broader theme” of new attractions and experiences. In order to better reflect the entertainment offerings that represent today’s Hollywood, Disney-MGM Studios was renamed “Disney’s Hollywood Studios” in January 2008.

Today, the all-new American Idol Experience invites Guests to participate on stage in the Superstar Theater, a nod to the attraction which originally occupied the structure. Meanwhile, Toy Story Midway Mania! features interactivity at its best and, in contrast to its Disney’s California Adventure twin, is uniquely tailored into a new Pixar Studios land.

While Disney’s Hollywood Studios has changed and developed over the past 20 years, it has been inspiring to understand its roots from Walt’s beloved Burbank studio. As the park continues to evolve, it will likely follow in step with Walt’s own spirit: with one foot in the future and another in the past, carrying on the traditions of a Hollywood that never was — and always will be.

John B.’s 4/26/09 Photo Report

I’d like to welcome John B. to the staff as our newest photographer. He along with Myrna, Chuck, Shawn, and I will be able to make Disneyland News Today the premiere and most often updated site for photo reports. With-out further ado, let’s get to John’s first photo report here at DLNT:

The fountains at Cosmic Waves have been removed, however the rotating ball in the middle will remain

A peak over the Pixie Hollow construction walls

Over at DCA… A look at some of the Food and Wine merchandise at the Festival Gift Shop

Read More about John B.’s 4/26/09 Photo Report