It’s Hard to Believe… High School Musical is 15

By Julia Mariah Vargas, Walt Disney Archives

Unbeknownst to many, January 20, 2006, would mark the start of something new.

In 2021, the Disney Channel Original Movie High School Musical celebrates 15 years of encouraging a generation of kids to freely express themselves, challenging the status quo along the way. This “contemporary ‘break-into-song’ production,” directed and choreographed by Disney Legend Kenny Ortega, was described in early publicity materials as a modern-day Romeo and Juliet story, “set in a high school, but instead of feuding families, [it would have] rival social cliques that strive to keep the young couple apart.”

High School Musical
Troy and Gabriella step out of their comfort zones into the “Start of Something New.”

Troy Bolton (played by Zac Efron), a popular basketball star, and Gabriella Montez (played by Vanessa Hudgens), the bright “new kid,” shake the core of East High when they audition for the lead roles in the upcoming winter musicale. However, by defying expectations and taking a chance on their dreams, the pair inspires their peers to reveal some surprising hidden talents of their own. The movie also introduces us to unforgettable characters such as Chad Danforth, Troy’s best friend and basketball teammate who “lives, eats, and breathes basketball,” played by Corbin Bleu; Taylor McKessie, the president of the decathlon team who fills Gabriella in about the social hierarchy of the school, played my Monique Coleman; and the twins, Sharpay and Ryan Evans, played, respectively, by Ashley Tisdale and Lucas Grabeel, who are usually the leads in the school productions.

Following its premiere, High School Musical achieved numerous notable feats. Within 24 hours of its January 20 premiere, 1.2 million unique visitors logged on to DisneyChannel.com—the most ever for the site at the time. On March 14, 2006, it became the first made-for-TV musical to premiere on the iTunes Music Store. The movie’s soundtrack, featuring memorable songs such as “Breaking Free” and “We’re All in This Together,” was certified Platinum and rose to No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200 album chart—the first-ever TV movie soundtrack to do so. It also received the Billboard Music Award for Soundtrack of the Year, and won Primetime Emmys® for Outstanding Children’s Program and Outstanding Choreography.

High School Musical
Students in the East High cafeteria urge each other to “Stick to the Status Quo.”

Furthermore, the movie was a source of inspiration for later arena and stage productions, such as “High School Musical: The Ice Tour” and “High School Musical: The Concert.” And, once Disney Theatrical Productions licensed the script for school and local theater use, more than 2,000 amateur stagings of the show were produced within the first two years—an impressive feat for the already-impressive property. It was also the source material for entertainment offerings at Disney’s California Adventure and Walt Disney World Resort with the “High School Musical Pep Rally.” The popularity of the movie ultimately resulted in a trilogy of releases, with High School Musical 2 premiering on Disney Channel in 2007, and High School Musical 3: Senior Year debuting in theaters in 2008.

Fifteen years after its initial bow, High School Musical still proves to be a cultural phenomenon, regularly reaching newer audiences. In 2019, High School Musical: The Musical: The Series was released on Disney+, following the “real” students of East High as they put on their own production of the beloved movie. Although the faces are now different and the stories new, the series celebrates the same spirit of togetherness and importance of courage to be one’s authentic self in high school—the very sentiments that first touched our hearts more than a decade ago. This iconic movie is streaming now on Disney+.

High School Musical
The “We’re All in This Together” dance number became a viral trend across the nation and continues to entertain today.

QUIZ: How Well Do You Know High School Musical?

By Zach Johnson

On January 20, 2006, it was the start of something new. High School Musical set a Disney Channel record when 7.7 million fans tuned in for the premiere. And after becoming the first TV movie soundtrack to reach No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200 chart, it became the top-selling album of the year. Directed and choreographed by Disney Legend Kenny Ortega, the film made stars out of Zac Efron (as Troy Bolton), Vanessa Hudgens (as Gabriella Montez), Ashley Tisdale (as Sharpay Evans), Corbin Bleu (as Chad Danforth), Monique Coleman (as Taylor McKessie), and Lucas Grabeel (as Ryan Evans). In honor of the film’s anniversary, we’re calling on Wildcats of all ages to take our quiz. Will you bop to the top?

Where is High School Musical set?

Correct! Wrong!

Gabriella and Troy meet on which holiday?

Correct! Wrong!

Which one of these words is NOT on a banner outside of East High School?

Correct! Wrong!

How many hats does Ryan wear throughout the film?

Correct! Wrong!

What was the name of Gabriella’s previous school?

Correct! Wrong!

What does Troy NOT hide behind during the winter musical auditions?

Correct! Wrong!

What is the title of the winter musical audition song?

Correct! Wrong!

What dance move does Ryan call a “crowd favorite”?

Correct! Wrong!

What are the names of the lead characters in the winter musical?

Correct! Wrong!

When are the callbacks originally supposed to take place?

Correct! Wrong!

What textbook is Martha Cox (Kaycee Stroh) reading in “Stick to the Status Quo”?

Correct! Wrong!

What food does Gabriella accidentally spill on Sharpay in the cafeteria?

Correct! Wrong!

Which Broadway icon’s photo does Chad’s mom keep in (not on) the refrigerator?

Correct! Wrong!

In what year did Troy’s dad win the basketball championship?

Correct! Wrong!

Which necklace charm does Sharpay NOT wear?

Correct! Wrong!

Which iconic woman does Taylor NOT mention in her speech to Gabriella?

Correct! Wrong!

Which statement tee does Chad NOT wear to school?

Correct! Wrong!

What dessert does Zeke give to Sharpay after winning the championship?

Correct! Wrong!

QUIZ: How Well Do You Know High School Musical?
You gotta get’cha head in the game! Better luck next time.
You’re soarin’, flyin’! Try again and you could go from understudy to center stage.
Way to go, Wildcat! Are you sure you weren’t a student at East High?

EXCLUSIVE: Read the First Chapter of the Fairy Tale-Inspired Crime Series, City of Villains

By the D23 Team

Monarch City Police Department intern Mary Elizabeth Heart has always wanted to be a detective—but when she finally gets her chance to investigate a missing person case, she is soon led down a path that will bring her face-to-face with some of Disney’s most iconic villains. Written by Estelle Laure, this dark and edgy YA series explores the reimagined origins of Maleficent, Ursula, Captain Hook, and other infamous Disney villains like you’ve never seen before. Read this first chapter of City of Villains below, and then preorder the book here before it hits shelves on January 26.


o n e

t w o  y e a r s  a f t e r  t h e  fa l l

SMEE WILL NOT DROP THE ISSUE OF ME SITTING

shotgun on the way to school.

“No, I mean really, Cap,” he’s whining to James, smoothing out his leather jacket. “We should be taking turns. We live in the same house, we drive the Sea Devil together to the same place, and then I have to get out of the front seat and get in the back just so Mary can jump in front. It’s—”

“Demeaning?” I suggest.

“Emasculating?” Ursula says, doing something on her phone. “Respectful,” James says. “Right.”

Smee gives me a look like he’s barely tolerating me and swaggers away from me so James is between us. “Just because she’s your girl- friend shouldn’t mean she gets to sit in the front all the time. We should take turns.”

James just fixed up a classic 1968 Mustang, painted it a vintage blue, and named it the Sea Devil, and it’s so gorgeous it’s causing all sorts of problems. Every time he does this—finds an old clunker with good bones, tinkers with it until it drives smooth, and polishes it to a high shine—Smee’s inner gangster comes out. It’s always kind of out anyway. He wants to be powerful, or sidekick to someone powerful at

the very least. We live in a city, so I don’t even know why we would be driving a car to school in traffic in the first place. We should be taking the subway, but now that’s not going to happen until James abandons the Sea Devil for a new project.

Now, Ursula wedges herself next to Smee as we push our way past the crenellated white columns and through the enormous wooden doors that lead into Monarch High.

“Doofus, she is the girlfriend. You’re not the girlfriend, you’re just one of six annoying roommates.”

“Do not speak ill of Neverland or its residents,” Smee says, “or I’ll make you walk the plank.”

The plank is the diving board in the old pool in the old house where James and six of his friends all live. Ursula edges past a couple of Narrows dressed in their usual white button-downs, Dockers, loafers, and jackets. We stop in front of our lockers and she gives Smee a rap on the head with her knuckle.

“Hey!” Smee says.

“Come on, you guys. It’s Monday morning. We have all week to annoy each other,” I say.

Monday morning at Monarch High is different from other high schools, at least from what I’ve heard. The Scar used to be almost all Legacy—people born with a black heart on the wrist, directly descended from magic. When I was a little kid, that was all I knew. There were maybe a few bureaucrats from Midcity, businessmen from the Narrows, but it’s not like that anymore. After the Death of Magic, Legacies like my family became sitting ducks, and the Narrows—uptowners with no magic and chips on their shoulders—are like vultures, plucking up our real estate, forcing Legacy onto the streets, and worst of all making us interact with their horrid offspring until they finish building them a suitable private school on land they bought cheaply from us. So now we have an espresso stand, a caterer who comes in to deliver lunches no

Legacy can afford, and they just finished adding on a pool and world- class gym.

Legacies avoid all of it. We don’t like to be bought. So now we try to stand apart. We aren’t separated by jocks and geeks and metalheads and emo like I’ve seen on TV shows. We have separated Legacy from Narrows. Legacies wear black leather bands on our  arms. We  dye our hair. We dress like it’s a party all the time. We wear clothes with #LegacyLoyalty emblazoned across the front.

But it’s true, even though the school is first divided in two, it continues to divide. James and his Neverland crew—Ursula, Smee, and I—act as one unit, and then there’s everyone else.

James and I pause to kiss while Ursula stops to answer a call on her cell and Smee stands there waiting, hands in his pockets, watching the hall in his black-and-white-striped shirt like he’s our bouncer.

Ursula slips her phone back in her pocket and says, “What glorious class have we this morning? Magical History, you say? My favorite.”

“Dreena, six o’clock,” Smee mutters. “Get ready for some school spirit.” As though she’s heard someone speak her name, Dreena swoops over, flanked by Lola and Casey, draped in sequined scarves, hair in two blue

braids. She’s holding an armful of pamphlets.

“What do you want?” Ursula says as Dreena approaches. “Whatever you’re selling, we don’t need any. Although,” she says, reconsidering, “if there’s anything interesting you need, maybe I could get it for you? My prices are very reasonable.”

“I wanted to give you guys one of these.” Dreena hands each of us  a pamphlet. Smee immediately drops his to the floor and looks off into space, bored. “I know you aren’t political or whatever, but Lucas Attenborough’s dad wants to build a mall right in the  middle  of town. A mall. They would be tearing down a whole block. We have to  meet!  We  have  to  rally! This  is  unacceptable. We  can’t  allow  the Scar’s historical district to be destroyed.” Dreena would be a lot easier

to take if she weren’t so annoying all the time, so utterly sure of her position, sure enough to approach us even though we’ve worked hard to be unapproachable so we don’t have to deal with people like her.

“Dree Dree,” Ursula drawls, slapping her locker shut. “I like a mall as much as the next girl, but I’m on your side here. Loyalty all the way. The thing is, rallying isn’t going to do any good. What you need is someone who knows what’s going on in the back end. You need to find out who is paying whom and whether there might be a good reason for them to give up on their pet project.” Ursula weaves in a circle around Dreena, who is paling rapidly. “Who’s been sleeping with whom? Who did a naughty business deal and could be convinced to back off? That’s what makes this city tick.” She finishes with her mouth against Dreena’s ear. Dreena shrinks like a mouse.

“But,” Dreena says with less enthusiasm, watching Ursula carefully, “it’s not right! That should be enough. It’s not right for them to come in here and tear down those old buildings to put in some kind of fast fashion storefront.”

“Maybe not.” Urs pulls out her phone and starts scrolling through. “But Monarch is what it is, and you’re not going to change it noodling around with sad little handmade posters. I know a few people down there. Let me know if you want me to start poking around. I could pencil you in.” She smiles, her thick red lips parting hungrily. “I have next Thursday free.”

Dreena lifts her nose in the air, tries to rise to a height that doesn’t make  her  look  absolutely  tiny  next  to  Urs. It  doesn’t  work. “What would  that  cost?  Don’t  people  have  to  pay  you  in  secrets?” she  asks uncertainly.

Ursula shrugs. “Depends. I like money, too.” She grins. “And favors.” “I think I’m just going to stick to the old-fashioned way,” Dreena

says. “Sit-ins and what have you.”

“Suit yourself. Try it your way, see how far you get.”Now that Dreena’s

made her decision clear, Ursula seems to have lost interest and searches for something in her black leather backpack.

Dreena shuffles from one foot to the other, persisting. “Our meeting is going to be at the Tea Party tomorrow if you want to come.” She rustles the pile of pamphlets in her hand. “All are welcome.”

“Let me know if you change your mind,” Ursula says, looking up distractedly. “I’m all about making dreams and wishes come true.”

Dreena, who looks like she’s very much regretting her decision to come and talk to us, turns to head down the hallway. But before she can take a step, Stone Wallace goes flying across her path, into Smee, who shoves him away reflexively as we all search for the source of the fight. James steps in front of me and I get on tiptoes so I can see. Monarch High used to be a pretty mellow school. Not anymore. Not since the Narrows changed districts.

Stone is in a white T-shirt and black leather pants with hearts pressed into the material to match the birthmark on his wrist. It looks like scales on a dangerous snake. He’s usually one of the untouchable kids. He mostly hides behind the bass he plays at Wonderland, the local underage club, on weekends, and other than that keeps to himself. Apparently not today. Stone slams into Lucas Attenborough, who pushes him back easily, so Stone falls onto his back, loses his breath, and looks up at us in panic. Lucas gives him a kick that’s more symbolic than painful.

“Hey,” James says, getting between them, Smee at his side. “That’s enough.” His commanding tone stops Lucas, who trains his eyes on James, striking a perfect balance between tense and utterly confident. It doesn’t matter how rich or how entitled Lucas Attenborough is. He would have to be a complete moron to mess with Captain Crook, a name James half hates because the Bartholomews are a crime family he tries to distance himself from, but also uses when he has the need. And he has the need often.

Legacy kids have to take care of ourselves. Ninety-eight percent of

Legacy would rather party than fight, but with the advent of jerks like Lucas in our midst, we have to be on our game, ready for anything, all the time.

“Gawd,” Justin, an outspoken Amagicalist in a plaid suit, drawls from the corner. “If everyone would just accept that magic is dead, none of this would be happening. We could just move on.”

His friends all nod in agreement.

“Belief in magic is the root of all of society’s problems,” a dour girl in pin-straight pigtails says.

Lucas sniffs, looks around the hall to see that he’s totally outnumbered by Legacies, who are gathering rapidly. Flora, Fauna, and Merryweather are even there, each in matching pink, blue, and green gauzy dresses, and everyone knows they have weapons on them at all times because of their falling-out with Mally Saint.

“Stone deserved it,” Lucas says, staring around the hall with black eyes in challenge. “Not that any of you would ever listen to anything  I say.”

“No, we wouldn’t,” Smee agrees, giving Lucas a small shove. “Get your Narrow behind out of my hallway.”

Lucas straightens his shirt with a little adjustment of his neck. “How dare you put your grimy Legacy hands on me. Do you know who I am?” “Do I know who you are?” Smee starts doing a little boxer dance, raising his fists to eye level. “Do I know who you are? Punk. The

question is do you know who I am?”

Smee looks like he’s about to punch Lucas in the face, which will then lead to Lucas punching Smee in the face, which will probably mean James and the rest of his boys will jump in, so I step between them before the next terrible thing can happen. Everyone knows where this is going. If they fight, Smee will get blamed and suspended, and the rest of the Legacy kids will be impossible to control. If Lucas survives, he gets no punishment whatsoever, except maybe having to give an apology.

“Go to class, Lucas,” I say, so low it’s like there’s only the two of us in the hallway, and not a hundred Legacy kids and him. He glances around, showing his first sign of nerves. “You’re outnumbered, and if you stay and fight this fight, you’re going to lose.”

Lucas takes a slow look around, at all the bright colors and eyes, everyone’s stance taut and ready, and he snorts in obvious disdain, letting his eyes linger over my heart birthmark, eyes blazing with hatred. “There’ll be nothing left of the trash bucket you call home by the time you realize your mistake, and that’s going to be a better payoff than fighting Stone . . . and winning.” Lucas shrugs, like he’s shaking off unpleasant thoughts. “I guess you’re right, though. These are soft Italian leather.” He looks down at Stone, who is glaring up, still clutching at his side. “I don’t want to sully them.” He tips his shoe upward, puts his hands in his pockets, and as though there isn’t an entire mob of Legacy kids staring at his back, he saunters down the hallway.

When the crowd disperses, Mally Saint, the coldest girl in Monarch, is calmly depositing books from her locker into her very expensive- looking leather bag. Her raven, Hellion, sits on her shoulder watching the kids disappear into their classrooms. He gives a low caw.

“Shhh, pet,” she says, stroking him. Her black hair is cut into a sharp bob, and her inky clothes look like they were tailor-made from French silk draped to fit her body, which they probably were. Her black dress transitions smoothly to high-cut boots, and her signature epaulets and double-buttoned military-style jacket make her look like she’s ready for war. Her dad is rich. Super rich. Only he’s not from the Narrows uptown. He’s Legacy. And as though everything and everyone is in agreement about Mally being bigger and better than everyone around her, instead of appearing on her wrist, Mally’s black Legacy heart creeps from her chest up the side of her neck like a creature. She closes her locker, not a hint of stress, and looks over at us.

“Well, hi, gang,” she says.

“Mally,” James says.

She saunters by, Hellion watching all of us as she goes. “I would have let the boys fight,” she says to me. “That would have been real entertainment.” She lets a finger trail over my shoulder and I shudder in spite of myself. “That would have been . . . priceless.”

When she vanishes around the corner a few seconds later, Ursula says, “You know, the more I think about her, the more I like her.”

“You gotta be kidding,” Smee says. “She’s like some kind of soul sucker. Gives me the willies.”

“Soul suckers can be useful when they’re on your side.” Ursula gives Smee another thump on the head.

“You remember when she got in a fight with Flora and them,” Smee says. “I thought they were going to end up skinned.”

It’s true, that fight was epic. Fauna confided in me one night that Mally bossed them all around so much they decided not to invite her to their annual fairy feast to honor their fairy grandmothers. Mally took that as an act of war. She showed up at the party and stood there with her arms crossed while Hellion flew everywhere, digging his talons into the rose blossom cake, knocking over the vat of ginger beer, pecking into the chestnut-roasted suckling pig. I was at that party, and the scariest part about it was that look on Mally’s face. No one would get near her because of that half smirk, but mostly it was just her cold, dark knowing. She would not be crossed lightly. But even ruining that party wasn’t enough for her. Mally cut Flora’s brake lines, left roadkill on  Fauna’s  doorstep, bleached  Merryweather’s  grass. They  still  don’t speak. Ever. Now Mally is always alone, slipping through the hallways like some high-fashion untouchable ghost.

Anyway. Just another typical Monday morning at Monarch High.

Violence. Territorialism.

It’s just that lately it feels like things are getting worse.

Everything New You Can Stream on Disney+ in February 2021

By Zach Johnson

February may be the shortest month of the year, but it’s long on content! Disney+ just announced its streaming offerings for February, which include fan-favorites like the film Cheaper by the Dozen and the seventh season of Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks, plus a handful of exciting premieres. New episodes of Marvel Studios’ WandaVision will continue to roll out every Friday, while Disney Legend Jim Henson’s The Muppet Show will join the Disney+ library on February 19; in addition to the first three seasons, Muppets fans will be able to enjoy the fourth and fifth seasons, which have never been released on home entertainment!

On February 12, Inside Pixar: Portraits will profile several of the talented people who work for Pixar Animation Studios, including a music editor and a pastry chef. The following Friday, the comedy film Flora & Ulysses will introduce 10-year-old Flora (Matilda Lawler), an avid comic book fan and a self-avowed cynic whose parents have recently separated. After rescuing a squirrel and naming him Ulysses, Flora is amazed to discover he possesses unique superhero powers, which take them on an adventure of humorous complications.

Be sure to mark your calendars for February 26 when Myth: A Frozen Tale premieres. Set in an enchanted forest outside of Arendelle, a family sits down for a bedtime story and is transported to a vibrant and mystical world where the elemental spirits—inspired by Disney’s hit Frozen 2—come to life and the myth of their past and their future is revealed.

All the film and television titles coming to Disney+ in February are listed below:

UPSIDE-DOWN MAGIC

Friday, February 5
Disney My Music Story: Yoshiki
Disney Upside-Down Magic
WandaVision (New Episode)
Wicked Tuna: Outer Banks (Season 7)

MARVEL BATTLEWORD: MYSTERY OF THE THANOSTONES

Friday, February 12
Inside Pixar: Portraits (Premiere)
Life Below Zero: The Next Generation (Season 1)
Marvel Battleworld: Mystery of the Thanostones (Season 1)
Marvel’s Behind the Mask
Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Cinderella
WandaVision (New Episode)

FLORA & ULYSSES

Friday, February 19
Cheaper by the Dozen
Cheaper by the Dozen 2
Flora & Ulysses (Premiere)
The Book of Life
The Muppet Show (Season 1)
The Muppet Show (Season 2)
The Muppet Show (Season 3)
The Muppet Show (Season 4)
The Muppet Show (Season 5)
WandaVision (New Episode)

DISNEY CHANNEL GAMES 2008

Friday, February 26
Car SOS (Season 8)
Disney Channel Games 2008 (Season 1)
Disney Illuminations Firework Show Disneyland Paris
Disney Pair of Kings (Season 1)
Disney Pair of Kings (Season 2)
Disney Pair of Kings (Season 3)
Disney Roll It Back (Season 1)
Disney’s American Dragon: Jake Long (Season 1)
Disney’s American Dragon: Jake Long (Season 2)
Mickey Go Local (Season 1)
Myth: A Frozen Tale (Premiere)
Okavango: River of Dreams
Secrets of Sulphur Springs (First 5 Episodes)
Shanghai Disney Resort Grand Opening Gala
WandaVision (New Episode)

5 Fantastic Things to Watch This Week

By Zach Johnson

This week has a bit of everything, from airplanes to dinosaurs to glass slippers. It all starts on Monday with the series premiere of Dino Ranch on Disney Junior, followed by the network premiere of The Hate U Give on FX and the special The New Air Force One: The Flying Fortress on National Geographic. The next night, The Wonderful World of Disney will present the 2015 film Cinderella on ABC. And on Thursday, season three of grown-ish will return on Freeform with a new episode and a rapper making her professional acting debut!

Dino Ranch

Dino Ranch—Monday, January 18, at 12:30 p.m. ET on Disney Junior
The series premiere introduces the Cassidy family, who live in a fantastical, “pre-Westoric” setting where dinosaurs roam. As the young explorers learn the ropes, they discover the thrill of ranch life while navigating the great outdoors through unpredictable challenges. The fun begins with “Big Jon Big Trouble,” where Jon’s enthusiasm gets the best of him while he attempts to tame a lively little dinosaur by himself. Then, in “Min’s Quest,” Min overcomes adversity to find a rare flower, which helps heal an ailing mother brontosaurus.

The Hate U Give

The Hate U Give—Monday, January 18, at 10 p.m. ET on FX
Capping off the network’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day Movie Marathon is the global broadcast premiere of The Hate U Give, based on Angie Thomas’ best-selling novel of the same name, directed by George Tillman Jr. The film centers on Starr Carter (Amandla Stenberg), who lives in two worlds: the poor, black neighborhood she resides in and the mostly white prep school she attends. The uneasy balance is shattered when she witnesses a white policeman (Drew Starkey) fatally shoot her best friend, Khalil Harris (Algee Smith). Amid community outrage and national news coverage, 16-year-old Starr must find her voice and stand up for what’s right. Rounding out the film’s cast are K.J. Apa, Sabrina Carpenter, Common, Regina Hall, Russell Hornsby, Lamar Johnson, Anthony Mackie, and Issa Rae.

The New Air Force One: The Flying Fortress

The New Air Force One: The Flying Fortress—Monday, January 18, at 10 p.m. ET on National Geographic
After three decades of missions around the world, the United States’ Air Force One aircrafts will soon be retired. In their place is a new, state-of-the-art 747 jumbo jet that has been transformed into the flying White House. With unprecedented access, this special follows the classified mission to create the new presidential aircraft and provides an inside look at the cutting-edge engineering and technology that transform the plane into a top-secret, highly secured command center. Featuring archival footage and interviews with U.S. presidents, The New Air Force One: The Flying Fortress not only grants a rare look into the dramatic military makeover, but also the people who maintain and fly the most important airplane in the world. It will also reveal for the first time ever the brand-new Air Force One.

The Wonderful World of Disney: Cinderella

The Wonderful World of Disney: Cinderella—Tuesday, January 19, at 8 p.m. ET on ABC
Directed by Kenneth Branagh, this beloved live-action fairy tale shines with beauty, imagination… and magic! Despite being mistreated by her wicked stepmother (Cate Blanchett) and her evil stepsisters (Holliday Grainger and Sophie McShera), a courageous and kind Ella (Lily James) decides to write her own happy ending. After a chance encounter with a handsome prince (Richard Madden)—and with the help of her Fairy Godmother (Helena Bonham-Carter)—Ella soon discovers what happens when magic becomes reality.

grown-ish

grown-ish—Thursday, January 21, at 8 p.m. ET on Freeform
After dropping out of Cal U to pursue her dream job as a celebrity stylist, Zoey (Yara Shahidi) is learning to balance the demands of her personal and professional lives while on tour with Joey BADA$$. The gig requires the ability to think on the fly—something that’s put to the test when up-and-coming rapper Indigo (guest star Saweetie) requests a last-minute wardrobe change at a music video shoot. Meanwhile, back at Cal U, Jazz (Chloe Bailey) and Doug (Diggy Simmons) struggle with the rules of their relationship “pause.”

All the Ways to Celebrate Winnie the Pooh on Disney+

By Courtney Potter

We’ve got a rumbly in our tumbly and a spring in our step, which can only mean one thing: It’s National Winnie the Pooh Day! (It might also mean we’re hungry, but that’s another story.) This adorable A.A. Milne character was first animated by Disney artists in Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree in 1966, and later appeared in many additional theatrical features and featurettes—along with educational films, TV series, Disney Parks attractions, and (of course) countless cuddly toys.

In order to properly celebrate such a momentous occasion, we took a spin through Disney+ to see just how many Winnie the Pooh-related adventures (presented in chronological order) we could go on right from the comfort of our very own homes.

Ready for a visit to the Hundred Acre Wood? We can’t promise an entirely Heffalump-and-Woozles-free experience (so keep an eye on your honey)—but all told, you’re sure to have a “hip-hip-Pooh-ray!” kinda time…

The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh

The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
Directed by Wolfgang Reitherman and John Lounsbery, this charming 1977 film is a compilation of the animated shorts Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree, Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day, and Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too—with newly animated linking material from the original books by Milne. Music and lyrics were provided by Disney Legends Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman, who wrote 10 songs for Disney’s series of Pooh films over the years.

The New Adventures of Winnie The Pooh

The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
This animated 50-episode series aired on both The Disney Channel (as it was known in the late 1980s) and on ABC, and won an Emmy® Award for Best Animated Program, Daytime, in both 1989 and 1990.

Poohs grand adventure

Pooh’s Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin
Everyone’s favorite group of Hundred Acre Wood denizens misunderstands that Christopher Robin has gone away to school—so they set off on a brave journey to find their best childhood friend. Directed by Karl Geurs, this film made its direct-to-video debut in August 1997. 

Tigger Movie

The Tigger Movie
Sure, this 2000 film may have Tigger in the title, but Winnie still plays an awfully big role in the feel-good shenanigans. Seems our favorite “bouncy, trouncy, flouncy, pouncy” pal starts feeling blue when he realizes he doesn’t know any other Tigger types—so he sets off to find the “biggest and bestest” family tree around. But his search is fruitless, and when his longing gets the better of him, Pooh and the others grow concerned. Eventually, Tigger realizes his real family has been beside him all along.

Book of Pooh

Disney Junior’s The Book of Pooh
This particular Pooh-related 2001 TV series is truly unique, in the pantheon of Hundred Acre Wood fun: The characters are presented in stories utilizing the incredible 300-year-old art of Bunraku puppetry, with computer-generated sets.

Very Merry Pooh Year

Winnie the Pooh: A Very Merry Pooh Year
Okay, it’s true—the holidays are over. But if you wanted to extend them out just a wee bit more, Pooh can help! It’s the most wonderful time of the year in the Hundred Acre Wood, but Rabbit is having a hard time discovering the true meaning of the season. It isn’t until his pals make some misguided New Year’s resolutions, to change who they really are inside, that he gets the picture. This 2002 film is narrated by Michael York.

Piglets Big Movie

Piglet’s Big Movie
When Piglet disappears, Pooh and pals use his Book of Memories as a map to find him, and in the process discover that this “very small animal” has been a big hero—and a wonderful friend—in a lot of ways. This 2003 direct-to-video animated film is notable for several new songs written and performed by Oscar® and Grammy® Award-winning singer/songwriter Carly Simon, including “If I Wasn’t So Small (The Piglet Song)” and “With a Few Good Friends.”

springtime with roo

Winnie the Pooh: Springtime with Roo
Here’s one to get you into the spring-type spirit, a few months early: Every year, Rabbit plays the Easter Bunny, but not this year… Instead, he expects the Pooh gang to stay inside and “spring” into action (get it?): scrubbing, dusting, sweeping, and mopping until every last bit of spring cleaning is completed. Can anything (or anyone) change Rabbit’s mind? A tiny and cute Roo, perhaps?

Heffalump

Pooh’s Heffalump Movie
Turns out, not all Heffalumps want to steal your honey! And speaking of Roo, the half-pint kangaroo sets off on a solo journey in this 2005 film to face and capture the dreaded Heffalump. Pooh and the others try to save Roo from certain peril by setting up makeshift traps to thwart the Heffalumps—but in the meantime, Roo comes upon a young, playful Heffalump named Lumpy, and makes a great new friend in the process.

My Friends Tigger & Pooh
Lumpy the Heffalump rejoins the Hundred Acre Wood gang for this CG animated series that debuted on Disney Channel in 2007. Follow along as new pals Darby (a 6-year-old girl with a cool pink scooter) and her puppy Buster help super-sleuths Tigger and Pooh solve all manner of mysteries.

Winnie the Pooh

Winnie the Pooh
This 2011 film, directed by Don Hall and Stephen Anderson, finds our beloved bear and his silly (but steadfast) friends searching for Eeyore’s lost tail. Everything becomes a lot more complicated when Christopher Robin goes missing, too! Notable voices include actor/host Craig Ferguson as Owl; eventual Oscar-winning songwriter Kristen Anderson-Lopez as Kanga; and late PBS stalwart Huell Howser as Backson.

Christoper Robin

Christopher Robin
The most recent Pooh-related film on our list, this 2018 live-action/CGI feature (Oscar-nominated for its visual effects) stars Ewan MacGregor as the grown-up Christopher—a man stuck in a job where he is overworked, underpaid, and facing an uncertain future. He has a family of his own, but his work has become his life, leaving little time for his wife (Hayley Atwell) and daughter. When he’s reunited with a now tattered and worn Winnie the Pooh, a spark is rekindled… and it’s up to Pooh and friends to help Christopher reclaim the wonder of his childhood once and for all.

Third Season of Disney Channel’s Big City Greens Ordered—Plus More in News Briefs

By Courtney Potter

Big City Greens

More to Come from Creators of Disney Channel’s Big City Greens

Great news for fans of the hilarious animated shenanigans on Disney Channel’s hit Emmy®-nominated series Big City Greens: Not only has a third season just been ordered, but Disney Television Animation has also announced an overall deal with the show’s creators and executive producers, brothers Chris and Shane Houghton!

Under the new agreement, the brothers will continue their work on Big City Greens and develop new animated series, shorts, and movies for Disney Channel and Disney+. “We are excited to be deepening our relationship with Disney,” the pair recently said. “They have been very supportive of us and our crazy ideas, and we’re looking forward to continuing to grow Big City Greens as well as develop new and exciting projects together.”

Big City Greens follows mischievous and optimistic 10-year-old Cricket Green (voice of Chris Houghton), who moves from the country to the big city with his wildly out-of-place family—older sister Tilly (voice of Marieve Herington), father Bill (voice of Bob Joles), and Gramma Alice (voice of Artemis Pebdani). The series is influenced by the Houghton brothers’ childhood growing up in the small town of St. Johns, Michigan, with many of the locations and characters inspired by their real-life family members and townsfolk.

Currently in its second season, new episodes will roll out Saturdays beginning this Saturday, January 16, at 9 a.m. EST/PST on Disney Channel and in DisneyNOW—and will include a super-special music-filled episode featuring five original songs! Plus, look for season one of the series streaming now on Disney+.

5 Fantastic Things to Watch This Weekend

Boy howdy, there’s something for everyone this weekend from around the worlds of Disney—and if you’re a dog lover, you’re especially in luck. Look for Disney+ to add both Isle of Dogs (adorable stop-motion puppers) and Mary Poppins Returns to its lineup; the premiere of new film The Ultimate Playlist of Noise on Hulu; and (more dog content ahoy!) the AKC National Championship on ABC. It’s yet another embarrassment of viewing riches and we’re, as the kids say, “here for it.”

Small Friends, Big Style: Disney nuiMOs Are Your New BFFs

Okay, speaking of “adorable,” you’ll flip for this news from our friends at shopDisney: Since originally launching at Disney stores in Japan (followed by Disney stores in China, Shanghai Disney Resort, and Hong Kong Disneyland Resort), ridiculously cute Disney nuiMOs miniature plush have quickly gained popularity on social media—with fans styling their nuiMos in fashionable outfits and accessories and taking them on everyday adventures. And now, it’s time for the rest of the world to meet them, when they become available for the first time in North America and Europe in just a few days!

The name “nuiMOs” is a blend of the Japanese words nuigurumi, meaning plush, and moderu, meaning model. Disney nuiMOs plush characters are meant to be an extension of one’s self, with the flexibility to change appearance to suit both personality and taste. Disney nuiMOs are flexible, pocket-sized, and oh so portable—making them perfect on-the-go companions.

The first release will include Disney nuiMOs plush of Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Stitch, and more, along with an assortment of outfits and accessories for fans to mix and match. And on the first Monday of each month, starting February 1, new accessories, outfits, or plush will be released, including collaborations with the likes of Loungefly, Spirit Jersey, and Ashley Eckstein.

Look for Disney nuiMOs plush beginning January 19 at shopDisney.com and shopDisney.co.uk; in Disney stores in North America and Europe; and at Walt Disney World Resort, while they continue to delight guests at Disney stores in Japan, Shanghai Disney Resort, and Hong Kong Disneyland Resort.

First Look at Flora & Ulysses (With Easter Eggs A-Plenty)

It’s based on the Newbery Award-winning book by Kate DiCamillo and directed by Lena Khan, and it concerns a 10-year-old comic book fan (newcomer Matilda Lawler) befriending a real-life super hero who just happens to be… a squirrel. Sounds intriguing and hilariously awesome, right? Get all the scoop that’s fit to print about the upcoming Flora & Ulysses—including some amazing Easter eggs to look for—right here at D23.com… and watch for its exclusive debut on Disney+ on February 19.

WandaVision

Marvel Must Haves Launches with WandaVision Fun

Marvel fans, rejoice! There’s a full year of new Marvel Studios-inspired product coming—spanning toys, games, books, apparel, home décor, and so much more. In honor of Marvel Studios’ upcoming Disney+ series rollouts, the brand-new Marvel Must Haves product line will serve as the main source on Marvel.com for product reveals for each new series… and it all kicks off with Marvel Studios’ WandaVision, premiering this Friday, January 15!

Every Monday, starting January 18 through the end of the year, Marvel.com will debut epic new product highlights via the Marvel Must Haves landing page, kicking off with WandaVision, starring Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany. Weekly reveals will then come at regular intervals throughout the year, and they’ll include offerings around all manner of new characters and cliffhangers. Marvel Must Haves will include some of the world’s biggest brands including Hasbro, LEGO, Funko, Her Universe, and Loungefly—and a wide array of merchandise will also be available from shopDisney.com, select Disney Parks, Amazon, Hot Topic, Ulta, Walmart, and Target. Keep your eyes peeled for super-cool must haves for upcoming series such as The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Loki, What If…?, Ms. Marvel, and Hawkeye.

Visit Marvel.com/musthaves and follow along on social via #MarvelMustHaves for the latest information and availability!

Disney’s Magic of Storytelling Campaign Kicks Off

Readers of the world, put a bookmark in your latest tome and take heed: From now through March 31, the Magic of Storytelling campaign will once again come to life—through the diverse voices of storytellers and talent from some of Disney’s most beloved books, series, and movies! This year, the campaign will take place online at MagicOfStorytelling.com, as well as across the company’s networks and social platforms. Everyone is welcome to enjoy some sure-to-be-entertaining virtual story times and hear storytelling tips from Disney authors and creators…

Each week, talent from across some of Disney’s favorite shows and movies will participate in the Magic of Storytelling by hosting virtual story-time get-togethers on Disney’s social media platforms and on the campaign’s website. Some of the talent scheduled to be featured include Angelica Ross from FX’s Pose; Tika Sumpter from ABC’s mixed-ish; director Jon M. Chu (Crazy Rich Asians); Danielle Fishel from Disney Channel’s Girl Meets World; and Kayla Cromer from Freeform’s Everything’s Gonna Be Okay.

To learn more—including how you can donate to help provide books for kids in need—visit MagicOfStorytelling.com.

Adventure Awaits: New Indiana Jones Game in the Works

Just this week, Lucasfilm Games announced that a brand-new Indiana Jones game is currently in the works. Developed by the award-winning studio MachineGames and executive produced by game industry icon Todd Howard of Bethesda Games Studios, this new game will tell a completely original, standalone story set at the height of the legendary adventurer’s career. (As unabashed “Indy” fans, we cannot wait.)

Few details have been released, but the teaser trailer just released (seen above) offers up some tantalizing tidbits. Stay tuned for more info as it becomes available.

Name Revealed for Baby Rhino at Disney’s Animal Kingdom

Our pals at Disney’s Animal Kingdom welcomed a truly adorable baby rhino in October of last year, and we’ve all been waiting with bated breath to find out what the little one’s name is… now, we have an answer! Check out the big reveal in the clip above. (The baby’s mother, Kendi, was profiled in Disney+’s series Magic of Disney’s Animal Kingdom.) Welcome to the world, Ranger!

The keeper team at Disney’s Animal Kingdom wanted to make sure the baby boy had a name with special significance—honoring the wildlife rangers who protect rhinos around the world. Rhinos are the world’s second largest land animal and among the most endangered animals in the wild due to poaching.

Ranger’s name is just another way that Disney’s Animal Kingdom joins the Disney Conservation Fund (DCF) in an effort to support rhino conservation. DCF has giving more than 75 grants and awards to rhino protection projects over the years… in fact, most recently, they gave rhino ranger Sgt. Mutinda Ndivo (of the Big Life Foundation) a Disney Conservation Hero award for his work to protect rhinos and other wildlife in more than 1.6 million acres of wilderness in East Africa. Amazing, right?

Lil’ Ranger is due to join his crash—yes, that’s the name for a group of rhinos—on the savanna at Kilimanjaro Safaris in the next few weeks.

ICYMI: Q&A with Retiring Walt Disney Imagineer Kevin Rafferty

It’s the end of an era: Longtime Walt Disney Imagineer Kevin Rafferty is retiring in just a few short months. D23 was lucky enough to sit down with Rafferty for a fantastic “exit interview” chock full of great historical tidbits about his time with Disney as well as some wonderful career advice for those with big Imagineering dreams. We wish him all the best!

Inside Disney Channel’s Mysterious New Series Secrets of Sulphur Springs

By Zach Johnson

We have our reservations about The Tremont.

The dilapidated hotel houses a myriad of mysteries in Disney Channel’s Secrets of Sulphur Springs. Premiering tonight at 8 p.m. ET/PT in an uninterrupted programming event, the network’s first-ever time-travel mystery series hails from creator and executive producer Tracey Thomson. It follows 12-year-old Griffin (Preston Oliver), whose family recently—and abruptly—relocates to Louisiana to renovate The Tremont in hopes of restoring it to its former glory. There’s just one problem: It’s rumored to be haunted by the ghost of a girl named Savannah (Elle Graham) who disappeared decades ago! After Griffin befriends Harper (Kyliegh Curran), a bright-eyed, friendly, and curious classmate, they find a secret portal that allows them to travel back in time. In the past, they’ll try to uncover the key to solving this mystery—one that they soon discover affects everyone close to them.

“This is like a mysterious, suspenseful, creepy side of Disney,” says Oliver. “It does have a little humor here and there, just to ease the creepiness, but I feel like people are really going to get hooked on it. Plus, it has a bunch of cliffhangers that will keep you wanting more and more.” Never knowing what will happen next is part of the fun, of course—and even the actors found themselves invested in the series’ many twists and turns. “You wait a week and all your theories are building up. You get so interested in it,” says Graham. “Then the next episode airs and you see it goes a completely different way, and it’s like, ‘Wow!’”

Secrets of Sulphur Springs may be darker than, say, BUNK’D or Raven’s Home, but it still offers all the hallmarks of a traditional Disney Channel series. “I think it’s good to have a mystery show that everyone—the whole family—can enjoy,” explains Curran. “Having something darker for Disney really brings everyone in. This is the beginning of a new era.”

While Griffin “loves going on adventures,” according to Oliver, he does so “with precaution to make sure nobody gets injured and everything goes as planned.” In real life, Oliver is a bit bolder than his character, and says he was rarely scared on set “since the scripts would write out everything so we knew what was coming. But seeing it happen in front of you was pretty cool to watch happen.” However, Oliver admits, “There’s one scene where me and Kylie are walking together and then something drops. I forgot it was going to happen, so it actually freaked me out and I jumped! That was probably the scariest thing that happened.”

Series Secrets of Sulphur Springs

Like her “mystery obsessed” character, Curran also loves to explore. “Sometimes when we weren’t working on a particular set, they’d turn off the lights. I would walk through the dark, dark Tremont sets and it was super creepy, but it was also extremely cool because of how detailed everything was,” she says. “It kind of made me feel like I was in a ghost story.”

Ironically, it wasn’t ghosts the cast feared so much as pranks from one of their co-stars. “I would get scared whenever anybody on set—especially Preston—would come out of nowhere and be like, ‘Boo!’” Graham says. “He did that to everybody. We’d all get scared.”

Secrets of Sulphur Springs Star Madeleine McGraw Clues Us In on Disney Channel’s Brand-New Series

By Beth Deitchman

Twelve-year-old Madeleine McGraw is quite the expert when it comes to keeping Disney secrets under wraps—so much so, that it’s no surprise she’s been entrusted with the Secrets of Sulphur Springs—the new live-action, time-travel mystery series premiering on Disney Channel this Friday, January 15 (8 p.m. EST/PST). The San Jose, California, native’s Disney credits include Disney and Pixar’s Cars 3 and Toy Story 4, as well as Marvel Studios’ Ant-Man and The Wasp, and not once did McGraw utter a single detail about these highly anticipated films prematurely. She’s just as tight-lipped when it comes to the mysteries that unfold in Secrets of Sulphur Springs.

Madeleine McGraw

McGraw plays Zoey, who would technically be considered the middle child of the Campbell family since she’s two minutes older than her twin brother, Wyatt. Along with older brother Griffin and their parents, Ben and Sarah, the Campbells move from Chicago to the fictional town of Sulphur Springs, Louisiana, to restore an abandoned hotel property, The Tremont, to its former grandeur. But there are a couple of wrinkles: The Tremont might be haunted… and it also houses a secret portal that leads back in time to an era when The Tremont was a bustling vacation destination. “There’s a lot of mystery,” McGraw says of the new series, the first of its kind for Disney Channel.

Secrets of Sulphur Springs

The one-hour series premiere will leave viewers hanging, which is how McGraw says she and her fellow cast members felt every week during production. “I was trying to figure out the mystery as we went along,” she shares. “We tried to ask them, ‘Oh, c’mon, tell us what’s going to happen!’ and they were like, ‘Nope, you have to wait until we give you the next script!’ So we were always ecstatic when we got the next script. I couldn’t wait.” Throughout filming in and around New Orleans, Louisiana, McGraw came up with many a theory about where the story was going, but was she able to crack the case? “It was a total surprise! I guessed, and I got it wrong. I was like, ‘Wait, that happens?’ But I can’t spoil anything,” she says unequivocally.

McGraw has had plenty of practice at avoiding spoilers, having worked within the top-secret world of the Marvel Cinematic Universe in Ant-Man and The Wasp, in which she played young Hope van Dyne. “It was my dream since I was little to be in a Marvel movie, so that finally came true and it was awesome. The sets were amazing, and I got to see sneak peeks of the other sets,” she recalls. “It was really cool getting to meet everyone on the film and getting to find out the secrets behind it.”

Madeleine McGraw

In addition to having inspired the name of the car she voiced in Cars 3—Maddy McGear—McGraw also lent her voice to one of our favorite humans in the Toy Story world, Bonnie, in Toy Story 4. Joining the franchise was especially meaningful for McGraw who, over the years, had watched the first three films countless times with her family. She recalls “screaming and running around the house” with her mother after learning she was cast in the film before going radio silent, keeping the role a secret from all of her friends and even her grandparents. “They were like, ‘Oh, what is she working on now?’ And we couldn’t tell them,” McGraw says. She was thrilled when she was finally able to show her grandparents a trailer for the film and see their reaction to hearing a very familiar voice. “That was definitely the hardest secret,” McGraw emphasizes.

Of course, it’s no mystery that McGraw is a lifelong Disney fan. Like the rest of us, she’s been watching favorite Disney films over and over while staying safe at home—Onward and Soul are recent favorites—and she’s dreaming of returning to Disneyland with her family when it reopens. She describes herself as a “huge roller coaster person,” and points to the Incredicoaster and Guardians of the Galaxy – Mission: BREAKOUT! as her two favorite attractions. And, also like the rest of us, she loves Disney Parks food. “I think we ate every five seconds. We had so much cotton candy,” she says of her family’s marathon days at Disneyland, which always end with a ride on Splash Mountain and a treat (ideally a caramel chocolate marshmallow).

Secrets of Sulphur Springs

The 11-episode Secrets of Sulphur Springs promises to be an equally thrilling E-Ticket ride, with unexpected twists and turns coming every week. McGraw is certain Disney fans are going to love the show. She promises, “It’s got a little bit of everything in it for everyone. It’s got some comedy, some drama, and a lot of mystery—and at the end of every episode, I think it’s going to leave viewers wanting more.”

Get Ready for BUNK’D Season 5 with Miranda May and Peyton List

By Zach Johnson

This Friday, Disney Channel’s family comedy BUNK’D returns for a fifth season of fun and friendship at Camp Kikiwaka. As a new season begins, former counselor-turned-fashion-designer Emma Ross (guest star Peyton List) pays a surprise visit to her old stomping grounds. Ahead of the season premiere, airing at 7:30 p.m. ET, we talked to List and series star Miranda May, who stars as Lou Hockhauser, owner and director of Camp Kikiwaka, about their TV reunion, the reason for Emma’s return, and what to expect later this season.

D23: Peyton, tell us about reprising your role as Emma. How did this come about?
Peyton List (PL): Disney basically reached out to me over quarantine and asked if I would come back. They said the writers already had an idea of where Emma has been. Then they sent me the script and I was over the moon. I said yes before they could even finish asking! I was so excited to come back.

D23: Fill us in on what Emma has been up to since she left Camp Kikiwaka.
PL: Emma has been off doing what she’s always wanted to do. It’s really cool, because I played her for the past 10 years, and she’s always talked about fashion and wanting to follow in her mom’s footsteps and go off to Milan—and that is exactly what she is doing. She might be failing along the way, but at least she’s pursuing her dream.

BUNK'D

D23: What was it like for the two of you to get to work together again?
Miranda May (MM): I was so excited to see her, because obviously with everything going on in the world right now, we don’t really get to see people—and this is a safe set. For her to be there, it was exciting, because we hadn’t gotten to hang out in a while. And to see the characters together again made me really happy, because there are so many stories that they’ve had together, and we saw their friendship evolve… I loved that it was just immediately like they were right back to how they used to be with each other.

D23: Had you two kept in touch in the years since Peyton left BUNK’D?
PL: Oh, yeah! I feel like we also realized, “Oh, my gosh! I’ve missed you so much more than I even fathomed.” I don’t think we stopped talking the entire week. I was in her dressing room, and then she was at my house that night, and we just could not stop talking. It was like when you’ve seen that friend who you haven’t seen in so long and it just feels so right. When we worked together every day, we were best friends—always with each other. But life takes you to other places for work and everything else. [This time] we were like, “We’re not doing that ever again! That’s not happening.”

BUNK'D

D23: Peyton, what was it like seeing some of younger cast members all grown up?
PL: It was really cool, I’m not gonna lie, to see the humans they’re becoming. I think when you work on a show for a year of your life, or a season as a kid, there’s so much growth within that [time]. And they’re all such good kids. They have such good families supporting them. And yeah, their voices are getting deeper and they are so much taller! I feel like a year really changes a kid a lot. Now I realize what everyone meant when they would come back from hiatus breaks on Jessie with the kids, because you really do see a lot of changes.

D23: Miranda, what’s in store for Lou and Camp Kikiwaka as the season moves forward?
MM: As always, we’re gonna have a bunch of craziness and fun stuff happening. But also, we’re gonna see Lou in college for the first time, which will be very fun. We will see her balancing school along with running the camp. And we’re gonna see the kids doing what the kids do! I don’t think that there is a dull moment at Camp Kikiwaka. There are some really heartfelt stories that I’m really happy we get to play out. It’s so cool to do real stuff… We’ll always have the fun, the real, and the heart of it all. I think everybody loves the show because of the heart in it, and these characters just love each other so much. I think that translates on-screen and also off-screen. Everybody gets along and everybody has a friend.

D23: Peyton, would you be open to having Emma return in future episodes?
PL: Oh, yeah! I really would. I would always be down to come back. I remember that Friday when we were wrapping, I was like, “Ugh, I want to be back here next week doing it again!”

BUNK'D

D23: Trevor Tordjman will also be joining the show later in the season as Parker Preston, who has 15% ownership of the camp. How will Lou adjust to that surprising development?
MM: The 15% is a big deal! There’s a very definitive line of Lou being like, “I have more say than you have,” and him being like, “But I do still have a say.” There’s definitely an arc of them learning about each other. I think for the first time we see Lou have her guard up with somebody. We have never in five seasons seen Lou not immediately want to hug somebody and not immediately want to be like, “Let me show you my camp!” She is just kind of taken aback by him [at first], so we’ll see her in that situation. And, you know… I think Lou and Parker will evolve as time goes on. And people are gonna like it, I promise!

D23: Are you hinting at a possible romance?
MM: We’re hinting at something. Who knows? Maybe they just get a dog!