Did You Know? 7 Enchanting Facts About Snow White Grotto

By Greg Ehrbar

There’s no way to calculate how many couples became engaged, the number of people who made wishes, or all the magical dreams that came true thanks to the iconic Snow White Grotto and Wishing Well in Disneyland Park. Nestled amid the greenery near Sleeping Beauty Castle, the lovely little water wonderland adorned with handcrafted figures of Snow White, Doc, Dopey, Bashful, Sleepy, Happy, Grumpy and Dopey, celebrates its 55th anniversary this month.

view of the castle from snow white grotto

We asked renowned producer/editor and Disney historian Les Perkins, who worked on the reimagining of Fantasyland in 1983, for seven little facts and an especially enchanting anecdote—in exchange for a fresh baked gooseberry pie.

    snow white grotto in the 1960s
  1. The grotto was the result of a collection of sculpts that was ordered from Italy. Walt was fond of them and asked Disney Legend John Hench of WED Enterprises (now Walt Disney Imagineering) to find a Disneyland home for them. John dreamed up the Snow White Grotto in 1960.
  2. sleepy and bashful

  3. Sculptor Leonida Parma fashioned the figures from pure Carrara marble. Hench was challenged by a visual problem: the Snow White statue was the same height as the seven Dwarf figures.
  4. The reason all eight marble figures were the same height was traced back to a set of eight Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs gift soaps, all molded the same size to fit inside the package.
  5. snow white grotto

  6. John solved the problem using “forced perspective,” the same technique that makes Disneyland buildings seem taller by building each successive level at a smaller scale. By putting Snow White high atop the grotto, she seems to be the proper size. John also had figures made of various birds, deer, and bunnies to heighten the effect. The “tradition” of a same-height Snow White was duplicated for the grotto at Tokyo Disneyland.
  7. Hench’s vision for the fountain was inspired by one he had seen in the small town of Brie, north of France.
  8. wishing well at snow white grotto

  9. The Wishing Well was Walt’s idea—so the coins could be easily collected and donated to charity and to discourage Park guests from tossing coins into the Castle moat.
  10. Over the years the marble became discolored. So molds were cast from the original sculptures and they were replaced with fiberglass figures.

An especially enchanting anecdote: When Les supervised the revised 1983 audio for Fantasyland with the assistance of Disney artist/historian Stacia Martin, he contacted none other than the original voice actor, Disney Legend Adrianna Caselotti, to recreate her trilling coloratura for the grotto. “When I called her, I mentioned that it was my birthday,” Les remembers with a smile. “She launched into a chorus of ‘Happy Birthday’ in that unmistakable voice! I couldn’t believe that ‘Snow White’ was singing just for me.”

Awesome New Disney Mobile Games—Plus More in News Briefs

New Mobile Games Offer Disney Fun, On-The-Go!

It’s now even easier to go on exciting Disney escapades wherever you are—thanks to several new mobile games!

In collaboration with Gamesoft, Disney just launched Disney Magic Kingdoms for Apple, Android, and Windows Phone mobile platforms. Players will go on thrilling adventures through Disney Parks as they fight to restore the kingdom’s magic from evil powers. Legendary attractions like Space MountainCalifornia Screamin’, and it’s a small world are all a part of the game, and players will share special moments with beloved Disney characters from Disney•Pixar’s WALL•E and Toy Story; Disney’s Tangled; and much more. You can download the game to your favorite smartphone or tablet now!

But that’s not all: At the recent 2016 Game Developers Conference in San Francisco, Disney and game developer Hipster Whale announced that Disney Crossy Road is coming to mobile devices very soon! The new game (based on the much-beloved Crossy Road) will take players on an 8-bit endless adventure with more than 100 of their favorite Disney and Pixar characters in several Disney- and Pixar-themed worlds… each with its own fun 8-bit music soundtracks! Stay tuned for more Disney Crossy Road info, coming soon.

Mark your calendar with upcoming Disney events

Save the Date!
Be sure to mark these upcoming Disney events on your calendar:

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
April 8
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Don Iwerks
April 9
D23 Day at the Walt Disney Studios
April 20
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On Tour in Portland, Oregon
May 20
Mickey’s of Glendale • Orlando Shopping Event
May 21
Finding Nemo: D23 in the Big Blue World (Florida)
June 8
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On Tour in Salt Lake City, Utah
Studios
April 15
The Jungle Book opens in theaters.
May 6
Captain America: Civil War opens in theaters.
May 27
Alice Through the Looking Glass opens in theaters.
June 17
Finding Dory opens in theaters.
July 1
The BFG opens in theaters.
August 12
Pete’s Dragon opens in theaters.
November 23
Moana opens in theaters.
December 16
Rogue One opens in theaters.
Parks
March 2—May 30
Epcot International Flower & Garden Festival
April 1-May 1
Disney California Adventure Food & Wine Festival
June 16
Shanghai Disney Resort to open
Television
May 1
Disney Channel Presents the Radio Disney Music Awards airs on Disney Channel from 7–9 p.m. EST

First Look at Shere Khan in Disney’s The Jungle Book

We’ll meet Mowgli and his amazing animal “family” when Disney’s The Jungle Book roars into theaters in just a few weeks. Thankfully, to tide us over, Disney recently revealed a brand-new, immersive website about the film at TheLawOfTheJungle.com… (Make sure to scroll down to find all the site’s movie-related goodies.)

New “chapters,” featuring exclusive content, will be revealed on the site in the weeks to come—but we’ve already been given an early look at the powerful Bengal tiger Shere Khan (as voiced by Idris Elba) in a never-before-seen clip from the film, above.

See The Jungle Book in a theater near you (in 3D, RealD® 3D, AND IMAX® 3D) on April 15!

Elsa from Frozen

Frozen Comes to Freeform

Mark your calendars and bundle up—Anna and Elsa are bringing a chill over Freeform! The network will premiere a Frozen weekend programming event beginning this Saturday, March 26, and continuing through Sunday, March 27!

The highlight of the weekend is, of course, the big Freeform premiere of Frozen at 8 p.m. ET (with an encore on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. ET). You’ll also get the chance to hang out with some other endearing Disney characters including quirky Carl Fredricksen (from Disney•Pixar’s Up, airing on Saturday at 5:45 p.m. ET) and lovable Dumbo (airing for all those night owls on Sunday at 12:30 a.m. ET).

So many characters worth melting for… what better way to spend your Easter holiday?

Minnie Mouse meets Kate Spade

Minnie Mouse Meets Kate Spade New York

She’s cute, she’s hip, and she continues to take the fashion world by storm! Minnie Mouse has truly become a style icon—she was the subject of a recent “Rocks the Dots” fashion retrospective in New York City, and she even had an exhibition (called “Minnie: Style Icon”) held in her honor during London Fashion Week, hosted by Georgia May Jagger. Now, she’s joining forces with one of the best-known names in fashion accessories.

As Spring 2016 begins to bloom, kate spade new york welcomes Minnie Mouse to the family with the launch of kate spade new york for Minnie Mouse, currently available online.

The accessory line will bring Minnie’s style to life with unique glitter bow accents, sequin appliqué detailing, and comic book prints—with products in several price ranges. We’re particularly partial to the adorable Minnie Mouse iPhone 6 case!

Check out katespade.com for more info.

The Jungle Book actors with their creatures

Creatures with Character: New The Jungle Book Images

Are you looking forward to Disney’s The Jungle Book as much as we are? We’re only about a month out from its release in theaters—and to celebrate, Disney’s released some gorgeous images of several of the film’s voice actors posing with the animals to whom they lend their dulcet tones…

See Idris Elba posing with the über-imposing Bengal tiger Shere Khan! Marvel as Scarlett Johansson gets up close and personal with massive python Kaa! Gaze upon Sir Ben Kingsley with stately panther Bagheera! See these animals (and more) when the film comes to theaters this April.

23 Moving Questions With Bob Gurr

Bob Gurr remains a man on the move while his creative accomplishments as a Disney Imagineer continue to transport people around the world… literally.

Energy. That’s the first thing you sense about Bob. This is abundantly evident during a visit on the shaded patio of The Big D commissary at Walt Disney Imagineering (WDI) in Glendale, California. As we speak, Bob’s laid-back demeanor and sunny disposition belies the pride he so clearly has in his accomplishments. Adding a touch of nostalgia to the surroundings here are reminders of Bob’s past design efforts: Skyway buckets and a PeopleMover car. “If it moves on wheels at the Disney parks, I probably designed it,” he says, grinning.

You get a guy like Walt once a century. We got to be the orchestra, and he waved the stick. It was so inspirational.

A 1952 graduate of Arts Center College of Design in Los Angeles, Bob grew up in the shadow of Grand Central Air Terminal, Southern California’s premier airport in the 1930s and ’40s, which these days just happens to be part of the site of the Disney Glendale campus. Watching the chaos of a busy airport—planes roaring overhead, sleek cars coming and going, and skirmishing mechanics making the aviation magic happen—whetted young Bob’s appetite for industrial design.

Bob Gurr with the Viewliner.
Bob Gurr in the ride-operator costume he wore during the Viewliner dedication in June 1957.

His numerous innovative and iconic designs for Disney—Autopia cars, the Monorail, PeopleMovers, Main Street, U.S.A. vehicles, Matterhorn bobsleds, and Mr. Toad cars, to name a few—led to his receiving the Themed Entertainment Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 1999. Five years later, Bob was officially recognized as a Disney Legend.

Bog Gurr in a test car
Young Bob studies automobile design at Art Center School circa 1950.

D23: Becoming a Disney Imagineer was truly a case of serendipity for you, wasn’t it?
Bob Gurr: While visiting Arts Center one day, sometime after graduating, I met an acquaintance with the school’s job placement department who asked me if I did any outside work. I had a day job and said “Yes,” but, really, I hadn’t done any. The next morning, he phones and tells me to be at the Disney Studio in 10 minutes. So I walked out of my job, smiled at my boss, and started work with Disney. It was the second week of October, 1954.

What was your first job with Disney?
Designing and building the Autopia cars in time for the opening of Disneyland.

Roger Broggie, Bob Gurr, Bill Cottrell, and Dick Irvine
Walt Disney at the seat of a clay model Autopia car in January 1955 with Imagineers (left to right) Roger Broggie, Bob Gurr, Bill Cottrell, and Dick Irvine.

How did you meet Walt?
A few weeks after starting with Disney, a group of us were huddled around an Autopia chassis and this old guy walks up, unshaven, funny short tie and Roy Rogers-style western belt. I thought this was the father of one of the night guards. We talked at great length about the car. When this guy walked away, everyone said, “See ya, Walt.” I thought, “Was that Walt Disney?” So I was never formally introduced. He was just another person in the midst of the conversation. And it was not until my third week, when Walt asked me questions about my books on car design, that we officially met.

Was there tremendous pressure to get the cars completed in time for the opening?
I would not call it pressure; it was more like enthusiasm for a new idea. There was so much excitement around Walt and so much going on. It wasn’t pressure—because if you’re doing something out of your own enthusiasm, you don’t see it as pressure.

Bob Gurr driving an Autopia car
Bob (driving the car in the foreground) rides down Main Street, U.S.A., behind the wheel of an Autopia car. Comedian Jerry Colonna, who provided the voice for March Hare in Alice in Wonderland, clowns for the camera in the adjacent police car.

What was Disneyland’s opening day like for you?
I was just trying to keep all the Autopia cars running, on the attraction and in the parade! We had 20 cars running but the carburetors kept locking up. I was constantly kick-starting the cars; once they were running they were OK, but waiting for the go-ahead to be in the live televised parade was the hardest part.

Isn’t there a story about Walt gifting you a garage?
After Disneyland opened, we had a lot of trouble with the Autopia cars. The majority of them were failing, and no one had figured out the support side of the attractions. I had been with my own tools, repairing the cars on-site. Walt came by, looked at the whole scene and asked, “What do you need?” I told him we needed mechanics to work on the cars, and we didn’t have any kind of facilities. In less than an hour, here comes this tractor dragging an old building and the driver says, “Here’s your damn building. Walt told me to bring it to you. Where do you want it?” We had mechanics the next morning.

Guests driving Autopia cars

What’s the difference between the Autopia experience of 1955 and the experience of today?
In one way, it’s exactly the same. When kids are growing up, they can’t wait to be tall enough to drive them. The current car was designed in 1967 with a better engine and more electrical components. We used the exact same car for Walt Disney World’s Tomorrowland Speedway. The bodies at Disneyland were redesigned in 2000, but the technical part of the cars is pretty much the same.

What influenced your design of the Disneyland Monorail, the first daily operating monorail in the western hemisphere?
Walt had returned from a trip to Germany and had photos of a monorail train that hung from a beam. It was very ugly, but he was excited about the idea. The whole thing looked like a loaf of bread with a slot sitting on a stick. I figured out how to hide the rail—you put a Buck Rogers spaceship on top of the beam with the point in the back—a sled runner in the front. It hides the fact that it’s a rectangle shape. The Monorail is like the California Zephyr; if you go to Disney California Adventure you can see the Zephyr’s fluid design influence. Another influence was the 1937 Greyhound Bus that was called the Silver Line.

You have said that the Disneyland Monorail is not a full-size train. What do you mean?
The Monorail is a smaller scale; there was nothing specified by Walt or anyone on the size of anything. In those days, when Walt said he wanted something, you immediately figured it out in your head and hoped it would be what Walt wanted.

the Monorail

Do you have a favorite Monorail design?
It’s like having six grandchildren and you’re asking me to pick one? They are all different for different reasons. A Learjet inspired the Mark IV design for Walt Disney World—the windshield, the color, the smoothness. When we were flying in the Disney jet, we stopped for gas one time in Kansas. Another corporate plane would land and a red carpet would be rolled out and a girl would walk out with flowers. I thought to myself, I want that feeling when people go to Walt Disney World. I want people to feel special when the Monorail comes to pick them up.

Like Mickey Mouse or the castles in Anaheim or Orlando, the Monorail simply screams “Disney.” What aspect of the Monorail are you most proud of?
That they have been operating efficiently 99.99 percent of the time since 1959!

Speaking of 1959, didn’t you have a funny thing happen to you on the opening day of the Monorail at Disneyland?
We had assembled the Monorail only two weeks prior to test and adjust, which now normally takes a year. Every day, the train went a little further and every day it broke down. The day before the Monorail was going to be dedicated on live television, the train did go around once without failure. The next morning, Walt is with Vice President Richard Nixon, and his family is up on the station platform for the dedication and Walt is showing off his Monorail. Walt said that he liked to drive the steam locomotives but because this is a modern train, “Bobby” will pilot. So, Walt gave the green light and without notice, we drove off… we just took off. Nixon realized that the Secret Service had not gotten on the train. When we came back into the station, the Nixon girls said “Let’s go again.” This time the Secret Service agents are trying to jump in the train as I drive right on through the station much to Nixon’s bemusement! We came back into the station and got out. Our German engineer came running up to me, yelling in a thick German accent, “You crazy Disney people! Just because you get the train to run once, you put your Vice President on this thing without knowing how it really works! You are a crazy person!”

the Matterhorn

Today all major tubular steel roller coasters can trace their design roots back to the Matterhorn Bobsleds at Disneyland. How did you earn your lederhosen on this project?
When Walt returned from making Third Man on the Mountain in Europe, he tells me that we are going to put in a Matterhorn with not just one but two roller coasters inside and that I’m to design the bobsled cars and design the track for the roller coaster. Fact of the matter is, I hate roller coasters! We had a year from start to the opening day. We built the fastest way out of necessity: We bent the track pipe and used wheels to speed up or slow down the bobsleds. This had never been done before. My son and I were the first riders on the Matterhorn. We had hay bales around the track and sand bags in a little test car that was ugly. Walt was there and said, “You designed it, you ride it.” After we survived the first few runs, all the executives rode and the ride got faster and faster.

Bob Gurr
Bob reviewing a 1960 Walt’s Runabout drawing in 1971.

You started working for Walt around the time that he became a TV personality. Were you ever in the park with him when he encountered fans?
In the park, he was a fast walker and he always made a point to keep moving. He always had a lot of guests with him, which made it hard for him. They slowed him down; if he stopped to sign one autograph, he would get surrounded. This is what led to the idea of having a runabout electric car for Walt to drive and take his guests around in. I came up with the 1903 Oldsmobile that was cuter than a bug’s ear. I actually selected the colors for each of the cars.

You worked on the fabled Flying Saucers at Disneyland. What was it like to ride it?
The Flying Saucers are a little bit hard to understand. It was like human air hockey.

Bob Gurr testing a ride vehicle
Bob at the wheel of the Ford Magic Skyway test car, with John Hench and Tommy Walker, at the Disney Studio in November 1961.

You worked on all four of the Disney shows for the 1964–65 New York World’s Fair. Which was your favorite?
I think the Ford Magic Skyway. I recall being at a meeting with Walt and Henry Ford II. We wanted to use the booster brakes like on the Matterhorn, and there was this Ford finance guy telling Walt not to do it. He wanted to use an assembly line sort of thing. During the conversation, the finance guy started heavily objecting and, in mid-sentence, Henry Ford kicked him under the table and the finance guy immediately changed his tune!

Is it true that Walt was once accused of killing President Lincoln?
Oh yeah, that’s right. We had a hydraulic overload problem prior to the World’s Fair opening. Walt was showing some lady the figure and a hose broke and it got on the shirt and turned it red. The lady started yelling at Walt—how dare he reenact the killing of President Lincoln! Walt wasn’t too happy.

You traveled extensively with Walt as he did research for his original vision of EPCOT. Did you spark to the idea of EPCOT?
EPCOT? I thought “Apricot!”… what the heck is it? I don’t ever remember being enthusiastic, and I don’t recall anyone else being enthusiastic about it because we were kind of getting thrown into it. It seemed like a cool dream, but the dream of utopia is a great first sentence and disintegrates when you get into the paragraph.

When most of the Disney Legends discuss working personally with Walt, they have a tendency to get a little wistful. Why?
You had to know Walt. I can understand the wistfulness. You get a guy like Walt once a century. We got to be the orchestra, and he waved the stick. It was so inspirational. Outside, the public viewed him as Wizard Disney, Genius Disney, and Walt Disney, but to us he was just Walt.

Bob Gurr with the Mark I Monorail
Bob helping with the Monorail Mark I assembly at Disneyland June 1959.

You designed so many things that are iconic to Disney. Which one sums up Bob Gurr the best?
The Monorail. It represents the feeling that there is a big beautiful tomorrow. I hear from adults about when they first saw it or when they first rode it. When you see a sleek monorail going across high on the beam with the sun setting behind it… I still get a little teary-eyed when I talk about it.

You were often asked to create things that didn’t exist. Isn’t that a difficult position to be in?
No, because it’s easier if it doesn’t exist. You don’t waste any time researching. You just get cracking and go and figure it out.

Bob Gurr with a Skyway bucket

You’re part of the first generation of Walt Disney Imagineers. In your opinion, what makes a great Imagineer?
A person that truly is curious about everything, especially things they don’t know anything about and are not truly interested in.

It’s really as easy as that?
Simple as that.

This Member Gift Honors A Film that Was Ahead of its Time

By Steven Vagnini

With its breathtaking introduction of color to animated films, Flowers and Trees (1932) brought a sense of renewal to the cartoon industry. Walt Disney’s Studio had done it again, pushing established boundaries in the service of creative storytelling—this time in glorious, new Technicolor. As reflected in this trade ad taken out by distributor United Artists, the short subject was enthusiastically received as a milestone in animation upon release.

Flowers and Trees trade ad D23 Gold Member gift
Click here to see the trade ad as part of D23’s 2016 Gold Member Gift, “From the Office of Walt Disney.”

Flowers and Trees was the 29th of 75 Silly Symphonies—the animated series that explored music and emotion in vibrant and unexpected ways—and is an outstanding illustration of the proving ground that the series provided. With no central character or theme to limit artists, the Symphonies presented Disney staff members the chance to experiment and open new forays in filmmaking… all in Walt’s enduring quest to elevate the cartoon medium. With trade ad in hand, D23 presents the story behind Flowers and Trees—another memorable milestone From the Office of Walt Disney.

Silly Symphony, Night from 1930

Of Mice and Music
From the very founding of the Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio in 1923, Walt Disney sought unique ways to bring his stories to life and distinguish them from other cartoons of the era. “Now they [Max and Dave Fleischer] had the clown out of the inkwell who played with the live people. So I reversed it,” Walt recounted in 1965. “I took the live person and put him into the cartoon field. I said, ‘That’s a new twist.’ And it sold.”

Walt was recounting the Alice Comedies, the groundbreaking Disney series that placed a live actress in a cartoon wonderland. Several years later, the next breakthrough in animation—the incorporation of synchronized sound—helped welcome Mickey Mouse into the hearts of audiences. And while distributors naturally wanted “more mice,” Walt insisted on producing a new cartoon series that, for the first time, relied less on humor and gags and more on mood and music: the Silly Symphonies.

Along the way, Walt took extra effort to infuse new levels of sophistication into his films (oftentimes at the frustration of his brother, Roy.) In 1930, the Studio began using a more delicate positive film stock, despite an added cost of $1,000 per short. And that year, intrigued by the idea of color, he asked Bill Cottrell to experiment by printing a Silly Symphony, Night (1930, pictured above), on blue film stock, attempting to produce a tinting effect to evoke a nighttime setting. Technology always seemed to be one step behind Walt Disney.

early Flowers and Trees art

An Adventure in Color
In early 1932, production was underway on a new Silly Symphony cartoon with the working title “Trees and Flowers.” The story would follow a pair of love-struck trees who find their romance threatened by the jealousy of gnarled old stump. After the villain instigates a devastating forest fire, true love wins the day and spring reawakens. With themes by classical composers like Mendelssohn and Beethoven, it would be the first Disney short to feature an all-classical musical score.

In the meantime, Walt discovered a new, three-strip color process that combined negatives of the three primary colors, allowing films to appear in full color for the first time. Recognizing the potential that color could bring to his work, Walt ignored Roy’s early opposition to the “prohibitively expensive” process and signed an agreement with Technicolor, providing the Disney Studio exclusive rights to the process in animated films for two years. He identified his new ode to nature—now titled Flowers and Trees—as the perfect story to introduce the process.

Flowers and Trees was halfway finished when Walt for asked his staff to pause production and convert the film to color. Months of work were added to the project as painters washed the gray shades off of cels and incorporated brilliant new colors. Costs mounted as background artists created all-new environments and technicians made efforts to keep colors from fading under the hot lights of a new camera stand.

Flowers and Trees poster

Spring Comes to Summertime
The Disney Studio’s bold new risk was ready for release by the summer of 1932. After watching an early screening, Hollywood showman Sid Grauman immediately identified Flowers and Trees as a sensation and booked it at the famous Chinese Theater alongside a major film release, Strange Interlude, in July.

“It received a very wonderful hand at the finish,” Roy remarked to a United Artists executive. Grauman himself heralded Flowers and Trees as a “creation of genius that marks a new milestone in cinematic development.”

Flowers and Trees

The Silly Symphonies Legacy
On November 18, 1932, Walt Disney accepted the first-ever Academy Award® for Cartoon Short Subject. (A Disney cartoon would go on to win the award for that category each subsequent year of the decade.) Flowers and Trees—as well as a special Oscar® for the creation of Mickey Mouse—also marked the first of Walt’s 32 awards from the Academy, a record that remains unmatched in Hollywood.

By this time, the Silly Symphonies had begun to rival the Mickey Mouse series in popularity and would also introduce their own lineup of original, memorable characters, including Donald Duck. But perhaps their greatest legacy is the freedom they afforded artists to explore their trade—from advancing personality animation in Three Little Pigs (1933) to creating a whole new sense of depth and dimension in The Old Mill (1937). Each step of the way, the Disney staff built the confidence and skills needed to break ground on an entirely new motion picture genre: feature animation. “Without the work I did on the Symphonies, I’d never have been prepared even to tackle Snow White,” Walt would later remark.

While the Silly Symphonies serve as bold artistic statements of their era, they continue to be appreciated as pieces of imaginative and enchanting entertainment. “You have to look at them with new eyes… and just look at these things for what they are,” suggested composer Richard Sherman during an interview for the Walt Disney Treasures series. “And they’re very thrilling. You step into another world. A sweet world, an innocent world. And a very lovely, laid-back world. The kind of world I sort of miss.”


When D23 Gold Members open their 2016 D23 Member Gift, “From the Office of Walt Disney,” they’ll discover a recreated Silly Symphonies trade ad, heralding the arrival of color to animated films and noting the success of the animated cartoon series.

This advertisement is one of 23 reproduced treasures from the Walt Disney Archives, celebrating major milestones in the life and career of Walter Elias Disney. To learn more about this first-of-its-kind collection, visit D23.com/OfficeofWaltDisney.

Who’s the Greenest of Them All this St. Patrick’s Day?

It’s St. Patrick’s Day, when all of us have a little bit of the “luck o’ the Irish”! Named for the patron saint of Ireland, the holiday was made official in the early 17th century; here in the United States, it’s seen as a celebration of Irish (and Irish-American) culture, and features numerous parades… not to mention, the traditional “wearing of the green”—a color that has been associated with Ireland since at least the late 1700s, when the green harp flag (used by the Society of United Irishmen) was first displayed.

There’s no shortage of green characters in Disney history—so we picked 10 of our favorites, all of whom could celebrate St. Patrick’s Day year ’round. “May the road rise up to meet you … Éirinn go Brách!”

Kermit the Frog

Kermit the Frog (The Muppets)
All told, it’s pretty easy “Being Green” for everyone’s favorite kind-hearted, banjo-playing, song-and-dance frog from the swamps (currently executive-producing Miss Piggy’s late night chat show on ABC’s The Muppets)… As the song says, green can be “important like a mountain” or “tall like a tree”—and for Kermit, “it’ll do fine.”

Arlo

Arlo (The Good Dinosaur)
One of Disney’s more recent viridescent characters, Arlo is the adorable Aptosaurus who befriends a human boy before setting off on adventure through rough and mysterious terrain in The Good Dinosaur. Considering he confronted (and overcame) his fears, maybe he found a lucky shamrock along the way!

Elliott

Elliott (Pete’s Dragon)
Chances are you’re familiar with Elliott—the large, green, always mischievous yet occasionally invisible dragon at the heart of Disney’s 1977 film Pete’s Dragon. (We’re big fans of his around these parts.) A new take on Elliott’s story hits theaters this August!

Greedo

Greedo (Star Wars: A New Hope)
Ah, yes—the Rodian bounty hunter (with scaly green skin) known for his infamous interaction with the one and only Han Solo in Episode IV. A frequent customer at the Mos Eisley Cantina, Greedo might’ve benefited from the “luck o’ the Irish” the last time he showed his face there.

Disgust

Disgust (Inside Out)
One of five emotions inside Riley’s mind in Disney•Pixar’s Inside Out, Disgust has vibrant green hair (and skin and clothing) and works hard to make sure Riley is never poisoned—either physically or socially. Fun fact: She especially hates broccoli (also green).

Donald Duck (left, Panchito Pistoles (middle), Jose Carioca (right)

José Carioca (The Three Caballeros)
José is the Brazilian parrot that stars alongside Donald Duck in Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros. His feathers are a lovely shade of green and he’s the life of the party; sounds like he’s the perfect person with whom to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day!

Maleficent

Maleficent (Sleeping Beauty)
This vengeful villain from 1959’s Sleeping Beauty has pale green skin—which is mostly hidden under her cloak and horned headdress. It’s said that Maleficent’s elegant look (rather than that of a hag-like witch) best suited artist and Disney Legend Eyvind Earle’s background art for the film.

Aliens from Toy Story

Aliens (Toy Story trilogy)
“Oooooooh!” Some of the more iconic green characters in recent Disney history, the aliens first met Woody and Buzz in the original Toy Story—later becoming especially loyal to “foster parents” Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head.

Oogie Boogie

Oogie Boogie (Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas)
Halloween, Christmas, and St. Patrick’s Day in one? If you ask us, Oogie Boogie (from 1993’s stop-motion animated film Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas) can represent all three holidays! His burlap sack body (filled with bugs) is a grayish green; he likes to scare little children; and he kidnapped Santa Claus on Christmas Eve.

Gamora

Gamora (Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy)
Have you ever wondered what makes Gamora’s skin green? Guardians of the Galaxy’s “most dangerous woman in the Universe” is the last surviving humanoid from Zen-Whoberi—a planet in the Silicon Star System of the Milky Way.

New Look at Captain America: Civil War—Plus More in News Briefs

A Brand-New Peek into Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War

Are your “spidey senses” tingling? That’s no surprise, considering a new Captain America: Civil War trailer just burnt up the Internet! And unless you’ve been living in a Hydra fortress (and, if so, please consider switching sides), you’ve probably seen the new look at what starts tearing the Avengers apart, resulting in two distinct camps: #TeamCap (led by Steve Rogers) and #TeamIronMan (led by Tony Stark). And you’ve also probably gone onto Facebook or Twitter to talk about that very special glimpse of red and black towards the end of the trailer…

If you haven’t seen the clip yet, click the above link and watch—post haste! You won’t be disappointed. And don’t forget to mark your calendar for Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War, coming to a theater near you on May 6.

Mark your calendar with upcoming Disney events

Save the Date!
Be sure to mark these upcoming Disney events on your calendar:

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
March 18
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Charlie Ridgway
March 19
D23’s Very Important Date: 65 Years of Alice in Wonderland—Florida

April 8
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Don Iwerks
April 9
D23 Day at the Walt Disney Studios
April 20
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On Tour in Portland, Oregon
June 8
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On Tour in Salt Lake City, Utah
Studios
April 15
The Jungle Book opens in theaters.
May 6
Captain America: Civil War opens in theaters.
May 27
Alice Through the Looking Glass opens in theaters.
June 17
Finding Dory opens in theaters.
July 1
The BFG opens in theaters.
August 12
Pete’s Dragon opens in theaters.
November 23
Moana opens in theaters.
December 16
Rogue One opens in theaters.
Parks
March 2—May 30
Epcot International Flower & Garden Festival
April 1-May 1
Disney California Adventure Food & Wine Festival
June 16
Shanghai Disney Resort to open
Television
May 1
Disney Channel Presents the Radio Disney Music Awards airs on Disney Channel from 7–9 p.m. EST

Inside Look at Frozen – Live at the Hyperion at Disney California Adventure

If you’re an avid reader of D23.com’s News Briefs (and if so, yay!), you may remember last week’s snippet about the brand-new live stage show coming to Disney California Adventure… Frozen—Live at the Hyperion.

Luckily, the good folks over at the Disneyland Resort have brought us all a peek into the rehearsal process with a new behind-the-scenes video, above. Watch as Dana Harrel from Walt Disney Imagineering Creative Entertainment and show director Liesl Tommy (who directed the current Broadway hit Eclipsed starring Lupita Nyong’o) pull back the proverbial curtain for an early look at the production.

“Let It Go” with the cast of Frozen—Live at the Hyperion when it debuts at DCA on May 27!

Star Wars at SXSW: Stormtroopers A-Plenty and New Bonus Feature Clip

The Force is strong in Austin! To celebrate the premiere of “Secrets of The Force Awakens: A Cinematic Journey” at the SXSW Film Festival, The First Order TIE Fighter and a plethora of Stormtroopers landed in ATX—much to the delight of festivalgoers, who caught the invasion at the SouthBites Trailer Park food truck gathering this past weekend.

The new feature-length documentary—an amazing bonus feature on the upcoming Digital HD and Blu-ray Combo Pack—just debuted at the Paramount Theatre on Monday. Want a sneak peek? Check out the clip above, featuring footage from the very first Star Wars: The Force Awakens table read!

Bring Star Wars: The Force Awakens home when it debuts on Digital HD this April 1, and on Blu-ray® Combo Pack and DVD on April 5.

Captain America: Civil War

Marvel Announces Girls Reforming the Future Challenge

In Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War, each hero is forced to choose a side in their fight to reform the future. Although the Avengers become divided, they remain united by the same goals: the commitment to safeguard humanity, protect the earth at all costs, and make the world better for future generations. To that end, Marvel Studios is launching the Girls Reforming the Future Challenge—aimed at engaging young women to further the Avengers’ goal of making the world a better place…

This program, supported by the Science & Entertainment Exchange from the National Academy of Sciences, seeks to inspire young girls to create positive global change for their generation and beyond through science and technology. The challenge invites girls ages 15 through 18 (in grades 10 through 12) across America to submit innovative STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, or Mathematics)-based projects that have the potential to change the world. Each applicant will be asked to submit a short video demonstrating her project; five finalists will be selected to come to California and present their projects to a panel of experts, and one grand-prize winner will be selected to receive an internship with Marvel Studios!

For more information about the Girls Reforming the Future Challenge, visit CaptainAmericaChallenge.com. (FYI: The final date to submit a project is March 26. Good luck!)

Nashville

On the Road Again: ABC’s Nashville Sets U.S. and International Tours

After sold-out tours across America in 2014 and ’15, the stars of ABC’s hit drama Nashville will once again take the show on the road this spring! The tour will feature cast members Clare Bowen, Chris Carmack, and Charles Esten performing original music as well as songs from the show. Plus, Will Chase, Jonathan Jackson, and Aubrey Peeples will join the tour in select cities.

Additionally, the “Nashville in Concert” tour will also stage its first-ever international run in the United Kingdom with Clare Bowen, Chris Carmack, Charles Esten, and Sam Palladio performing. Tickets for both the U.S. tour and the U.K. dates go on sale this Friday, March 18! For more info, check out www.abc.com/nashvilletour.

Nashville returns with all original episodes beginning Wednesday, March 16, at 10 p.m. ET/PT, only on ABC.

Share Your Ears

Disneyland Resort Doubles #ShareYourEars Donation to Make-A-Wish®

Amazing news! The recent #ShareYourEars campaign—which saw Disneyland Resort pledging to donate $5 to Make-A-Wish® for every “ear photo” that fans shared on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, up to $1 million—was so successful, they’ve decided to double the donation! Disney Parks recently announced it would donate a whopping $2 million to Make-A-Wish in recognition of the huge outpouring of support for the campaign. An exclusive dazzled Ear Hat and two exclusive Disney experiences are part of a sweepstakes to raise additional funds—and proceeds from the sale of collectible 60th Anniversary Ear Hats sold at Disneyland also will go to Make-A-Wish.

The #ShareYourEars campaign was launched in February to honor the 100,000th Disney wish granted globally for Make-A-Wish (bringing hope and joy to children with life-threatening medical conditions), as well as in celebration of Disneyland Resort’s 60th Anniversary. To find out more about the #ShareYourEars sweepstakes, and to see a plethora of fantastic “ear photos,” head over to www.ShareYourEars.org.

Star Wars Day at Sea

Star Wars Day at Sea Returns to Disney Cruise Line in ’17

Fans of Star Wars who also like to sail the ocean blue… take note: With the overwhelming excitement of cruisers to this year’s Star Wars Day at Sea aboard the Disney Fantasy, Disney Cruise Line recently announced the return of the day-long galactic celebration in 2017! Each sailing will feature a full day of Dark Side and Light Side shenanigans, including official appearances of Star Wars characters, a deck party complete with fireworks, Jedi training for kids, at-sea screenings of Star Wars films, unique food and beverage offerings, and exclusive merchandise.

Plus, the special Disney Fantasy sailings are expanding to both eastern and western Caribbean 7-night itineraries… but they’re only offered for a limited time on 15 sailings from early January 2017 through mid-April 2017 from Port Canaveral. Check your calendars and get to booking!

The Absent-Minded Professor: Did You Know?

By Greg Ehrbar

On March 16, Walt Disney’s mega-hit comedy-fantasy The Absent-Minded Professor turns 55—but the laughter is ageless, from its high-flying Model T antics and gravity-defying basketball game to the its inventive script that moves deftly between all-out zaniness and wry political satire. Along with The Parent Trap, it was one of the five highest-grossing movies of 1961.

With Professor Brainard’s permission, we went digging through his messy file cabinets for flubberized factoids about this comic classic that you either never knew or—like the Professor—forgot about.

  1. The Absent-Minded Professor completed the “blueprint” for Disney comedy-fantasies that began with 1959’s The Shaggy Dog and continued for decades to come, including the casting of familiar, beloved character actors (many of whom appear in subsequent films in similar or identical roles) and making a specific sport or other competition a key plot point. Even the setting of always financially struggling Medfield College was the backdrop for the film’s sequel, Son of Flubber, the 1997 Flubber remake, and the Kurt Russell trilogy: The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes, Now You See Him, Now You Don’t, and The Strongest Man in the World. The Epcot attraction Journey Into Imagination with Figment contains several references to Flubber as well as a Medfield letterman’s jacket inside a computer room.
  2. Professor Brainard holding Flubber

  3. In The Disney Films, Leonard Maltin notes that Time magazine revealed the Disney special effects department’s formula for Flubber: “To one pound of salt water taffy add one heaping tablespoon polyurethane foam, one can crumbled yeast. Mix till smooth, allow to rise. Then pour into saucepan over one cup cracked rice mixed with one cup water. Add topping of molasses. Boil till it lifts lid and says ‘Qurlp.” (Kids, don’t try this at home.)
  4. In addition to miniatures and film process screen effects, a full-sized Model T was refitted so it could “fly” with two people inside. In the book, The Disney Live-Action Productions, Second Unit Director Arthur J. Vitarelli told author John G. West that the car was lightened with aluminum fenders, a fiberglass crankcase, and foam rubber tires, then lifted by four powerful wires from a rectangular platform attached to a 150-foot crane.
  5. Professor Brainard creating Flubber

  6. Producer/writer Bill Walsh told author West that real-life Professor Julius Sumner Miller from El Camino College supervised the laboratory sequences and helped develop the concept of Flubber. When the Mickey Mouse Club was syndicated for TV in 1962 Professor Miller appeared in new features as “Professor Wonderful” and recorded a series of albums for Disneyland Records about famous inventors.
  7. Professor Brainard and his lady flying in the car

  8. The Absent-Minded Professor predates another classic story about a vintage flying car: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, which was written by James Bond author Ian Fleming in 1964 and hit movie screens in 1968 (starring Dick Van Dyke with a classic Sherman Brothers score). There are coincidental visual similarities, particularly at the end of both films, in which the crazy inventors and their lady loves fly off in their respective fanciful flivvers.
  9. Album cover for Story of The Absent-Minded Professor

  10. Speaking of “the boys,” Richard and Robert Sherman made their big-screen songwriting debut with “The Medfield Fight Song” a.k.a. “The Absent-Minded Professor March.” A version of the song, produced by Tutti Camarata, appeared on a Disneyland Records Storyteller album based on the film, narrated by Sterling Holloway (voice of Pooh, Kaa, and the Cheshire Cat) with vocal effects by Sam Edwards, who appears in the movie briefly as a military technician.

Indiana Jones and the Most Amazing News!

Adventure… Excitement… Humor… Romance. These qualities are inextricably associated with Disney storytelling, from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to Star Wars: The Force Awakens, and they immediately come to mind when you think about another beloved movie franchise—Indiana Jones. The iconic hero first hit the big screen in 1981 in Raiders of the Lost Ark, portrayed by Harrison Ford and directed by Academy Award®-winning director Steven Spielberg. His daring exploits continued in subsequent movies: Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. And today The Walt Disney Studios announced that Indiana Jones will return to the big screen on July 19, 2019, for a fifth epic adventure in the blockbuster series! Steven Spielberg, who directed all four previous films, will helm the as-yet-untitled project with star Harrison Ford reprising his iconic role. Franchise veterans Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall will produce.

“Indiana Jones is one of the greatest heroes in cinematic history, and we can’t wait to bring him back to the screen in 2019,” said Alan Horn, Chairman, The Walt Disney Studios. “It’s rare to have such a perfect combination of director, producers, actor and role, and we couldn’t be more excited to embark on this adventure with Harrison and Steven.”

Indiana Jones Stunt Spectacular

Disney fans have embraced Indy since the opening of the Indiana Jones Epic Stunt Spectacular at Disney-MGM Studios in 1989, and the thrills have only become more, well, thrilling with the addition of Indiana Jones-themed attractions at Disney parks around the world.

Disneyland Paris was the first Disney park to translate the on-screen excitement to real-life exhilaration with Indiana Jones and the Temple of Peril, which opened July 30, 1993. Some Disney fans might even remember that the ride ran backwards for a time, from April 1, 2000 until December 3, 2004! Guests of the Disneyland Resort began asking, “Snakes. Why did it have to be snakes?” on March 3, 1995, with the opening of Indiana Jones Adventure in Adventureland; and Indiana Jones Adventure: Temple of the Crystal Skull made its Tokyo DisneySea debut on September 4, 2001, in the Lost River Delta area.

Jock Lindsey's Hangar Bar

The newest way that a Disney parks guest can channel his or her inner Indy is to take a break at Jock Lindsey’s Hangar Bar at Disney Springs at the Walt Disney World Resort. The bar opened in September 2015 and is named for Indy’s pilot and sidekick, Jock Lindsey. Since we didn’t have a lot of time to get to know Jock in Raiders of the Lost Ark—it was about a minute, according to our friends at the Disney Parks Blog—the talented folks from Walt Disney Imagineering developed a fun backstory that turned Jock Lindsey’s Hangar Bar into as much a feast for the eyes as it is for the taste buds.

More details will be announced later, and D23 will be bringing all the news your way as it breaks. So hang on to your fedora and keep an eye out for snakes—Indy will be back before you know it!

Disney Details: Cottage in the Glade

Savor this scene of a stone cottage standing resolutely in the shade of tall trees, with hydrangea and lilies bending beautifully in the breeze. You can discover this gorgeous glade the next time you visit the Canadian Pavilion at Epcot, where you may be surprised to learn that what appears to be a cottage drawn straight form the pages of Thomas Hardy is really a structure for storing tools used by the landscaping department in the upkeep of this beautiful part of the park.

It’s all in the Disney Details!

You’ve Never Seen a Disney Clock Tower Like This Before

You watch the clock when you’re bored… or when you’re running late. But the Shanghai Disney Store recently debuted a brand-new clock tower that’s positively going to stop you in your tracks.

The Shanghai Disney Store was already pretty spectacular. It opened on May 20, 2015, in the city’s Lujiazui shopping district, and it’s the world’s largest Disney Store—with unique features that include a 19-foot-tall “Disney Magic Kingdom Castle” in the middle of the store and a Mickey-shaped roof sculpted with more than 8,000 LED lights. The store is home to a stunning landscaped plaza that has just become even more breathtaking with the addition of this new Glockenspiel-style clock tower.

You can easily lose track of time as you focus on all of the details that have been incorporated into the clock by the designers at Walt Disney Imagineering. The clock face of the 60-foot-tall tower might just remind you of an iconic timepiece you once wore—or still wear?—around your wrist.

Mickey Mouse clock face

At the base of the clock are statues of Mickey’s best buds—Donald Duck, Goofy, Pluto, and Minnie Mouse.

Goofy statue on the Shanghai Disney Store Clock Tower

Everywhere you look there’s something that makes you pause, from the visible gears and mechanisms to the beautiful lighting to our favorite touch, the Disney, Disney•Pixar, Marvel, and Star Wars characters that emerge to greet guests on the hour and half hour—accompanied by melodious bells and musical shows.

Disney characters coming out of the Shanghai Disney Store Clock Tower

“We hope the Shanghai Disney Store clock tower will become a new landmark for this great city, providing a preview of the magic that will soon arrive with the opening of Shanghai Disney resort,” Bob Weis, president, Walt Disney Imagineering, said.

“We are extremely proud that the Shanghai Disney Store is the first Disney Store in the world with an outdoor plaza and clock tower, which not only provides guests with a unique shopping and entertainment experience, but also serves as a perfect meeting location for friends and families,” added Ando Toru, senior vice president and general manager, Disney Store Asia, Disney Store Japan, and Disney Store China.

So make time now to watch this video and see this unbelievable clock in action, and to hear directly from Imagineers about creating one of Shanghai’s newest landmarks.