JUST ANNOUNCED: Take a First Look at Snow White’s Enchanted Wish at Disneyland Park

By the D23 Team

Our friends at Disney Parks Blog  have been covering the ongoing renovation of the classic Disneyland attraction Snow White’s Scary Adventures. Today is the perfect day for an update on this exciting transformation—after all, it is the 83rd anniversary of the premiere of Disney Animation’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs at the Carthay Circle Theatre in Los Angeles. Our first update: Disney Parks Blog has shared that the attraction has been reimagined and renamed as Snow White’s Enchanted Wish!

While Disneyland park has been closed, Walt Disney Imagineering has been putting the finishing touches on this cherished attraction, which will be ready to welcome guests when we reopen our theme parks at a later date. While you may recognize some familiar elements in the attraction, you’ll also spot some enhanced story details and all-new scenes. Take a look at the sneak peek the Blog just shared:

Imagineers have updated this classic Fantasyland attraction using state-of-the-art audio and visual technology, including new music, LED black lighting, laser projections, and a new animation system. You’ll recognize beloved characters in new appearances, such as Snow White cheerfully dancing and twirling with the Seven Dwarfs in their cozy cottage. You may even notice the scent of Doc’s handiwork—a baking apple pie—wafting through the air, before heading “off to work we go!”

Snow White

You’ll be singing “Heigh-Ho” along with the new shadow projections that bring to life the dwarfs as they march happily off to work in the mine. All that glitters in the mine is not gold—in fact, it now sparkles with updated shimmering lighting effects and glittering jewels all around.

Wishing for more coverage on Snow White’s Enchanted Wish? Stay tuned to D23.com for more updates as they are announced!

5 Fantastic Things to Watch This Week

By Zach Johnson

Nat Geo WILD will celebrate the “Pol-idays” this year with a 12 Days of Dr. Pol Marathon, beginning December 21 and continuing through the New Year. As an early present, two of our favorite holiday films—Home Alone and The Mistle-Tones—will air this week before Freeform’s “25 Days of Christmas” comes to a close. And ABC will offer fun for the whole family with its debut of The Greatest Showman on Christmas Eve, followed the next morning by the fan-favorite annual special Disney Parks Magical Christmas Day Celebration.

12 Days of Pol

12 Days of Pol—December 21–January 3 on Nat Geo WILD
This holiday season, the network is having snow much fun with 12 festive days of The Incredible Dr. Pol, followed by all-new episodes beginning January 2, 2021. And as a special gift, the all-day marathons will also include behind-the-scenes stories from Dr. Pol himself!

Home Alone

Home Alone—Tuesday, December 22, at 5:10 p.m. ET on Freeform
In this 1990 classic, the McCallister family travels to Paris to celebrate Christmas. There’s just one problem: They’ve accidentally left 8-year-old Kevin McAllister (Macaulay Culkin) behind! Unsupervised and unencumbered by his family’s absence, Kevin relishes his new role as man of the house. It’s not all fun and games, of course. Soon, he learns that bumbling burglars Harry (Joe Pesci) and Marv (Daniel Stern) have been robbing his neighbors and set their sights on his home—meaning Kevin alone will have to defend it.

The Mistle Tones

The Mistle-Tones— Wednesday, December 23, at 9:30 a.m. on Freeform
In this 2012 film, the day has finally come for Holly (Tia Mowry) to audition for the Snow Belles, a holiday singing group founded by her late mother. Unfortunately, ice queen Marci (Tori Spelling) is in charge of casting… and she’s threatened by Holly. So, Holly creates her own musical group, The Mistle-Tones, and challenges her rivals to a Christmas Eve sing-off.

The Greatest Showman

The Greatest Showman—Thursday, December 24, at 8 p.m. ET on ABC
Making its network broadcast debut, the award-winning musical stars Hugh Jackman as the sensational showman P.T. Barnum. Given his knack for publicity and promotion, he decides to give showbiz a shot, rising from nothing to create the Barnum & Bailey circus. Featuring catchy musical numbers, exotic performers, and daring acrobatic feats, his spectacle quickly takes the world by storm to become the greatest show on earth. Rounding out the film’s all-star cast are Zac Efron as Phillip Carlyle, Rebecca Ferguson as Jenny Lind, Keala Settle as Lettie Lutz, Michelle Williams as Charity Hallett-Barnum, and Zendaya as Anne Wheeler.

Disney Parks Magical Christmas Day Celebration

Disney Parks Magical Christmas Day Celebration—Friday, December 25, at 10 a.m. ET and 9 a.m. CT/PT on ABC
Join hosts Tituss Burgess and Julianne Hough as they spread holiday cheer across Walt Disney World Resort. Featuring appearances by actor Keegan-Michael Key and Tik Tok creator Alex Ojeda, the annual holiday special will include Disney cast member highlights and a look into Disney Dreamers Academy, as well as special sneak peeks at the attraction Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, the series WandaVision, and the animated feature film Soul. In addition to Burgess and Hough, performers will include Jon Batiste, Keedron Bryant, the Florida A&M University Gospel Choir, Becky G, Trevor Jackson, Tori Kelly, and Maddie & Tae. Be sure to keep an eye out for beloved Disney characters popping up in unique ways!

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Mussorgsky

By Katie Strobel, Walt Disney Archives

We’re continuing our Fantasia (1940) composer series by exploring the life and music of Modest Mussorgsky.

St. John’s Night on the Bare Mountain (1867), streaming now on Disney+

Modest Mussorgsky (1839-1881)

Fantasia: 01:49:20-01:59:18

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Bach
Fantasia (1940) Chernabog scene concept art

The 19th-century composer, Modest Mussorgsky, was a member of the Russian nationalist school known as “The Mighty Five.” Along with composers Balakirev, Borodin, Cui, and Rimsky-Korsakov, these five made music that was inspired by folk melodies, rhythms, and orchestrations. Rimsky-Korsakov (of “Flight of the Bumblebee” fame), in particular, saw original talent in Mussorgsky, but also deemed his music “absurd” with “unsuccessful orchestration.” In fact, it is Rimsky-Korsakov’s own re-working of the music we hear in the “Night on Bald Mountain” segment of Fantasia (1940).

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Bach
Fantasia (1940) Chernabog holding flames concept art

Originally titled St. John’s Night on the Bare Mountain by the composer, Mussorgsky aimed to create a “tone-picture” for the orchestra, lending beautifully to the vision of Fantasia (1940) in which images were especially created to describe already-existing music. As was original to the composition via Russian folklore, and what we can see in the film, the work in both forms paints a picture of dark and phantasmagorical spiritual revelry atop and around a shadowy mountain.

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Bach
Fantasia (1940) figures dancing with flames concept art

However, St. John’s Night on the Bare Mountain was a complicated composition for Mussorgsky: After thinking he had done a great job, his mentor scrutinized it so much that Mussorgsky was left trying to make improvements. It wasn’t until after Mussorgsky’s death that his friend Rimsky-Korsakov re-worked this piece to make it playable in concerts. He gave it a brighter sound with more formal control, but one could say that that also eliminated Mussorgsky’s original dark and rough feeling in the piece.

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Bach
Fantasia (1940) skeletons in the sky concept art

So where can you see (or hear) Mussorgsky’s St. John’s Night on the Bare Mountain? Check out Fantasia (1940) and The Simpsons, streaming now on Disney+, and the Walt Disney Records album below! And be sure to check back for our next spotlight look at Amilcare Ponchielli and Paul Dukas!

The Simpsons (TV, 1989-present), streaming now on Disney+

  • “Simpsons Bible Stories” (1999) – Season 10, Episode 18
    • 00:19:41-00:19:50
  • “Them, Robot” (2012) – Season 23, Episode 17
    • 00:06:08-00:06:15
  • “The Last Traction Hero” (2016) – Season 28, Episode 9
    • 00:15:57-00:16:18
  • “Stop or My Dog Will Shoot” (2007) – Season 18, Episode 20
    • 00:16:21-00:16:41 – Here you can hear another well-known Mussorgsky piece, Pictures at an Exhibition: “The Great Gate of Kiev.”

The Legacy Collection: Disneyland

  • “Fantasmic!”
    • 00:15:18 – Here you will start to hear St. John’s Night on the Bare Mountain.

 

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Bach
Bill Tytla sketching Chernabog.

Did You Know? Mussorgsky originally intended for St. John’s Night on the Bare Mountain to be an episode in his opera Sorochintsy Fair.

In case you missed it, click here to see our previous spotlight look at Franz Schubert!

Muppet Babies Returns on January 4—Plus More in News Briefs

By Courtney Potter

Muppet Babies

Season Three of Disney Junior’s Muppet Babies Debuts This January

They’ll make your dreams come true—with all-new adventures, starting next month! Season three of Disney Junior’s Emmy Award®-nominated series Muppet Babies will premiere Monday, January 4, at 5 p.m. EST on Disney Junior and in DisneyNOW, and will introduce a new Muppet named Rozzie, the newly adopted sister of Fozzie Bear!

In the season three premiere, Fozzie shares the news that his family is adopting a little sister, and he’s worried that he doesn’t have what it takes to be a big brother. Consequently, Fozzie’s friends use their imaginations to enroll him into “Rizzo’s Big Bruddah School.” (We have a feeling Fozzie will “graduate” with flying colors.)

The reimagined, CG-animated Muppet Babies follows the hilarious playroom antics of a young Kermit the Frog, Piggy, Fozzie Bear, Gonzo, Animal, and Summer Penguin, and is Disney Channel’s No. 1 series with kids ages 2 through 5. Based on the original Emmy Award-winning series, the show is executive produced by Tom Warburton (Codename: Kids Next Door), and Matt Danner (Gravity Falls) will be co-executive producer and supervising director for season three. And speaking of Danner, earlier this year, he won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Performer in a Preschool Animated Program for voicing Kermit, Rowlf, Mr. Waldorf, Beaker, and Chef. Kudos on that sensational, celebrational, Muppetational work!

5 Fantastic Things to Watch This Weekend

It’s a holly jolly holiday around the world of Disney, with so much to watch that you may have to brew up a second pot of hot chocolate to get you through. So, what can you expect? Why, nothing less than the sure-to-be-amazing season two finale of Disney+’s The Mandalorian! Plus, it’s time once again for ABC’s annual Christmas-adjacent airing of the iconic 1965 film The Sound of Music. All told, these are “a few of our favorite things” for watching over the next couple days. Get it? “Favorite Things”? Fraulein Maria? (We crack ourselves up.)

New Music-Filled Featurette From Disney and Pixar’s Soul

One of the incredible aspects of Disney and Pixar’s upcoming animated feature Soul is its music… With the film set in two distinct worlds—bustling New York City, and the fantastical cosmic realms of The Great Before—it called for two styles of music that will help shape and define each world. Renowned musician and Grammy® nominee Jon Batiste provides the original jazz compositions and arrangements for Soul, while Oscar® winners Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross (The Social Network) created an original score that will drift between each realm. For an inside look at how some of that was accomplished, check out the brand-new featurette, above.

In related news, Walt Disney Records is set to release several albums inspired by the film: the Soul Original Motion Picture Soundtrack; the Soul Original Score vinyl album; and Music From and Inspired by Soul vinyl album. The digital soundtrack—which features the songs “Rappin Ced” performed by Daveed Diggs, “Parting Ways” performed by Cody ChesnuTT, and Batiste’s cover of the Curtis Mayfield classic “It’s All Right”—as well as both vinyl albums will be available beginning Friday, December 18!

The Proud Family

The Proud Family Producers to Develop Projects for Disney

Cool news for fans of awesome things (hey, that’s us!): Influential producers Bruce W. Smith and Ralph Farquhar have entered into a multiyear overall deal with Disney that calls for them to produce animated and live-action series and movies for Disney Branded Television. They’ll work closely with executives at Disney Channels and Disney Branded Television to bring their inspired storytelling to all manner of audiences. This new agreement provides Farquhar and Smith an incredible way to develop emerging talent, as well as leverage their own combined experiences to bring unique projects and voices to Disney.

Among many other things, Smith and Farquhar are the producers behind the groundbreaking animated series The Proud Family, which—18 years after its Disney Channel premiere—is still beloved for its characters, stories, humor, and messages about inclusion and cultural diversity in a super-smart, modern way. All episodes are currently available to stream on Disney+, home to the upcoming revival series The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder (premiere date TBA). We can’t wait to see what else these two über-talented humans have in store! 

ICYMI: All the Investor Day News That’s Fit to… Post

The Walt Disney Company’s recent Investor Day was a holiday gift of truly epic proportions—for it included the announcements of so many incredible upcoming projects, we almost couldn’t keep track. But we did! (We’re pretty good at that kinda stuff.) And we have a complete rundown of what you can expect in the months and years to come. Take a gander and mark those calendars for veritable scads of mind-blowing films and TV series to look forward to.

The Mandalorian

Go Behind the Scenes of The Mandalorian Season Two

As we previously mentioned, this very weekend features the second season finale of the mega-hit The Mandalorian. Yup, it’s sadly season-finale time already… but don’t you fret, because there’s still some new Mandalorian-related content coming very soon to Disney+.

The streaming service will bring viewers behind the scenes of the groundbreaking season in a brand-new hour-long “Making of Season Two” documentary special, premiering Friday, December 25! In this new installment of Disney Gallery: The Mandalorian, filmmakers and cast provide unprecedented access to the storytelling decisions and innovations that went into season two of the Emmy® Award-winning series.

Featuring immersive on-set footage that places viewers in the center of the filmmaking process, the special explores the production of all eight episodes in season two—from early concept art through the groundbreaking technology introduced in the series.

In related news, Disney, Lucasfilm, and Google have teamed up to bring the world of Mando and friends to life through a new, immersive The Mandalorian AR Experience app. Users can now interact with characters from the Emmy® Award-winning series in their own homes, discovering hidden features while re-creating scenes from season one. Retrace the Mandalorian’s steps, find the Child, and harness the Force as virtual versions of the characters appear via the Google Pixel app—which you can download by clicking here. (Available on 5G Google Pixels and other select 5G Android phones that have Google Play Services for AR updated.)

First Look at Disney Channel’s Secrets of Sulphur Springs

Are you a fan of ghost stories? What about mysteries full of time-travel and intrigue? Then have we got a show for you… Secrets of Sulphur Springs, a brand-new live-action series for kids and families, will premiere on Friday, January 15, at 8 p.m. ET/PT with a special one-hour uninterrupted programming event on Disney Channel. Following the premiere event, new episodes of Secrets of Sulphur Springs will be presented Fridays at 8 p.m. ET/PT on Disney Channel, beginning January 22.

Set in the fictional Louisiana town of Sulphur Springs, the series follows 12-year-old Griffin Campbell (Preston Oliver), whose world has been turned upside-down after his father Ben (Josh Braaten) moves the family from Chicago to take over an abandoned hotel property, The Tremont. The Campbell family, which also includes Griffin’s mother Sarah (Kelly Frye) and his younger twin siblings, Wyatt (Landon Gordon) and Zoey (Madeleine McGraw), moves into The Tremont in hopes of restoring it to the colorful vacation destination it once was. But on his first day at his new school, Griffin hears rumors that the hotel is haunted by the ghost of Savannah (Elle Graham), a girl who disappeared decades ago. He meets and befriends Harper (Kyliegh Curran), a thrill-seeking classmate, and soon they discover a secret portal that allows them to travel back in time and uncover clues about this astonishing town mystery.

Leading into Secrets of Sulphur Springs’ debut is the season five premiere of BUNK’D at 7:30 p.m. ET/PT, guest starring original cast member Peyton List, reprising her role of Emma Ross. Looks like we’ll be kickin’ off the new year with some great TV!

Exclusive Q&A with Soul Musician Jon Batiste

By Zach Johnson

Jamie Foxx may provide the voice of Joe Gardner in Soul, but Jon Batiste provides his hands. “When you see Joe’s hands playing in the film, that’s Jon’s playing,” producer Dana Murray says. “Our animators studied reference footage of Jon at the piano to capture details of how he plays—everything from how his fingers move to the breaths he takes.” Grammy® nominee Batiste handled the original jazz compositions and arrangements for the film, while Oscar® winners Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross composed an original score.

In an exclusive Q&A with D23, Batiste opens up about his work as a musician and a consultant on Soul, making its theatrical debut January 12.

D23: The Official Disney Fan Club: In your first meetings with Pixar, what were some of the early ideas you pitched director Pete Docter and co-director Kemp Powers, who wrote the script with Mike Jones? And how did that evolve as production progressed?

Jon Batiste (JB): I pitched the idea of putting together a large, multi-generational ensemble that would feature a range of musicians from living jazz legends to young lions. We were able to do that over the course of several recording sessions, which is a historic feat! The age range of the band is 95 years old to 19 years old. I mean Roy Haynes, who played some drums for us, played with Louis Armstrong!

Soul

D23: Are there any specific jazz musicians that inspired your work on Soul?

JB: I created a unique style for the film that was influenced by Thelonious Monk, Duke Ellington, Roy Hargrove, Cassandra Wilson, Nina Simone, Louis Armstrong, and many, many others.

D23: What made you want to get involved with a Pixar film—and Soul in particular?

JB: Pixar is home to some of the world’s best storytellers. Also, Pixar has such a distinct style, which is something artists all strive for. It’s rare to be able to blend wholesomeness and high artistry, all wrapped in universal themes that draw from a diverse range of cultures and sensibilities. These are all core values of mine and no one else in the world does it like Pixar can at such a high level. It’s been a dream come true.

Soul

D23: Were you in touch with Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross to make sure your compositions complemented each other, or did you want to keep that separate?

JB: The songs and the score mostly exist in separate worlds—Earth and The Great Before—so it worked better for us to not communicate at the start of the creative process since we wanted there to be a contrast between the two worlds. Once we were further into the process, we played each other some of the music, and that’s when their music started to influence my approach more. There are moments when our worlds collide, and for those moments, we collaborated on the music together. It really was the blending of two worlds. My creative process was completely different from theirs. Figuring that out with them were some of my favorite moments in the studio.

D23: Soul aside, what are your favorite music memories associated with Disney and Pixar?

JB: The music in Aladdin changed my life. What a brilliant score and remarkable way to incorporate middle eastern culture. The 1953 animated Peter Pan with music done by Oliver Wallace was orchestrated beautifully! So was Fantasia! Also, the music Randy Newman wrote for Toy Story stands in the top five of all-time great movie music for me.

Celebrate 10 Years of TRON: Legacy with a Look Back at the Creation of the Film

By Josh Shipley

To celebrate the 10th anniversary of TRON: Legacy, we’re sharing a story that originally appeared in a slightly different form in the winter 2010 edition of Disney twenty-three magazine and was modified for d23.com. Become a D23 Gold Member to enjoy more content like this in the quarterly publication.

Torn

1982… In these early days of bits and data streams, young writer/director Steven Lisberger had a vision of how our burgeoning world of ever-increasing technology was on a collision course with our personal lives. This is how TRON was originally conceived, and it was Disney that embraced his vision. It was a revolutionary notion at that point in our society’s grasp of technology, often referred to in ensuing years as “ahead of its time.”

Fast forward to the end of the 1982 film, and with all things properly aligned in the lives of Flynn and Bradley, tales of the TRON universe were content to lay dormant for nearly three decades. As we began to comprehend the influence of the digital sphere on our own lives, the game grid adventures of Flynn and Tron slowly became less abstract. Steven has a stable theory as to why a TRON sequel would take so many years to develop into reality: “The reason it took the 25 to 28 years is because we needed the 10-year-olds to grow up and be powerful enough to make this movie, so that they could take their 10-year-old sons.” Although TRON was never forgotten, the arcade generation that was most influenced by the original simply needed to grow up.

Enter the age of TRON: Legacy.

Torn

Fans from the start
“I saw the [original] movie with my dad when I was 12 years old,” recalls TRON: Legacy producer Sean Bailey. “That was my first take of high concept. I had never seen a movie screen that had looked like that before. I have an emotional history with TRON, and a reverence for the title.” With Sean working alongside co-producer Justin Springer and production executive Brigham Taylor as the initial creative team, Adam Horowitz and Eddy Kitsis joined the team as the writing pair to add new life to this elaborate digital canvas. When they were initially approached by Brigham in 2007 regarding their ability to write a treatment for a TRON sequel, Eddy was elated. “I just couldn’t believe they asked!” he says.

They jumped right in. Each has vivid memories of having been dropped off at the mall to see TRON in its original release, and both have been influenced by its brave approach to story, technology, and of course, visuals. This childhood favorite had a storyline for which they both felt a personal understanding, and they couldn’t wait to develop it further.

Torn

The Time for TRON to Continue
Although the new team was motivated and in place, there was still doubt regarding whether or not the timing was right for Disney to return TRON to today’s pop culture vernacular, so the team determined that a short visual effects test could be secretly produced, and subsequently rolled out at the 2008 Comic-Con International in San Diego, California. Pleading their case for absolute secrecy on the matter, Sean remarked, “We have the opportunity here to surprise a crowd that is un-surprise-able.”

This nearly three-minute test became a true Comic-Con “Easter egg” to be discovered. It would be covertly attached to the end of an existing Disney panel in front of nearly 6,500 unsuspecting spectators. As the panel completed its presentation, several in attendance began to disperse to their next scheduled event. The moderator stood back at the microphone and coyly announced that there was a surprise. As the Walt Disney Pictures logo appeared on the big screen, and then morphed into a digitally rendered visage of that same castle, the audience went silent… with bated breath. New, yet strangely familiar images began to fill the screen. Game warriors? Light cycles? The trailer depicted a dark and foreboding computer world, not at all like the bright and peaceful “free-system” our heroes fought to liberate at the end of TRON, where an exciting light-cycle chase sequence ensues. The payoff was the reveal of a young Jeff Bridges who, we discover, is the aggressor in the light-cycle chase, who “de-reses” (eliminates) the light-cycle rider he’s pursuing. This is a character trait we didn’t see Jeff portray in the first film. A new attitude and vibe toward the TRON story were clearly present.

Audience reactions began to break the silence in recognition, but nothing matched the unbridled enthusiasm of seeing a matured Jeff Bridges appear on screen as Flynn. The conclusion was met with deafening applause. The visual effects test was an enormous success. Joseph adds, “There was a lot of internal excitement, and the Comic-Con excitement was the push to get it a full green light.” Now, it was time to get to work.

Torn

Lighting up a Legacy
The highly sophisticated technical costuming on TRON: Legacy held all of those involved with entranced fascination. Director Joseph Kosinski remarks, “In this film, I really wanted the suits to physically illuminate the characters. Each other. The set.” The costumes in TRON: Legacy could light up on their own with practical lighting built into each one. A full cast of characters emitting streams of light all at once created a unique visual like no one had ever experienced. The actors would wait with a child-like anticipation on a dimly lit set for those magic words, “Light ’em up!”

“The illuminated suits were something we developed for this movie, and they ended up driving how we lit the whole film,” Joseph continues. “The suit lamps look brilliant in a dark room; they don’t look great in a bright room so the lighting of all of our sets had to be dimmed down to a really low level. That came out of my desire to make everything in this film as physical and real as possible. For the actors, it makes a difference to be on a real set, and it makes a difference to be in a suit and watch it illuminate on your body. I think it pays off in the performances and the overall look of the movie.”

Torn

Creating Clu
Helping to fully realize the cast was the timeless Jeff Bridges. He wasn’t just returning to his role as the older and wiser Kevin Flynn, who has been a prisoner of the computer grid for two decades, but also as his ageless digital avatar, Clu, who rules that realm. By portraying both roles with separate thought, emotion, and motivation, and through the wonders of modern filmmaking techniques, it is convincingly easy to believe that Bridges does in fact have his younger counterpart to perform against. The results of this talented one-man duality is an amazing artistic marvel to behold, as Kevin continues to impart wisdom upon an irrational Clu that only believes in perfection.

“I don’t see this movie happening without Jeff,” Joseph admits. “He was the first key in getting this going.” The impressive nature of how Kevin Flynn has evolved during the last 28 years is multifaceted. Not only is the importance of this father–son story literal in the biological relationship of Kevin and Sam in the real world, it takes on an undeniable poignancy between Kevin and Clu within the digital world.

 Thanks to Rob Klein for his contributions to this article.

7 Things You Need to Know About the Disney+ Docuseries On Pointe

By Beth Deitchman

Only the best of the best young dancers are accepted to New York City’s esteemed School of American Ballet (SAB) where, through hard work and dedication, those truly gifted 8-18-year-olds learn to become even better at what they already do so beautifully. The new docuseries On Pointe, coming to Disney+ this Friday, December 18, gives viewers an unprecedented inside look at SAB, as well as the lives of these remarkable dancers and their families over the course of a season.

The older SAB students come to Manhattan from across the U.S. to train for professional careers in ballet, while younger dancers commute to classes from around the greater New York City area and, in some cases, are selected for coveted roles in New York City Ballet’s holiday classic George Balanchine’s The NutcrackerÒ. They’re all in pursuit of a common dream, and as SAB’s Chairman of Faculty Kay Mazzo notes in On Pointe’s first episode, “Some succeed and some don’t. But if you say, That’s all I can do with my life—I have to dance, you’re in the right place.”

Director/producer Larissa Bills led a small crew that gathered hundreds of hours of footage captured within SAB’s classrooms and dorms, as well as the students’ homes. The filmmakers set the barre high, approaching the project as if they were creating a six-hour documentary film, as opposed to a reality show about SAB. As a warmup, here are a few things you need to know before watching On Pointe:

On Pointe

1. SAB represents the gold standard in terms of ballet schools in the United States.
Legendary choreographer George Balanchine founded SAB with the goal of creating an American ballet company. SAB is now the preeminent ballet school in the U.S., and is inextricably linked to New York City Ballet, for which it serves as the official training academy. “It’s a serious place,” notes young Isabela in On Pointe, which follows the 9-year-old from her audition to acceptance at SAB and her journey to (hopefully) be cast in The Nutcracker. Sixteen-year-old Ruby echoes Isabela’s admiration for the school, sharing, “There’s just so many talented dancers and the fact that they chose me is unreal.”

On Pointe

2. The filmmakers were given unprecedented access to SAB and its students.
“The school was aware that it would be a very small crew, it would be very intimate, it wouldn’t intrude,” Bills tells D23, noting this is the first time that SAB has opened its doors to an outside production. The filmmakers shot verité-style, creating as small a footprint as they could. Executive producer Sara Bernstein explains, “It’s about being as observational as we possibly can to let the real-life events that are unfolding help guide the story, as opposed to trying to push the story in any particular direction.”

On Pointe

3. SAB’s older students come to New York from all around the country to train for careers in ballet.
The teenagers featured in On Pointe come from very different backgrounds and cities across the U.S., but all of them have made the choice to move to New York City to attend SAB and live away from home. Bernstein acknowledges, “There is tremendous dedication and sacrifice for parents to say, ‘OK, I’m going to send my 15-year-old to New York City of all places to follow their dream.’ I think there’s something really beautiful in that.” The stakes are high, but so is the level of commitment. In On Pointe, viewers will see how the teens balance their dance classes with academic studies, through online learning or at a nearby professional school many SAB students attend in person. Bills emphasizes, “They’re like Olympic athletes and they’re training at a really high level.”

On Pointe

4. The younger dancers also make a huge commitment when they enter SAB.
SAB’s 8-13-year-old students attend school during the day before braving long commutes to SAB’s Manhattan campus from their homes around the New York area—with homework still waiting for them after their classes end and they return home for the night. On Pointe’s filmmakers accompany these young dancers and their parents on the subway as they travel to and from SAB and take viewers inside their homes to shine a light on the commitment and sacrifice that are shared by the entire family. “There’s an incredible amount of dedication there, especially in terms of these families that have to shuttle their kids back and forth all the time to the school,” Bills underscores.

On Pointe

5. On Pointe presents a unique look at New York City through the lens of SAB and its students.
“Living in New York, at the age of 16, you do need a certain level of independence,” Sam, who moves to New York from Richmond, Virginia, points out in On Pointe. Director/producer Bills shares, “I think what’s really great is that this isn’t just a portrait of the school, but it’s a bit of a portrait of being a kid in New York City… These are kids from all over and really diverse backgrounds.” As part of its commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion, SAB casts a wide net to find students for its younger programs through an audition process that isn’t confined to Lincoln Center’s Upper West Side neighborhood but extends to Harlem, Chinatown, Queens, and beyond. The younger students who appear in On Pointe are true “city kids,” many of whom were drawn to SAB after first seeing George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker performed during the holiday season, as well as children who have never before experienced a live professional ballet performance and now find themselves preparing to dance on the Lincoln Center stage.

On Pointe

6. The docuseries takes viewers behind the scenes of George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker like never before.
During a typical year, it’s a time-honored holiday tradition for New Yorkers and visitors to the city to converge upon Lincoln Center for New York City Ballet’s annual production of George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker. On Pointe begins as SAB is embarking upon a new school year and follows the 8-13-year-olds through the audition process for roles in The Nutcracker, as well as rehearsals and ultimately, the staged production of the iconic ballet. Since 2020 is far from a typical year, Bernstein is happy that On Pointe allows viewers to be able to experience the production in a new way, given that New York City Ballet won’t be performing George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker live this year. “I think it becomes that much more special for Disney to be able to share this with audiences,” she says.

On Pointe

7. On Pointe is set within the world of ballet, but it has a powerful message that translates to any chosen pursuit.
In On Pointe, you’ll rarely see a kid focus on a smartphone or tablet rather than the world around them while they’re working toward a challenging goal. Bernstein believes that the SAB students’ commitment and hard work will resonate with anyone who watches On Pointe, whether they’re an aspiring dancer, athlete, artist, or scientist. She shares, “I hope that viewers are inspired by seeing kids live out their dreams and dedicate themselves to something that is rigorous and isn’t easy, and understand that with practice and training, you can excel.”

5 Fantastic Things to Watch This Weekend

By Zach Johnson

Christmas is coming early, thanks to ABC, Disney+, and Nat Geo WILD! It all starts Friday when Disney+ makes the films Eddie the Eagle and Into the Woods available and also debuts the highly anticipated season two finale of The Mandalorian. The next night, Nat Geo WILD will deliver an un-fur-gettable season finale of Secrets of the Zoo: North Carolina. Then, on Sunday, ABC will broadcast the fan-favorite movie The Sound of Music.

Eddie the Eagle

Eddie the Eagle—Friday, December 18, on Disney+
Joining the Disney+ library, this 2016 film from 20th Century Studios and director Dexter Fletcher tells the inspirational story of British athlete Michael “Eddie” Edwards (Taron Egerton). Cut from the Olympic ski team, Eddie travels to Germany to try his luck at ski jumping. Fate leads him to Bronson Peary (Hugh Jackman), a former ski jumper who now works as a snowplow driver, who agrees to train the determined and spirited underdog. Though his country discounts him, Eddie makes it all the way to a historic and unlikely showing at the 1988 Winter Olympics. But does he have what it takes to medal in Games?

Into the Woods

Into the Woods—Friday, December 18, on Disney+
The streaming service is adding the Rob Marshall Oscar®-nominated adaptation of Stephen Sondheim’s beloved Broadway musical to its library. The story follows a childless couple (Emily Blunt and James Corden), who have been cursed by a formerly beautiful witch (Meryl Streep). Three days before a blue moon rises, the couple heads into the woods to find ingredients that will reverse the curse. Along the way, they meet Cinderella (Anna Kendrick), Little Red Riding Hood (Lilla Crawford), Rapunzel (MacKenzie Mauzy), and Jack (Daniel Huttlestone), each of whom is on a quest of their own. Rounding out the cast are Christine Baranski as Cinderella’s Stepmother, Tammy Blanchard as Florinda, Disney Legend Johnny Depp as the Big Bad Wolf, Billy Magnussen as Rapunzel’s Prince, Chris Pine as Cinderella’s Prince, Lucy Punch as Lucinda, and Tracy Ullman as Jack’s Mother.

The Mandalorian

The Mandalorian—Friday, December 18, on Disney+
All season long, the titular Mandalorian, Din Djarin (Pedro Pascal), has been trying to reunite Grogu, aka The Child, with the Jedi. His adventures have reunited him with familiar faces such as Cara Dune (Gina Carano), Greef Karga (Carl Weathers), Mayfield (Bill Burr), Peli Motto (Amy Sedaris), and Fennec Shand (Disney Legend Ming-Na Wen), and also introduced him to new ones, including Cobb Vanth (Timothy Olyphant), Bo-Katan (Katee Sackhoff), Ahsoka Tano (Rosario Dawson), and Boba Fett (Temuera Morrison). After Moff Gideon (Giancarlo Esposito) captured Grogu, Mando will stop at nothing to get him back. As our hero warned the Darksaber-wielding villain in the penultimate episode, “You have something I want. You may think you have some idea what you are in possession of—but you do not. Soon, he will be back with me. He means more to me than you will ever know.”

Secrets of the Zoo: North Carolina

Secrets of the Zoo: North Carolina—Saturday, December 19, at 10 p.m. ET on Nat Geo WILD
In the season finale, “Running Otter Time,” North Carolina Zoo’s Wildlife Rehabilitation Center is busier than ever! Four orphaned otter pups are nearly ready to be released into the wild, but first they need to pass fish school. Meanwhile, the veterinary team is called to rescue seven huge, confiscated pythons that are in need of urgent medical treatment. Then, the zookeepers rush to assist a pair of arctic foxes that have sustained mysterious injuries.

The Sound of Music

The Sound of Music—Sunday, December 20, at 7 p.m. ET on ABC
Based on the real-life von Trapp family, who fled their home to escape the Nazis in 1938, Rodgers & Hammerstein’s cinematic classic is coming to network television! Disney Legend Julie Andrews stars as Maria von Trapp, a tomboyish postulant at an Austrian abbey. She becomes a governess in the home of a widowed Captain George von Trapp (Christopher Plummer) with seven unruly children, bringing a new love of life and music into the home. Gather the family to celebrate the Academy Award®-winning film featuring the songs “Climb Every Mountain,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Edelweiss,” “The Lonely Goatherd,”  “My Favorite Things,” and “Sixteen Going on Seventeen,” as well as the title song, “The Sound of Music.”

It’s a Brazzle Dazzle Anniversary: Celebrating Pete’s Dragon!

By Melissa Pankuch, Walt Disney Archives

Originally conceived to be an episode of the Disneyland television series, Pete’s Dragon tells the story of a young orphan named Pete and a mischievous dragon, Elliott, which takes place in the quaint town of Passamaquoddy, Maine.  On the anniversary of its general release in 1977, let’s take a look and uncover some of the magic behind the film!

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Bach
Pete and Elliott. Pete’s Dragon (1977) 

One of Walt Disney’s major contributions to the art of motion pictures was the novel technique of combining live-action photography with animated cartoons. This concept was utilized in multiple Disney projects prior to Pete’s Dragon, including The Three Caballeros, Mary Poppins, and Bedknobs and Broomsticks. In these examples, live-action characters had to interact with animated characters and backgrounds. Pete’s Dragon, however, posed a unique challenge to the studio: the process needed to be reversed. Placing an animated character into the live-action shots required incredible precision, and relied on the art direction of Disney Legend Ken Anderson and animation direction of Don Bluth to bring the character to life.  

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Bach
Lena Gogan and Elliott. Pete’s Dragon (1977)

In a 1977 interview with American Cinematographer, Ken Anderson commented that “Every shadow had to fall exactly right. Whenever we drew an animated sequence. We had to know exactly where the light was falling in the live-action scene. Also, human skin tones change along with the quality of the light as they move from one exposure to another and at different times of day. Elliott’s color had to be adjusted accordingly.” The need for understanding the light within the scene led to a large collaboration between the live-action crew and the animation team. In essence, each live-action scene had to be composed with the animation in mind. Zooming in for a shot was nearly impossible due to the animators’ inability to match the action on the animation stand, and panning could only be done if the camera was tightly secured and there were precise points of reference in the shot that would help the animators find their marks. Overall, Elliott appeared in 1,770 feet of animation, amounting to 22 minutes of the final film.

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Bach
Pete and Elliott fly to Nora in the lighthouse. Pete’s Dragon (1977) 

When the actors in the film sought to interact with Elliott on screen, they required a way to help visualize him within the scene. For some sequences, layout artist Joe Hale would provide the actors with a “dragon finder”—a handheld shadow box that showed drawings of Elliott. By using this tool, the actors would be able to see how the scene would eventually look. In other instances, a physical manifestation of Elliott was necessary.

One such scene featured actress Helen Reddy; the script called for Reddy to give Elliott a kiss after he relights the wick of a lighthouse beacon, saving a ship from crashing into the rocks below. Seen in the below photographs, production provided a latex model of the dragon head for Reddy to rehearse with, which helped the actress to understand the dimensions of the character’s head and the distance she would need to move for the kiss to land. In a 1992 interview, Reddy explained: “When they were ready to shoot, they took the model away, and I worked without it. One does feel a trite foolish kissing thin air, so my first thought seeing it (on-screen) was, ‘Wow! There’s Elliott!’”

Fantasia at 80: Exploring Bach
Nora and Elliott in the lighthouse. Pete’s Dragon (1977)

From Passamaquoddy to a screen near you, be sure to catch Pete’s Dragon now streaming on Disney+!

Everything New You Can Stream on Disney+ in January 2021

By Zach Johnson

Welcome to a new reality! On January 15, Disney+ and Marvel Studios will present WandaVision, with Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany reprising their roles as Wanda Maximoff and Vision, respectively, from the Marvel Cinematic Universe. In anticipation of Marvel Studios’ first original scripted series for the streaming platform, Disney+ will debut Marvel Studios: Legends on January 8, an exciting refresher for the various heroes and villains making their way to the highly anticipated streaming shows debuting on Disney+. And, naturally, the first two episodes will shine a spotlight on Wanda Maximoff and Vision.

Prior to the premiere of WandaVision, the late-night talk show Earth to Ned will return with 10 brand-new episodes on January 1. The series’ star-studded lineup of guests will include Ginnifer Goodwin and Alan Tudyk; D’Arcy Carden and Oliver Hudson; Yvette Nicole Brown and Jack McBrayer; Kevin Smith, Aisha Tyler, and Ben Schwartz; Sherri Shepherd and Penn & Teller; Alyson Hannigan and Ben Feldman; Roy Choi and Brenda Song; Mayim Bialik and Margaret Cho; Molly Ringwald and Chris Colfer, and Grace VanderWaal; and Jason Ritter and Tig Notaro. Debuting on January 22 is Pixar Popcorn, a collection of mini shorts starring your favorite characters in all-new, bite size stories. All the while, the weekly rollout of Behind the Clouds extras will continue through January 29.

Library titles coming to Disney+ in January 2021 include Disney Fam Jam, Doctor Doolittle 3, Ferdinand, Isle of Dogs, Mary Poppins Returns, Mr. Popper’s Penguins, Toy Story That Time Forgot, and The Wolverine (2013), as well as all four volumes of Star Wars Forces of Destiny!

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

Earth to Ned

Friday, January 1
700 Sharks
Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears a Who!
Great Shark Chow Down
Mega Hammerhead
Mr. Popper’s Penguins
The Wolverine (2013)
Earth to Ned (New Episodes)
Beyond the Clouds: A Firm Handshake (Extras)

Toy Story

Friday, January 8
Disney Fam Jam
Ferdinand
Star Wars Forces of Destiny: Volume 1
Star Wars Forces of Destiny: Volume 2
Star Wars Forces of Destiny: Volume 3
Star Wars Forces of Destiny: Volume 4
Toy Story That Time Forgot
Beyond the Clouds: The Anatomy of Emotion (Extras)
Marvel Studios: Legends (Premiere)

Wondavision

Friday, January 15
Disney Elena of Avalor (Season 3)
Doctor Doolittle 3
Isle of Dogs
Mary Poppins Returns
WandaVision (Premiere)
Beyond the Clouds: The Concert of a Lifetime (Extras)

WILD UGANDA

Friday, January 22
Wild Uganda
Pixar Popcorn (Premiere)
WandaVision (New Episode)
Beyond the Clouds: The Finishing Touches (Extras)

RAMONA AND BEEZUS

Friday, January 29
Dinosaurs (Season 1)
Dinosaurs (Season 2)
Dinosaurs (Season 3)
Dinosaurs (Season 4)
Epic
The Incredible Dr. Pol
Ramona and Beezus
Texas Storm Squad
WandaVision (New Episode)
Beyond the Clouds: A Promise Kept (Extras) (Finale)