The Making of World of Color

We have yet another pair of videos for you from the D23 Expo recorded and edited by our own Matt Paul. The first video is “The Making of World of Color” presentation with Imagineer Steven Davison (walking us through the entire new nighttime spectacular for Disney’s California Adventure) and the accompanying video is of the World of Color press conference that directly followed. We hope you enjoy this inside look at Disney’s World of Color embedded via the WDWNTube:

The Making of Presidents and Play Things

Continuing our D23 Expo coverage, we have two more fantastic videos for you to enjoy. The first video is of the “Making of the U.S. Presidents” panel, featuring the creation of the new Hall of Presidents at Walt Disney World and the progress on the upcoming Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln show for Disneyland. The second video is from the “Making of Toy Story Mania” panel and features the development and execution of the Disney’s California Adventure and Disney’s Hollywood Studios attractions. We hope you enjoy these videos by Matt Paul, embedded via the WDWNTube:

Myrna Litt’s DLR and Haunted Mansion 40th Anniversary Photo Report

Our very own Myrna Litt was one of the lucky few who got into The Haunted Mansion 40th anniversary event last week, and she shares with us her photos of the event, along with other happenings around the Disneyland Resort:

We’ll start off with the day before the event, at the merchandise viewing and pick-up area at the Disneyland Hotel

There was a photo opportunity

Into the store we go…

Various pieces of Haunted Mansion merchandise, from pins to sketches to models

Read More about Myrna Litt’s DLR and Haunted Mansion 40th Anniversary Photo Report

9/9/09 News Update

With the D23 Expo just one day away, plenty of photos and announcements are starting to come out, so I thought I’d group together some stuff released/announced today. First up, D23 has announced their fall member events:

D23: The Official Community for Disney Fans today announced its lineup of fall 2009 special events. In November, D23 Members will be among the first audiences to see The Princess and the Frog as The Walt Disney Studios opens its gates to the public for the very first time. The national tours of The Lion King and Mary Poppins continue to delight audiences from coast to coast, and D23 Members will get the opportunity to go behind the scenes of these amazing productions. Back by popular demand, the legendary Lot at The Walt Disney Studios and Walt Disney Archives will be open for guided tours, and unique once-in-a-lifetime experiences will take place at the Walt Disney World Resort where D23 Members can enjoy Sip & Stroll during the Epcot® International Food & Wine Festival and Magic & Merriment this holiday season.

“D23 continues to create unique and unforgettable events around the country that only D23 Members can experience,” said Steven Clark, head of D23. “Our Spring and Summer events introduced us to our Members for the very first time, and we look forward to meeting more of them this Fall; plus, as with everything we do, D23 Members can expect some amazing surprises along the way.”

FALL 2009 D23 CHARTER MEMBER-ONLY SPECIAL EVENTS:

October 7: D23 and The Lion King Roar into Anchorage

This award-winning musical phenomenon has entertained more than 50 million guests around the world and now, thanks to our friends at Disney Theatrical Productions, D23 Members can have a magical night to remember at The Lion King at the Alaska Center for the Performing Arts, including premium seats, merchandise discounts, complimentary souvenir program, an exclusive show merchandise item, a special “behind-the-scenes” experience after the show and more!

October 7: D23 and Poppins Breeze into the Lone Star State
D23 Members can have a supercalifragilisticexpialidocious night to remember at Mary Poppins in Dallas — featuring original Broadway stars Ashley Brown (Mary Poppins) and Gavin Lee (Bert) — with premium seats, merchandise discounts, complimentary souvenir program and a once-in-a-lifetime “behind-the-scenes” experience. D23 Members also will receive the recently released 2-Disc Mary Poppins 45th Anniversary Special Edition DVD, courtesy of our friends at Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment.

November 7: D23 Day at The Walt Disney Studios and Archives (FREE)
A rare opportunity for D23 Members to enjoy a two-hour tour of The Walt Disney Studios and Walt Disney Archives, hosted by D23 and Walt Disney Archives staff. Space is very limited.

November 18: D23 and Poppins Fly into Los Angeles
D23 Members will have the chance to experience the “practically perfect” Mary Poppins — featuring original Broadway stars Ashley Brown (Mary Poppins) and Gavin Lee (Bert) — like never before, with premium seats, merchandise discounts, complimentary souvenir program and a once-in-a-lifetime “behind-the-scenes” experience.

November 20: D23 and The Lion King Roar into Spokane
Simba and Nala have entertained more than 50 million guests across the world. Now D23 Members can have a magical night to remember at The Lion King, including premium seats, merchandise discounts, complimentary souvenir program, exclusive show merchandise item, a special “behind-the-scenes” experience after the show and more!

November 25, 2009: D23 Night at The Princess and the Frog
Join D23 at a very special first-night screening of The Princess and the Frog, when The Walt Disney Studios opens its gates for the first time in history to the general public! After being one of the first audiences to see The Princess and the Frog in the newly renovated Main Theatre on The Walt Disney Studios Lot, guests will go over to Sound Stage 3 for the ultimate Disney experience, where they can meet ALL the Disney princesses, including the star of the film, Princess Tiana. D23 Members will learn to draw a character from the movie from a Disney animator; see original costumes, sets and props from the Walt Disney Archives, and much, much more! Tickets for this event will be available at the D23 Expo in addition to the D23 ticketing phone line.

More information on this event is available HERE

ADDITIONAL EVENTS: SAVE THE DATES

Complementing the above spectacular experiences are three extraordinary events.

Sip & Stroll will offer a host of exclusive, delicious opportunities during the Epcot ® International Food & Wine Festival on Sunday, October 18.

D23 will celebrate the season with Disney and Dickens on Thursday, December 10, featuring VIP seating for Disney’s A Christmas Carol at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, followed by a private dinner at the legendary Tam O’Shanter restaurant in Los Angeles — a frequent hangout of Walt Disney and his animators.

On December 12 and 13, D23 will bring Magic & Merriment to Walt Disney World with out-of-this-world holiday magic.

Stay tuned in the coming weeks for additional details and ticket prices for these truly unique events.

To find out more about D23’s Fall 2009 Special Events Calendar, including admissions and how to register for events, click on the Expo & Events tab. All D23 Special Events are subject to change without notice, have varying admission fees and registration processes, and may require advance reservations due to space limitations.

It appears that walls have gone up just in front of the California letters at the entrance to Disney’s California Adventure. The letters are still there on the other side of the walls, accessible to guests. Could this be the beginning of the change over to Buena Vista Street?

Don’t worry, the park is still open 😉

Picture taken by Tom Corless on the WDWNT Twitter. Follow that account all week for coverage from Disneyland and the D23 Expo

Finally, if you just can’t wait until tomorrow to see what’s going on at the D23 Expo, then here are some images Disney released from the Anaheim Convention Center:

While crews work around the clock, Mickey Mouse is getting ready to greet Disney fans fans from all over the world who will be given unprecedented access to never-before-seen movies, TV shows, park experiences, collectibles and more from Sept. 10 to Sept. 13 at the Anaheim Convention Center as Disney and “D23: The Official Community for Disney Fans” present the first-ever D23 EXPO

The Welcome Center being set up

Herbie the Love Bug will be at the Expo

In an extraordinary exhibition designed especially for the D23 Expo, an incredible collection of classic and contemporary Disney props, artifacts and costumes will be accessible to the public for the first time ever. “Treasures of the Walt Disney Archives” brings together such amazing pieces as the fully restored, 11-foot model of the Nautilus from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea; the stunning, jewel-encrusted book used in the opening moments of Sleeping Beauty; Michael Jackson’s costume from Captain EO; and other rare surprises from throughout Disney’s history. Ranging from the original Mickey Mouse Club and the musical classic Mary Poppins to recent hits like Pirates of the Caribbean and High School Musical, the “Treasures of the Walt Disney Archives” is a never-before-experienced exhibition that’s a D23 Expo exclusive

For more pictures from inside the Convention Center, check out D23’s website. Stay tuned to Disneyland News Today and WDW News Today in the coming week for plenty more coverage from the first ever D23 Expo!

Guests Select Ingredients at The New Lucky Fortune Cookery

The colorful new Lucky Fortune Cookery, debuting Friday, Sept. 4, 2009, is the newest addition to the variety of dining options at Disney’s California Adventure park. Located in the Pacific Wharf section of the park, Lucky Fortune Cookery offers guests the opportunity to create their own Asian Rice Bowl meals and enjoy them in an outdoor plaza.

  • Lucky Fortune Cookery can be found in the location previously occupied by Cocina Cucamonga, which has relocated directly across the Pacific Wharf outdoor dining plaza.
  • The quick-service restaurant features colorful décor, paper lanterns, oversized pots filled with bamboo and iconic dragon designs.
  • Guests are served at the quick-service windows of Lucky Fortune Cookery and they dine at tables under festive umbrellas in the outdoor plaza at Pacific Wharf. The environment allows for a pleasant and flavorful break in the day at Disneyland Resort.
  • The Menu: Customized Asian Rice Bowls are the specialty of Lucky Fortune Cookery.  It starts with a bowl of steamed white and brown rice and seared Asian vegetables. Guests select chicken, beef or tofu, plus a sauce of their choice: Mandarin orange, spicy Korean, Thai green curry or teriyaki.
  • The spicy Korean sauce is actually based on an old family recipe provided by Gloria Tae, chef de cuisine at the award-winning Napa Rose restaurant in Disney’s Grand Californian Hotel & Spa. All the sauce options were researched and taste-tested by Disney chefs as well as by cast members from diverse cultural backgrounds so that the final products would appeal to the broad variety of guests dining at Lucky Fortune Cookery.
  • The Price: Each customized Asian Rice Bowl, regardless of ingredients, will cost $9.49. A kid’s meal of teriyaki chicken and rice, including fruit cup and choice of beverage, is available for guests age 9 and under for $6.49.

New Treats at This Year’s Halloween Time

ANAHEIM, Calif. (Sept. 1, 2009) – Spooky new fireworks and ghoulish screams at Space Mountain add to the fun when Halloween Time returns to Disneyland Resort Sept. 25-Nov. 1. Halloween Time offers families a chance to celebrate the season as they interact with some of Disney’s most beloved characters decked out in seasonal costumes at Disneyland and Disney’s California Adventure parks. Guests will also enjoy a unique opportunity to experience some spooky fun with Disney’s more sinister characters, the Disney villains. In addition, Mickey’s Trick-or-Treat Party returns for 12 special nights in October.

For older kids and adults, Halloween Time offers a new attraction: Space Mountain Ghost Galaxy in Tomorrowland at Disneyland. The scary new experience will begin as a typical Space Mountain adventure, but will suddenly launch voyagers into an uncharted and haunted section of the universe. Ghosts appear out of the starry darkness and swirling galaxies of Space Mountain, reaching out as if to grab guests as they speed through space. The exhilarating drops and curves of the journey are punctuated by piercing screams, creepy sound effects and haunting music. The Halloween transformation occurs outside the mountain as well, as frightening images, audio and lights illuminate the Space Mountain exterior.

Also new this year is “Halloween Screams – A Villainous Surprise in the Skies.” The new fireworks spectacular will haunt the nighttime sky throughout the Halloween season. To start the show, “Master of Scare-omonies” Jack Skellington appears in a flash of fire above Sleeping Beauty Castle. Thanks to Jack’s ghoulish charm, haunting melodies fill the air and a Halloween pyrotechnics extravaganza explodes into the night. Such classic Disney villains as Maleficent, Ursula the Sea Witch and Oogie Boogie join in the “spirit” of the celebration, and even Zero, Jack’s faithful ghost dog, will make an appearance. Spectators in Disneyland are encouraged to participate in a bone-chilling Halloween Scream-Along during the show.

Jack Skellington also returns to take over the Haunted Mansion and bring back Haunted Mansion Holiday to New Orleans Square in Disneyland. Transformed to a mix of Halloween spookiness and Christmas tradition, Haunted Mansion Holiday is inspired by the classic animated film “Tim Burton’s Nightmare Before Christmas.” Jack and his friends provide plenty of havoc and surprises as they celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Haunted Mansion in their unusual style. Jack’s return to the Haunted Mansion includes the traditional Halloween/Christmas gingerbread house in the Mansion Ballroom, with some special spooky surprises in this year’s design.

For not-so-frightful fun, Halloween Time offers special pleasures for children and parents.

  • Main Street, U.S.A. in Disneyland is again transformed for the Pumpkin Festival, where more than 300 “non-identical” pumpkins will be on display in shop windows.
  • Visitors to Big Thunder Ranch in Frontierland will sometimes find the ranch animals dressed in costume for a seasonal Halloween Roundup, with pumpkin carvers, Halloween décor and activities for youngsters, all presided over by Sheriff Woody.
  • Next door at Big Thunder Barbecue, Miss Chris and the Roundup musicians add Halloween songs to their repertoire.
  • Meeting favorite Disney characters will be easier than ever as Disney villains gather to plot Halloween mischief in “it’s a small world” Mall in Disneyland, while other characters in seasonal costumes greet guests in Town Square, Main Street, U.S.A. in Disneyland and Sunshine Plaza in Disney’s California Adventure.
  • Also available throughout both parks are special Halloween treats, including menu items such as Zero’s Ghostly Ghoulash served in a dog dish in honor of Zero.
  • Special Halloween Time gifts are offered in Disneyland Resort shops. Gifts include jack-o-lantern mouse ears and collectable pins depicting Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse and their friends in Halloween costumes.

More spine-tingling fun can be found in Disney’s California Adventure at The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, where a “supernatural” event happened on Halloween evening, 1939, forever haunting the building.

Also at Disney’s California Adventure, Sunshine Plaza becomes Candy Corn Acres, with Mickey’s pal Goofy up to his tricks again – attempting to wow the world with his unusual candy corn treats. Candy corn carrots, candy corn pumpkins and candy corn grapes are just a few of the candy corn items Goofy is harvesting.

Back by popular demand is Mickey’s Trick-or-Treat Party, a one-of-a-kind celebration that returns to Disney’s California Adventure for 12 nights in October (2, 8, 9, 15, 16, 21, 22, 23, 28, 29, 30 and 31). Mickey’s Trick-or-Treat Party lets adults and children alike dress up and trick-or-treat in the ultimate Disney neighborhood. Highlights this year will include:

  • 25 Treat Stops located throughout Disney’s California Adventure
  • All your favorite Disney’s California Adventure rides and attractions
  • A Hollywood Bat-Lot Bash in Hollywood Pictures Backlot
  • A nightly “Mickey’s Trick-or-Treat on the Street” cavalcade
  • Character photo locations featuring Disney villains, princesses and other favorites
  • Pirate’s Wharf, a transformation of the Pacific Wharf area into an entertainment area, photo location, craft area and games area

This separate-ticket nighttime event gives children and their families a chance to dress as their favorite princesses, goblins or heroes and trick-or-treat throughout the park. Tickets purchased in advance are $32 most days, while tickets purchased on the event day are $39. For Oct. 30 and 31, all tickets to Mickey’s Trick or Treat Party are $42. Favorite Disney characters, including Mickey himself, will be in attendance in their favorite costumes. It’s the ideal environment to have fun, eat special holiday treats, play interactive games, listen to “spirited” music and watch a nightly character cavalcade that celebrates the season.

For more information about Halloween Time at Disneyland Resort, see disneyland.com/halloween. This site will be updated as frightfully fun details become available.

Value-minded vacationers can celebrate Halloween Time with a special travel offer this fall: savings of $400* at the Disneyland Resort. From Aug. 12 through Dec. 19, 2009, guests will save $400 when they book a 4-Day/4-Night Disneyland Resort vacation package, featuring Disneyland Resort hotel accommodations – Disney’s Grand Californian Hotel & Spa, Disneyland Hotel and Disney’s Paradise Pier – and park hopper tickets. The offer is valid for arrivals through Dec. 20, 2009, with a final booking day of Dec. 19. Details are at disneyland.com/Save400.

DLR Photo Report – 7/29/09-8/5/09

I have returned from a near record setting 8 days at the wonderful Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, California. This trip was mainly to spend time with members of the WDWNT staff, which for some was their first visit, and for others was their 100th visit! Let’s get into the first photo report of what will be many from this past week:

On our first day, we enjoyed a meal at the recently opened Celebration Roundup and Barbecue. Left to right here you can see Matt Paul, Tom Corless, Chris Lastrapes, and Jose Castillo

Space Mountain was a favorite among everyone

The White Rabbit statue outside the restrooms near Alice in Wonderland finally has its clock-face back

The freaky looking Mickey Monsters plush have started hitting store shelves through-out the Disneyland Resort

The “What Will You Celebrate?” Disneyland Resort Harbor Blvd. entrance

Read More about DLR Photo Report – 7/29/09-8/5/09

Inside World of Color

D23 has posted an interview about with Steven Davison, Bob Weis, Chuck Davis, and Sayre Wiseman on the upcoming nighttime spectacular at Disney’s California Adventure, World of Color:

As the creative team behind the upcoming innovative water spectacular World of Color at Disney’s California Adventure gears up for the attraction’s spring 2010 opening, D23 caught up with Steven Davison, vice president, Parades & Spectaculars, Walt Disney Imagineering Creative Entertainment; Chuck Davis, technical producer for World of Color; Bob Weis, executive vice president, Creative, Walt Disney Imagineering; and Sayre Wiseman, director, Show Production, Walt Disney Imagineering Creative Entertainment, to get an inside look at this exciting upcoming water spectacular.

Q: What is the main “Wow” factor for this show? And how is this going to be different from Fantasmic!?
Steven Davison: I think a lot of it is going to be how water becomes a character and that’s the hardest thing to show in a creative presentation — how water becomes a living actor and will create things for you. It’s the philosophy I used when we did all our firework shows — even when you see a firework and you hear music and you see a certain color and you see a certain effect, it triggers your mind to think about, in our case, a Disney property like Cinderella is blue and beautiful silver, and you are hearing “So This is Love.” It instantly brings that back and this show is going to do that same thing in very different way where water becomes a living ballet of dancers, and at times it will form shapes in the grid that will evoke certain things. At times it mixes with media. But it does it on a very, very big scale and in a very imaginative way. That’s why I keep saying it’s not a movie, that we don’t want it to just be a movie screen. We can literally project anywhere on anything that has a living water in it. Sometimes it’s just beautiful droplets, and a lot of it is about really inspiring people’s imagination. When you watch it, we will literally pull you into the show. The soundtrack is nearly completed, and it is stunning. It has so much emotion and depth and from the very first moment, it will pull you in and should encapsulate you to the end. It won’t let you go until the very last effect, which we won’t tell you what it is right now! So that’s what I think the big difference is. Fantasmic! utilizes people and sets and things. We are going to do it all organically in a very different way that it comes and disappears. And when it comes up, it kind of just takes you in, and it becomes an environment. The environment is all encompassing when you are out there.
Sayre Wiseman: One thing that is unique about World of Color is that the audience is actually less than 25 feet away from the first fountain and those fountains go 40 feet in the air. So you have a sense of connection so it’s not like you’re watching something in the distance. You’re actually very close to the effect.

Q: What are the best sight lines around the lagoon to view the show?
Sayre: The deepest part of the fountain structure is right there in the center of the viewing area. Our viewing count actually goes from the bridge all the way past the viewing area to the Zephyr. So that’s really where the show is at its best. We did a CGI test and the show also looks incredible from the back by Paradise Pier. It’s different and you see the production in a different way, but it’s really unique back there as well. I know it looks a little bit skewed to the left in the plans but it’s actually designed to be that way.

Q: Is the technology used over at Pixie Hollow at night, especially the technology used under water, borrowed from this attraction or is that something completely different?
Chuck Davis: It’s different technology at a substantially different scale. The pool at Pixie Hollow is about 20 inches deep and over here we are 14 feet deep. Their fountains don’t go very high and ours go 200 feet. So it’s really a question of scale, and I think that the work that was done to produce World of Color was based on that scale. So we are pushing the industry for underwater lighting, for LED lighting, for fountains, for flames and all of that. We are pushing that forward substantially in size and scale.

Q: How many of the fire cannons are there in World of Color and how and are they all mounted on swivel devices?
Chuck: There are 36 canons of varying sizes and 12 of them are mounted on swivels.

Q: It seems like you’ve built World of Color so that you can revamp the show down the road as Disney adds movies and new content. Is that accurate?
Steven: Yes. Incredibly, we made everything very software receivable, so that when… [a new movie] comes out, we can seamlessly put it into the show very quickly. We are going to have World of Color keep changing over time. So if you come throughout the year, we will be putting new things into it as we go on. We’re also going to do specialty shows. We will do a holiday show and probably a Halloween show. World of Color is as endless as your imagination. We have some great ideas for Christmas that will surprise everybody that will totally do new things.

Q: How many projectors are you using across that big water screen, and how many are you using altogether?
Chuck: There are a total of 12 projectors to do the back wall — we purchased 32 projectors and there are about 29 in the show plus spares.

Q: Will you be using motion control for all those or will they move?
Chuck: None of the projectors actually moves.

Q: When they first started talking about doing something out here, and I know you were part of that, what was the original basic concept of what you wanted to do here?
Bob Weis: I will let Steve and Sayre addressed the early generation of World of Color. But in terms of the very aggressive expansion that’s coming out of DCA overall — one of the things we really wanted to enhance is the nighttime visit to DCA. We think Disney’s California Adventure is a beautiful sight to be at night. There are great dining experiences out here and there are great attractions that are as fun or more fun to do at night as they are during the day. So what this gives us is a strong anchor in the way that Fantasmic! is an anchor for Disneyland for people to want to come to have a nice dining experience to sit out in the evening and wait for this big spectacular show. So this big viewing area that we’ve done a substantial amount of construction for in order to make sure that all of our audience can have prime viewing was designed to make sure that people can see it. They can get comfortable. They can stake out their claim on site and really have prime viewing for a very large group. That just enhances the whole Disney’s California Adventure nighttime scene.
Steven: We really kind of set out to do something that would be its own mark, kind of a thing that we call destination entertainment that when you come to the park, it becomes kind of a big communal thing. We have these at all of our parks, which is the big kiss goodnight. At Epcot is Reflection of Earth and the Magic Kingdom has firework shows and World of Color will be that for Disney’s California Adventure. So it’s going to be this great thing at night, where people can all gather around the lagoon and watch this experience together, which I think will be very magical. It’s also working with the restaurant too. Ariel’s restaurant is right in some of the best sight lines of the show. And I think it will be a great place to sit and watch the show like some of our other restaurants around the world too. So it’s going to be this wonderful nighttime play.

Q: I have two online speculations that I’d like you to clear up. First, are there any bad places around the lagoon to see the show? And the other speculation is about interactive elements around the lagoon such as Mickey’s Fun Wheel and the big fountain in the seating area.
Sayre: We have been doing a lot of research and development on the possibility of down the road, creating an interactive work with the fountain during the day. That’s not in our current plans, because there is still a lot of research and development to do on that. But the fountain is very capable of on the spot, reacting to crowds. So we are first concentrating on the show, and over time we are going to be adding things and that might be one of them.
Steven: We’ve done a lot of fun little mockups to actually test these activities. And that’s one of the goals — by the end of the show or even when you start doing these things that will come online later, we want the fountain to be a living character. We want it to be living water, that it can be humorous. Again, what Disney does really well is taking things that can be inanimate and making them animated in wonderful ways and giving them personalities. That’s why went after the Little Squirt character. He’s very funny in the show and you will get the personality because we are mixing music and the texture of water to kind of create that and make it happen. We have a big solid massive viewing area that has great viewing. I have a thing that we call reverse water where you can actually watch the show from behind and you can actually back stand there and get a different viewing experience. We do have some limitations when it gets by the sun wheel, because there is a lot of blocking that’s happening, so that’s not premium viewing for the show. But when we set out to make a big area, we did it pretty well I think. So there’s going to be what we call the rated yellow areas around the lagoon, but we have the capacity for a lot of people.

Q: What have you done differently with the show than you did with Luminaria and what did you learn from that experience?
Steven: You’re referring to something that we did right after we opened DCA, where we wanted to do something in the lagoon. So we created this beautiful little piece called Luminaria, which is an interactive piece with our guests where during the day, they could actually draw little cards and we would put them into the show with projection. One thing we learned that was big is that we need to do fathoms in the show, that Luminaria was heavily, heavily based in pyrotechnics literally because of time and because of how we put the show together. And that was one thing that we learned. We actually looked at further tests of what we would do to Luminaria and that’s actually how World of Color was born. We decided not to go back to Luminaria and put it on hold and actually come in and develop a full nighttime experience for the park because this is been in the works since 2005, 2004. So this is literally like a feature animation film, and we’ve been working on it for years and years. To be honest, I think we can bring Luminaria back. I was listening to the track the other day and thinking if you put Luminaria into the World of Color infrastructure, it would do everything it ever wanted to do and more. I’m not saying we are doing that, but we could.
Chuck: The other thing we learned from Luminaria was scale. This scale of the lagoon is very, very, very deceiving. There are very tall structures right on top of it and it is much larger than you think it is. You think 200 feet, oh my. That’s amazing. It’s impressive, but it’s difficult to comprehend that scale, and I think Luminaria really taught us that.

Q: At Disneyland, there are hidden Mickeys throughout all of the attractions that the big Disney aficionados can look for. Will there be any of those in World of Color?
Steven: Yes, that is a possibility!

Q: So should people be looking for hidden Mickeys in this show?
Steven: Yes, that is a possibility! [Laughing] But I will say that the fountain is capable of doing hidden Mickeys. We can do very different versions of it from light to water. It may appear — you never know!

Q: Steven, how does this show compared to the other shows you’ve done with Disney?
Steven: This will be the biggest show of my career. In scale, it’s huge! It really is. This is the biggest entertainment undertaking that we’ve ever done in entertainment. It’s bigger than Epcot. It’s bigger than anything we’ve done in Tokyo. It’s bigger than any fireworks show we’ve ever done. So the company is really behind it. It’s funny — when we were going down the road and first pitching it, people really grasped it pretty quickly and started to understand it and what it could do, and the stories that it could tell. That’s really fundamentally what we do — we are storytellers. Instead of something being just a generic spectacle, this really had a transformative effect. So for me, it’s huge. I’m spending a lot of time with our team on it. [Pixar Animation and Walt Disney Animation Studios Chief Creative Officer] John Lasseter is involved in it, Feature Animation is involved and Pixar is involved. Every division of the company is literally involved with the show and all of the other enhancements coming into DCA. It’s great because it’s like a big family, and we are all just making magic together!

Q: How does World of Color set the tone for all of the things that are going to be happening at DCA over the next few years?
Bob: The tone of it is so perfect because it combines everything we are trying to do, which is we are bringing in more walls, more inspiration, and more storytelling. We’re trying to do everything in very state of the art technology, things people have not seen before, and almost everything is being done in a very rich collaboration between animation, Pixar, Imagineering and the park. So it really epitomizes and symbolizes for us what is going to be transforming about everything in the park.

Q: When do you think this will all be completed?
Bob: We always default to the great Walt quote that, “Disneyland will never be finished as long as there is imagination in the world.” We actually have phases of Disney’s California Adventure that we are working on that come beyond what we’ve announced. So this park, just like Disneyland or any of the other parks, will continue to develop over time as the audience builds and evolves. So I’m not sure that it ever ends — thankfully for us!

World of Color Fountain Test

Walt Disney Imagineers conduct a test with one of the more than 1,200 water jets that will make “World of Color,” a nighttime water, animation, fire and musical extravaganza, come to life in Spring 2010 in Paradise Bay Lagoon at Disney’s California Adventure. The fountain being tested – a blow pop – can reach 200 feet in the air.