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Sweet niblets! It was 15 years ago today that we first met Miley Stewart—average teenager by day, pop superstar singer by night—in the classic Disney Channel series, Hannah Montana, which ran from March 24, 2006 until January 16, 2011. The show marked a career-making debut for Miley Cyrus, who starred as the title character, a hugely successful pop singer with a wardrobe (and a closet!) to die for and an ever-growing list of hit records. But when Miley took off Hannah’s wig, she was just an “ordinary girl.” Who would’ve thought that a girl like her would double as a superstar? Usually no one, but there were a lot of close calls over Hannah Montana’s four seasons, which were filled with slapstick shenanigans and infectious songs we still haven’t gotten out of our heads 15 years later.
In honor of this milestone anniversary, we’ve got the best of both worlds: a celebration of the iconic series and a chance to see how your Hannah Montana memories stack up. Can you finish the lyrics to these hits? See how well you do, and then head over to Disney+ where all four seasons of Hannah Montana are streaming now.
1. “You get the best of both worlds. Chill it out, take it slow, then you ____ “ A. Go with the flow
B. Rock out the show
C. Just can’t say no
D. Can’t wait to go
2. “Gotta make this party grow… Together we can ____”
A. Make it blow
B. Let it go
C. Start the show
D. Make it glow
3. “Something’s been telling me, telling me maybe ____”
A. This could be true love
B. This might just be love
C. We could be in love
D. He could be the one
4. “So I’m moving on, letting go, holding on to ____” A. My memories
B. Tomorrow
C. The future
D. What I had
5. “When you ask, ‘Do you want to dance, my _____ Cinderella?’ A. Lovely
B. Princess
C. Barefoot
D. Graceful
6. “I know where I stand, I know who I am, I would never run away when ____” A. You get mad
B. It gets hard
C. I feel sad
D. Life gets bad
7. “Who said, who said I can’t be Superman? I say, I say that ____” A. I know I can
B. I am that strong
C. I’m gonna fly
D. I’m made of steel
8. “Everybody makes mistakes, everybody ____” A. Loses their way
B. Has to pay
C. Come what may
D. Has those days
9. “Sometimes I’m lazy, I get ____; I get scared, I feel ____” A. Bored, ignored
B. Sad, so mad
C. Tired, inspired
D. Mean, unseen
10. “I know how you always seem to go for ____ instead of me” A. The other girl
B. The movie star
C. The obvious
D. The heroine
Correct answers:
1. B, Rock out the show (“Best of Both Worlds”)
2. A, Make it blow (“Pumpin’ Up the Party”)
3. D, He could be the one (“He Could Be the One”)
4. B, Tomorrow (“Wherever I Go”)
5. C, Barefoot (“Barefoot Cinderella”)
6. D, Life gets bad (“I Got Nerve”)
7. A, I know I can (“Who Said”)
8. D, Has those days (“Nobody’s Perfect”)
9. A, Bored, ignored (“Ordinary Girl”)
10. C, The obvious (“If We Were a Movie”)
If you got…
1–4
Nobody’s perfect. You gotta work it again and again ’til you get it right. Better luck next time!
5–8 Get up, get loud, start pumpin’ up the party now! You’re this close to an all-access pass. Watch a few episodes of Hannah Montana on Disney+ and give the quiz another try.
9–10 Everybody makes mistakes… but not you, when it comes to Hannah Montana lyrics. Congratulations—you’re the ultimate fan!
Women have worked at The Walt Disney Studios since it opened in the 1920s. Here at the Walt Disney Archives, we love to shine a light on some of those amazing trailblazers!
Berta “Bea” Tamargo was born in 1928 in Havana, Cuba, but moved with her family to Miami when she was 10 years old. She started studying art in high school and fell in love with it.
When her family moved to Los Angeles, Bea decided to get a job at The Walt Disney Studios. She was hired as an Inker for the Ink and Paint Department in 1946. Her talent for drawing was soon recognized and she was promoted to Assistant Animator. She was one of a few women who worked in the Animation Department at that time.
Bea worked on the feature length films Cinderella (1950), Alice in Wonderland (1951), Peter Pan (1953) and Lady and the Tramp (1955). The Walt Disney Archives Photo Library is home to photos of Bea in action, including images of the artist working on Lady during the production of Lady and the Tramp in 1954.
Bea Tamargo sketches Lady from Lady and the Tramp.
Bea’s background and language skills were a valuable asset for The Walt Disney Studios as well. She was called in on many occasions to help interpret and translate for Spanish-speaking dignitaries and guests visiting the Studios. She also helped dub lines for cartoon productions with Latin American backgrounds, and even occasionally served as a live-action reference model.
With such a long list of talents, we are honored that Bea spent her formative years creating magic at the Walt Disney Studios! Thank you, Bea!
Bea Tamargo shows off her artistic talents and illustrates Lady from Lady and the Tramp.
Disney Legend Jim Cora, who joined Disneyland Park as an attractions host in 1957 and retired as chairman of Disney International 43 years later, passed away Sunday after a brief hospitalization. He was 83.
“Very few people have a Disney legacy that reaches as far and wide as Jim Cora,” said Disney Parks chairman and former Disneyland resort president Josh D’Amaro, “His dedication to bringing Disney magic to people around the world was only matched by the passion he exuded throughout his career and for the many years that followed. I always loved hearing Jim’s thoughts about our business. He was one of our last connections to Walt Disney and he will be missed dearly.”
Cora credited his push from the Matterhorn Bobsleds to the Disneyland Administration Building to a fellow named Walt Disney. “He asked me if I had an interest in training,” Jim recalls. “[Future Disney Legend] Van France was just starting the University, and he was looking for five guys.”
Left to Right: Disney Legends Tom Nabbe, Jim Cora, and Bill Sullivan autograph their award plaques during the 2005 Disney Legends Awards ceremony at Disneyland.
A few years later, while working for Retlaw Enterprises (the Disney family-owned company), Jim was part of the opening team for Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room.
Jim graduated from California State University, Long Beach in 1962 with a Bachelor of Arts in English. He also attended a two-year executive management program at the University of Southern California.
For 10 years, Jim held positions of increasing responsibility in management at Disneyland. In 1971, he assisted in the opening of the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World, implementing the “Disney Way of Leadership” program. In 1974, as staff assistant to Dick Nunis, president of Walt Disney Attractions, Jim redesigned the Disneyland Park operating organization to the “area concept,” becoming one of three production directors for the Park, responsible for Fantasyland and Tomorrowland.
While leading Disneyland International, Cora oversaw the development of Tokyo DisneySea, the Company’s ninth theme park. He is pictured here in front of the park’s impressive central icon, Mount Prometheus.
In 1979, Jim assumed the responsibilities of managing director of Operations for the Tokyo Disneyland Project. In this capacity, he was responsible for all operational planning and management training for Tokyo Disneyland.
In preparation for the opening of Tokyo Disneyland, Jim was promoted to vice president, Walt Disney Productions Japan, Ltd. He relocated to Japan and was instrumental in providing ongoing support and advice to Oriental Land Company (owner and operator of Tokyo Disneyland), as well as overseeing Disney’s operational and design standards. In 1983, Jim returned to California and assumed the position of vice president, Disneyland International.
In 1985, Jim was responsible for negotiating the agreements, master planning, and site research for the Disneyland Paris project. In 1987, he was promoted to executive vice president and chief operating officer for Euro Disneyland Corporation.
Jim Cora (left) and former Disneyland Resort president Matt Ouimet during the 2005 Disney Legends Awards ceremony at Disneyland.
In 1995, Jim was promoted to president, Disneyland International, responsible for the development and creative direction of Tokyo Disneyland, in addition to directing the strategic and creative development of Tokyo DisneySea. In 1999, Jim was promoted to chairman, Disneyland International, where his primary focus was to develop and maintain the strategies that ensured the continued growth and success of the Tokyo Disney Resort. He retired from that position in 2001, after 43 years with Disney.
Disney Legend Jim Cora pauses for photo at The Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California, in October 2016.
After retirement, Jim was heavily involved in volunteer work, including with Taller San Jose Hope Builders, and for years was on the board of directors of St. Joseph Hospital in Orange, where he passed away. He had recently completed his memoir, Not Just a Walk in the Park: My Worldwide Disney Resorts Career, which will be published later this year by Disney Editions.
Jim is survived by his wife, Mimi; daughter René Wong and her husband Kelly; his son Jim, and his wife, Bonnie; two grandchildren, Kayleigh and Joshua; and siblings Marilyn and John. Jim was preceded in death by his daughter, Michelle, in 1995.
Mark your calendars! Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution today announced new release details for a number of titles on Walt Disney Studios’ upcoming slate of films, including Disney’s Cruella, Marvel Studios’ Black Widow, and Disney and Pixar’s Luca.
“Today’s announcement reflects our focus on providing consumer choice and serving the evolving preferences of audiences. By leveraging a flexible distribution strategy in a dynamic marketplace that is beginning to recover from the global pandemic, we will continue to employ the best options to deliver The Walt Disney Company’s unparalleled storytelling to fans and families around the world,” said Kareem Daniel, Chairman, Disney Media & Entertainment Distribution.
Disney’s live-action Cruella will launch simultaneously in theaters and on Disney+ with Premier Access in most Disney+ markets on Friday, May 28, followed by Marvel Studios’ long-awaited Black Widow on Friday, July 9, respectively. This comes on the heels of the successful release of Raya and the Last Dragon, which launched in theaters and on Disney+ with Premier Access on March 5.
Similar to the launch of Disney and Pixar’s Academy Award®-nominated Soul that delighted Disney+ subscribers during the holidays, Disney and Pixar’s Luca will stream directly in homes worldwide exclusively on Disney+ beginning Friday, June 18, as a special offering to kick off the summer season. In international markets where Disney+ is not yet available, the film will be released theatrically, with premiere dates to be announced.
Theatrical release dates also shifted for several additional upcoming films. New release dates include:
Free Guy on August 13, 2021
Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings on September 3, 2021
The King’s Man on December 22, 2021
Deep Water on January 14, 2022
Death on the Nile on February 11, 2022
Stay tuned to D23.com for news and more details about all of these films in the coming months.
What is the measure of a true hero? In the Disney animated film Hercules, the titular character strives to discover just that, ultimately achieving true hero status but turning away his chance to live as a god on Mt. Olympus so he can be with the woman he loves. But what if he had accepted the offer to become a full Greek god? In Go the Distance: A Twisted Tale, author Jen Calonita explores what would happen to Megara when Hercules ascends to Mt. Olympus and she can’t join him. Hera offers a solution: Meg has to rescue her ex’s current wife from the Underworld. You know, the ex-boyfriend who she saved by giving up her soul? The ex-boyfriend who then moved on to a new girl while Meg was trapped in the Underworld? Yeah, that’s a challenge only a true hero can face. Discover how Meg takes on this quest in an exclusive excerpt below. Go the Distance: A Twisted Tale is available for preorder now and hits shelves on April 6.
Go the Distance: A Twisted Tale [excerpt]
By Jen Calonita
“I have purpose and drive,” Meg said grudgingly, folding her arms across her chest.
“Do you?” Athena asked almost mockingly. “Is that why you played my flute so beautifully when given the chance? We both know you know how to play.”
“You do?” Phil questioned. “It kind of sounded like you didn’t. No offense.”
Meg’s cheeks colored slightly. “I don’t play anymore.”
“Not because you can’t, but because you have lost your will,” Athena pointed out. “Therein lies the problem.”
“Why don’t you play anymore?” Phil asked.
Meg brushed him off. “That’s not important.”
Athena’s eyes flashed. “On the contrary, it’s very important. You are going to war, Megara. And in war, one must have the will to fight for what they want or they will fall in
battle as swiftly as a sword cuts through the air.”
Meg stifled a sigh, careful not to offend the god in front of her. What do I want? she asked herself. I care for Hercules, but we’ve just started to get to know each other. How do I know I want to be with him forever? And how do I actually know I’d even make a decent god? That’s a pretty big commitment, too. When have those ever worked out for me?
“Good!” Athena nodded appraisingly. “Finally, we are getting somewhere. Without questioning where you’ve been, you’ll never understand where you must go.”
Meg tried not to look too shocked. So Athena could hear her thoughts. She supposed it made sense. She had prayed to the gods for answers before. One just happened to be standing in front of her now.
“Wait, did I miss something?” Phil asked.
Both women ignored him.
“But how do I know what I want without having the time to figure it out?” Meg questioned.
“War waits for no one,” Athena said. “You have a deadline. To find answers, you must look to both the past and future for guidance.”
Meg still wasn’t sure she understood. How was someone supposed to understand something like love? How would she know what she wanted out of Hercules, out of herself ?
How could she be a god like Athena when she did not know the answer to those questions?
“Yes, like that!” Athena said, again seeming to hear her thoughts. “The more questions the better! I want to see fire in your belly, Megara. I know you have it, or you would not
have been able to beat that Empusa.” The god studied Meg. “Perhaps Hera was right to put her faith in you. If you do as I say, you’ll do well on the journey ahead.”
Meg inhaled sharply. The next part of her quest! “What do I have to do?”
Phil, Pegasus, and Meg looked at Athena. Her dress blew softly in the light breeze and she seemed to consider the question. Finally, she spoke. “You must go to the Underworld
to retrieve a lost soul.”
Meg felt as if the earth beneath her feet had dropped out from under her. Her mouth went dry. “The Underworld?”
This had to be a cruel joke. Hera couldn’t expect her to travel to the land of death and be able to return a third time.
“But we just got her back from there!” Phil sputtered. Exactly! Meg wanted to cry, but she was too afraid to speak.
“Quests are not for the faint of heart,” Athena said simply.
Hades did not just let souls come or go. Charon, the ferryman, only shuttled the dead, and even if one could get past him, there was Hades’s three-headed dog, Cerberus, at the entrance to the Underworld to keep mortals out. This was an impossible task. Meg rubbed the bandages on her arm and tried not to let her fear show. “Do you know whose soul I’m looking for? The Underworld, unfortunately, is a rather large place.”
Athena staked the tip of her sword in the dirt and squared her shoulders. “Her name is Katerina. I believe she captured the heart of someone you once loved.”
Meg felt the world start to spin. “Katerina?” She reached out for Peg. Her knees felt like they might buckle.
“Katerina?” Phil repeated. “Who is Katerina?”
Meg wasn’t sure she could answer that question without opening up an entire new can of worms. “He left me for Katerina.”
Phil scratched his right horn. “Hercules?”
“No!” Meg felt herself grow impatient. Her chest felt like it was constricting, and it was suddenly hard to breathe.
“Aegeus.”
“Who is Aegeus?” Phil asked, but Meg couldn’t speak.
Athena had to do it for her. “He’s the one Megara gave up her soul for.”
This morning, Disney Channel announced that production is scheduled to begin later this spring in Toronto on the music-driven ZOMBIES 3, the intergalactic third story in the hit Disney Channel Original Movie franchise. Stars Meg Donnelly and Milo Manheim will reprise their respective roles as Addison and Zed, Seabrook’s star-crossed cheerleader and zombie couple.
“After the enormous success of ZOMBIES 2, we wanted to raise the stakes in this third and final installment,” said Lauren Kisilevsky, vice president, Original Movies, Disney Branded Television. “So when the ultimate outsiders descend on Seabrook, our team of cheerleaders, zombies, and werewolves must band together to face a threat of galactic proportions that may change the face of Seabrook forever.”
In ZOMBIES 3, Zed and Addison are beginning their final year at Seabrook High in the town that’s become a safe haven for monsters and humans alike. Zed is anticipating an athletic scholarship that will make him the first Zombie to attend college, while Addison is gearing up for Seabrook’s first international cheer-off competition. Then, suddenly, extraterrestrial beings appear around Seabrook, provoking something other than friendly competition.
DGA Award winner Paul Hoen, who’s directed a record-setting 15 Disney Channel Original Movies, including both ZOMBIES installments, will direct the “trequel” from a screenplay by David Light and Joseph Raso. Light, Raso, and Suzanne Farwell serve as executive producers.
ZOMBIES 3 is a production of Bloor Street Productions.
Are you ready to wield the shield? Celebrate 80 years of the First Avenger with this boxed pin set created just for D23 Gold Members!
Spanning eight star-spangled decades, this comic book-inspired set of nine colorful soft enamel pins features eight milestone shields straight out of Marvel Comics and Captain America himself! These D23 Gold Member-exclusive pins, set inside an exclusive embossed tin, are the perfect way to commemorate this heroic milestone and Marvel Studios’ newest Disney+ series- The Falcon and The Winter Soldier!
This boxed pin set, a limited edition of 800, will be available exclusively to D23 Gold Members on shopDisney at 7 a.m. PT on March 22, 2020.
*Available while supplies last. To purchase, you must log in to shopDisney.com with the Disney account tied to D23 Gold Membership. Pin sets are $99.99 each, plus applicable sales tax. Maximum of one(1) pin set for purchase per D23 Gold Member for online orders. Shipping not available to PO boxes; shipping and handling fees may vary for all online orders. Other restrictions may apply. All information is subject to change including, but not limited to, artwork, release dates, editions sizes, and retail prices.
For the next few weeks, Disney California Adventure is hosting a unique festival offering Disney fans a taste of Disneyland Resort favorites: A Touch of Disney. We have some hot tips for those of you who are attending this sold-out E-Ticket experience, which runs now through April 19.
Stop and Smell the Churros What we mean is, take your time. If this is your first visit back to the resort in a while, savor the moment (and the churros too, of course). Disney California Adventure looks fantastic, and A Touch of Disney affords guests the opportunity to stroll the walkways of the park admiring the whimsical designs and colorful architecture. Whether it’s the tongue-in-cheek references sprinkled throughout Hollywood Land, the early 20th century glamour of Buena Vista Street, or the breathtaking rockwork of Cars Land, there is so much to see, and—since the event runs from noon to 8 p.m.—you should take your time and soak it all in.
Dig In A Touch of Disney is a foodie’s delight, and each ticket includes a $25 gift card good for food (and non-alcoholic beverages)—as well as complimentary parking in the Mickey and Friends parking structure and unlimited PhotoPass.
Pepperoni Pizza Egg Rolls from California Craft Brews
Favorites from throughout the resort are now offered in the park for this limited time. Been craving a DOLE Whip (who hasn’t)? Adorable Snowman Frosted Treats is offering this Adventureland staple along with its usual host of chilled delights. Missing your Monte Cristo? The Smokejumpers Grill will satisfy that craving. And why not try the impossibly delicious Impossible Chili Waffle Fries? Been longing for your beloved Jumbo Smoked Turkey Legs? The Poultry Palace on Pixar Pier has you covered. Jonesing for the taste of Bengal Barbecue? Head over to Cocina Cucamonga Mexican Grill for the beef and chicken skewers (and they also have a fantastic plant-based Tacos de Papa)!
Plant-based Tacos de Papa from Cocina Cucamonga Mexican Grill and a lime margarita
The six marketplaces located throughout the park also offer Disney classics, including Walt’s Chili (available at D•Lish) and Sweet and Spicy Chicken Wings like you might have enjoyed at Trader Sam’s (at Golden Dreams). LA Style also offered a heaping portion of delicious Impossible Cheeseburger Mac and Cheese, and the Pepperoni Pizza Egg Rolls from California Craft Brews are a perfect snack.
Satisfy your cravings with food and drink from Carthay Circle Lounge
And favorite eateries Carthay Circle Lounge and Lamplight Lounge are both serving up their staples (reservations are required). Sip a classic martini while nibbling on fine cheeses as you watch the passersby on Buena Vista Street. Or dive into the incredible Lobster Nachos at Lamplight. We missed them so.
Smokejumpers Grill offers Impossible Chili Waffle Fries
And for added convenience and contactless payment, guests can take advantage of mobile food ordering on the Disneyland mobile app. Mobile order makes it easy to schedule when guests want to pick up meals and snacks from the marketplaces or from select participating locations inside the park.
Say Cheese Plenty of photo opportunities await as you wander the parks, and there are plenty of PhotoPass team members to make sure your moment is picture perfect. Plus, there’s not just one but two special D23 photo opps to find. All signs point to you on Pacific Wharf where, just next to Ghirardelli Soda Fountain and Chocolate Shop, you’ll find a fun D23-themed photo wall. And over at D•Lish, after you’ve grabbed some of Walt’s Chili, check out the side of the marketplace which has colorful Mickey Mouse illustrations and the message, “Be bold. Be true. Be original. Be you.” Make sure to tag @DisneyD23 on social so we can see!
Fans of the Disney+ hit WandaVision can jump into the middle of the Marvel Cinematic Universe in a “televised” photo spot direct from Westview (by way of the Mickey’s PhilharMagic queue).
Characters A Touch of Disney affords guests the opportunity to see and experience beloved characters in a new way. During our day in the park, we saw Chip and Dale frolicking with oversized acorns in the foliage just next to Smokejumpers Grill. We spied Donald Duck waving to us from a balcony off Disney’s Grand Californian Hotel. Goofy and his son, Max, were fishing off the side of Pacific Wharf (although all they seemed to catch was a rubber chicken and a pair of boxers). Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, and Daisy Duck were walking on the platform of Silly Symphony Springs. Miguel from Coco was in the gazebo in Paradise Gardens Park. Lightning McQueen and Mater were parked in Cars Land. And Joy and Sadness were spreading, well, joy and sadness, by the Inside Out Emotional Whirlwind.
Merchandise It’s the 20th anniversary of Disney California Adventure and the park is chock-a-block with colorful collectibles from T-shirts to pins to mark the magical occasion. Stroll through the classic “department store” Elias & Co to see a wide selection. And fan-favorite shopping spots, such as Off the Page and Bing Bong’s Sweet Stuff, are open for business. And Trolley Treats is the perfect place to pick up a classic sweet (peanut brittle? candy apple?) to bring home to your friends who may not have been lucky enough to join you. Fair warning: these tantalizing temptations are so scrumptious, they may not make it home!
A “Year of Magical Surprises!” is Coming to Shanghai Disney Resort
Time flies when you’re having fun! On June 16, Shanghai Disney Resort will celebrate five years of magic and wonder—and next month, they’re kicking off a brand-new, year-long event to help commemorate such an auspicious occasion.
Starting April 8, the resort will begin a “Year of Magical Surprises!”, featuring an exciting lineup of exclusive experiences and sensational surprises. From a breathtaking evening spectacular, ILLUMINATE! A Nighttime Celebration, to an anniversary-themed overlay to Mickey’s Storybook Express pre-parade, there are new experiences and surprises around every single corner of Shanghai Disneyland. New soundtracks will be heard throughout the park, bringing the celebrations to tuneful life, and a collection of limited-edition souvenirs will allow guests to bring home all kinds of warm memories. Plus, fifth anniversary decorations will line the streets of Mickey Avenue, and each land will be illuminated anew. But that’s not all: Big anniversary makeovers are also coming to the resort’s two hotels and Disneytown.
Stay tuned for more “Year of Magical Surprises!” news as we cavort ever closer to its start date…
5 Fantastic Things to Watch This Weekend
Well, this weekend finally brings us the kick-off of a TV season we’ve been looking forward to for months: Genius: Aretha, starring Cynthia Erivo as the legendary Aretha Franklin, on National Geographic. Tune in this Sunday for the first two episodes! You can fill the remainder of your calendar with additional amazing viewing from around the worlds of Disney, including the season-three premiere of Disney Channel’s Sydney to the Max, and so much more!
New Sneak Peek at Disney’s Cruella
It first aired during the 2021 Grammy® Awards—but in case you haven’t yet seen it, take a gander at the brand-new sneak peek trailer for Cruella, Disney’s all-new live-action feature film starring Oscar® winners Emma Stone and Emma Thompson, directed by Craig Gillespie.
Following the rebellious early days of one of cinema’s most notorious—and notoriously fashionable—villains, Cruella is set in 1970s London amidst the punk rock revolution. Estella (Stone), a clever and creative young grifter determined to make a name for herself with her designs, befriends a pair of young thieves who appreciate her appetite for mischief, and together they are able to build a life for themselves on the London streets. One day, Estella’s flair for fashion catches the eye of the Baroness von Hellman (Thompson), a fashion legend who is devastatingly chic and terrifyingly haute. But their relationship sets in motion a course of events and revelations that will cause Estella to embrace her wicked side and become the raucous, fashionable, and revenge-bent Cruella we know and love today.
With incredible costumes by two-time Oscar winner Jenny Beavan, Cruella is due to wreak fashionably memorable havoc beginning Friday, May 28.
Disneyland Resort Sets April 30 Reopening Date
It was news heard ’round the world: Earlier this week, the good folks over at Disney Parks Blog announced that Disneyland Resort is set to reopen, on a limited basis, beginning April 30. So get your Mickey ears ready and prime your taste buds for that first sure-to-be-amazing bite of churro… Check out more information here
Disney Cruise Line Announces Summer 2022 Itineraries
The saying “It’s never too early to book your next vacation” has never been more true, honestly… and to that end, if you’re fans of Disney Cruise Line like we are, you’ll delight in their just-announced, brand-new itineraries for Summer 2022.
That season, the Disney Magic’s grand tour of Europe begins with sailings through the Greek Isles and Mediterranean before heading to northern Europe for cruises to the Baltic, the British Isles, Iceland, and the Norwegian fjords. Five new ports of call in Europe include Chania, Greece; Porto, Portugal; Riga, Latvia; Maloy, Norway; and Nynashamn, Sweden, near Stockholm. Meanwhile, the Disney Wonder will return to Alaska for the ’22 summer season to explore the region’s breathtaking natural vistas, glaciers, and wildlife. Departing from Vancouver, Canada, most of these seven-night cruises will visit Dawes Glacier, Skagway, Juneau, and Ketchikan; two of the cruises will also check out Icy Strait Point in place of Skagway. Plus, for the first time ever, guests will be able to sail out of Miami during the summer season, enjoying even more opportunities to visit Castaway Cay.
Bookings for the incredible vacations mentioned above open to the public on March 25! (And don’t forget: The Disney Wish is also scheduled to sail its maiden voyage in Summer ’22; information on itineraries and bookings for this ship will be released at a later date.) All the pertinent details can be found on the Summer 2022 Itineraries page of disneycruise.com.
The Walt Disney Company Earns 15 Oscar Nominations
March is peak “awards season,” which means we’re heading towards the top-dog of ’em all: The Academy Awards! And earlier this week, the 2021 Oscar nominees were announced. The Walt Disney Company earned 15 total, including Best Picture for Searchlight Pictures’ Nomadland. See the full Disney-related list and start preparing your red-carpet-worthy home-viewing outfits right now…
Peter Pan & Wendy Begins Production in Vancouver
There’s a new way to Neverland coming soon to Disney+ … and it promises to be a treat! Principal photography on the live-action adventure/fantasy Peter Pan & Wendy has just begun in Vancouver, Canada; the film reteams Pete’s Dragon director David Lowery and producer Jim Whitaker, and it’s scheduled to premiere on the streaming service in 2022.
Based on J. M. Barrie’s novel Peter and Wendy and inspired by Disney’s 1953 animated classic, Peter Pan & Wendy is the timeless tale of a young girl who—defying her parents’ wishes to attend boarding school—travels with her two younger brothers to the magical Neverland. There, she meets a boy who refuses to grow up; a tiny fairy; and an evil pirate captain… and soon, they find themselves on a thrilling and dangerous adventure far, far away from their family and the comforts of home. The film stars Jude Law as Captain Hook, Yara Shahidi as Tinkerbell, Ever Anderson as Wendy, Alexander Molony as Peter Pan, Molly Parker as Mrs. Darling, Alan Tudyk as Mr. Darling, and Jim Gaffigan as Smee—and introduces newcomers Joshua Pickering as John, Jacobi Jupe as Michael, and Alyssa Wapanatâhk as Tiger Lily.
Take that second star to the right and keep your eyes peeled for more Peter Pan & Wendy news as it becomes available.
ICYMI: Descendants: The Royal Wedding Announced
Hear ye, hear ye—mark your calendars now for what’s sure to be a most memorable event! The VKs are coming back in Descendants: The Royal Wedding, an all-new animated special that invites viewers to Mal and King Ben’s nuptials. Read up on what you can expect right here… Wonder what’s on their registry?
“There will never be another woman like me,” Aretha Franklin—as portrayed by Tony®, Emmy, and Grammy Award winner Cynthia Erivo—states unequivocally in the trailer for Genius: Aretha. Beginning Sunday, March 21 (9/8 c), National Geographic honors the Queen of Soul in the new season of its Emmy® Award-winning anthology series from 20th Television and Imagine Television, paying tribute to Franklin’s incredible singing voice, her dedication to civil rights activism, and the incredible trajectory of her life and career. Double-stacked episodes will air over four consecutive nights on the National Geographic channel, with the premiere episodes available the next day on Hulu. The entire eight-episode season can be streamed on Hulu by Thursday, March 25.
In this photo that’s exclusive to D23, Aretha Franklin (right, played by Cynthia Erivo), rehearses in the studio with her sister Carolyn Franklin (left, played by Rebecca Naomi Jones) and King Curtis (second from left, played by Marque Richardson). (Credit: National Geographic/Richard DuCree)
Franklin is one of the bestselling musical artists of all time, as well as one of the most acclaimed. But before Aretha Franklin was the Queen of Soul, she was shy “Little Re,” singing in the church of her father, C.L. Franklin; a gospel prodigy; and a brilliant Black female vocalist who took control of her own career during a time when the music industry was largely controlled by white men. She would go on to use her celebrity for causes she believed in, working alongside activists such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Angela Davis to advocate for civil rights. Genius: Aretha explores all of these facets of Franklin’s life and is the first-ever, definitive and only authorized scripted series to do so.
Courtney B. Vance portrays Reverend C.L. Franklin, while Shaian Jordan is Little Re in Genius: Aretha.
Genius: Aretha has been brought to the screen by an über-talented and, dare we say, genius group of filmmakers and actors—including Erivo; Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks, who serves as executive producer and showrunner; Emmy and Golden Globe® winner Anthony Hemingway, who serves as executive producer and director; and Oscar® winners Brian Grazer and Ron Howard, who executive produce through their company, Imagine Entertainment. We spoke to this incredible team about how they explore Franklin’s remarkable life and her undeniable genius in this can’t-miss television event. Here are some of the things we learned from them.
As with the previous subjects of Genius—Albert Einstein and Pablo Picasso—Grazer and Howard knew that Aretha Franklin’s story would be told best in a longer format. Grazer, Howard, and the Imagine Entertainment team initially sparked to the idea of a feature film focused on the life of Albert Einstein, but quickly realized that a movie wouldn’t allow enough time to paint a full picture of the scientist’s brilliance. Howard and Grazer—who count Apollo 13, A Beautiful Mind, and Frost/Nixon among their impressive credits—are drawn to stories of groundbreaking people across all disciplines, Howard says, “who work on another plane, outside the box, and yet are of course utterly human despite their extraordinary capabilities and their impact on society.” Television, he believes, is the perfect place to flesh out the stories of these remarkable individuals.
Cynthia Erivo as Aretha Franklin.
The Genius series takes a closer look at the events in its subjects’ lives that may have helped drive—or impede—their success. In the case of Franklin, Grazer explains that they examined questions such as, “What mattered in Aretha Franklin’s life when her talent surfaced? How did it surface? Who was involved? Who helped nurture it? Who was an obstacle? What were people’s agendas? There was a tremendous amount of racial prejudice in that period. Was that an obstacle? You’re basically thinking about a person’s life in total.”
To tell the story of Aretha Franklin, Grazer and Howard enlisted a team of real-life geniuses. Executive producer and showrunner Suzan-Lori Parks—the first African-American woman to receive the Pulitzer Prize in Drama for her play Topdog/Underdog, and a Tony Award winner for her adaptation of Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess—is a MacArthur “Genius” Award recipient. “She’s a spiritual person and you feel it out of her. I thought, well, nobody better to do this than this highly qualified writer who also understands faith, because Aretha Franklin’s voice was primarily birthed out of the choir and God was living inside her songs and voice itself,” Grazer explains. ”That’s what you’re looking for—and SLP was the embodiment of that.”
It’s very meaningful to Parks that Franklin is both the first women and the first person of color to be featured in the Genius series. “My aunties and my mom and dad are big Aretha Franklin fans. I heard her music at home and of course knew of her church music,” she says. “The eight hours as part of the Genius franchise really got me excited because I’m a Black American woman. I’m a writer. I’m also a musician. Our efforts as Black American women get lauded and applauded but our genius is rarely recognized—the way we endure, the way we synthesize disparate elements of culture and make magic, Black girl magic and all of that. The way Aretha took the lead of her life, the difficulties of her life, and turned it into sonic gold. That is seen, but our efforts are not recognized as genius.
In this photo that’s exclusive to D23, Ted White (center, played by Malcolm Barrett) with his wife Aretha Franklin as she signs with Jerry Wexler (left, played by David Cross), at Atlantic Records. (Credit: National Geographic/Richard DuCree)
Genius: Aretha has been built around formative moments in Franklin’s life. The showrunner mentions that they’d considered structuring the series so that each episode was paired with one of Franklin’s songs, but there were simply too many hits and iconic numbers to choose from. “Genius is a matter of context. Genius is created by context,” Parks notes, detailing, “Each episode revolves around a period in her life when she was doing something that I consider like, wow, out of sight.” As an example, Parks points to Franklin’s early support for Angela Davis, which inspired her to record the protest album Young, Gifted and Black.
Franklin is crowned “Queen of Soul” in Genius: Aretha’s first episode, following a show-stopping performance in Chicago, but Genius: Aretha also tells the parallel story of how Little Re grows from shy little girl to a master performer who can bring down the house and command more than “a little respect.” Howard points out, “Geniuses are so different. Aretha is so unique. You want to honor her story in a way that reflects that.” The creative team had a deep understanding of how complicated Franklin was, and the nuanced portrayal of her in Genius: Aretha reflects that. “[Franklin] always kept one foot in the day-to-day reality of her life and her culture, her cultural history, and her personal history,” Howard says, “And she was able to transform those moments into songs and sounds and performances that really were revelatory.”
Cynthia Erivo completely inhabited the role of Aretha Franklin. “She’s a total beast! She’s an amazing talent. She has a big heart, like the Queen herself. She’s also a private person, much like Aretha was,” Parks shares. “But I was most impressed with Cynthia as such a brave performer who embraced this huge monster role and went places far outside her comfort zone. We worked long hours and there was just a lot of heavy lifting which fell on Cynthia’s plate and she just was always up for the challenge and really came through in a huge way.”
Director Hemingway kicked off the production by staging a vocal performance on day one, which he says was the “greatest decision ever.” Erivo’s ability to fully assume the role of Franklin captivated the crew and set the tone for the rest of the shoot. Hemingway says, “It was an unbelievable experience watching Cynthia humanize Aretha and embody her essence, strength, vulnerability, her musical genius, as well as her many characteristics.”
Erivo focused on being true to the patterns and pacing of Franklin’s performance, rather than trying to deliver a sound-alike performance. “There are technical things that [Franklin] does that I may not do. There are certain vowel sounds that she makes that are like wider and it changes as she gets older. When she was younger, everything she sings is a lot brighter, and then as she gets older it gets sort of breathier and more certain,” Erivo explains. She praises Franklin’s patience and her tendency to “hang on the note for a little bit.” With the help of a vocal coach, Erivo worked to make sure that she followed Franklin’s patterns—the “dips and falls” in her vocals. “There’s a sort of way that she draws things from note to another. She likes to bend a note often,” Erivo says. “And she sings in such a relaxed way, which I’ve learned to do for myself because it’s healthier, but she’s a very relaxed singer. No stress on the vocal chords, really and truly. It all sort of falls out of her.”
Erivo also studied archival videos of Franklin to get a sense of the Queen of Soul’s stage presence during performances, as well as how she presented herself in interviews and with people she knew. “She was not a dancer, yet she had such a groove in her when she does dance and when she does move. She was really one of those singers who could stand and not do anything, but I think she enjoyed herself so much that the movement came from that,” Erivo says.
The filmmakers believe that Franklin’s genius is universal and still relevant to the world we’re living in today. “I loved reading about how [Franklin] loved her family,” Parks says of the extensive research she undertook while writing the show. “She loved her kids and she was incredibly intense about her career. As a woman, I think that’s really important to remind ourselves that we can be intense about our career and we can also be intense about our families. I think women have the power to do both of those things.” Parks also believes that Franklin would be continuing to use that power and inspire others. “She was outspoken, oftentimes about things that were not necessarily popular politically. She was on the vanguard of some of these political movements. And that’s something that I think we as artists today can be proud of and learn from,” she says.
“I want everyone to recognize that the definition of a genius can be and is more than the myopic meaning we grew up thinking it is,” Hemingway says. “It’s also worth noting that geniuses are real people, too. Watching this show will give you the opportunity to see what made Aretha Franklin, Aretha Franklin.”