7 Lessons We Learned from Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas

By Megan Deppe

Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas, which turns 20 this year, shows us that Christmas is a wonderful time to step back and remember what’s truly important. We took another look at this cherished holiday “tale as old as time” and were reminded once again what Christmas is all about.

1. Christmas is about the people you love.
Of course, Chip’s obsession over getting the perfect tree leads the gang into a bit of a disaster. The Enchanted Christmas reminds us that the holidays are not about the holiday trimmings. If you don’t have the perfect tree or accidentally burn the cookies, don’t worry about it—as long as you’re with the people you love, it’s still Christmas.

batb christmas

2. Teamwork gets the job done.
Despite their frequent friction, we all know Lumiere and Cogsworth are a great team. The Enchanted Christmas gives them a cute little song to emphasize their teamwork, “A Cut Above the Rest”, to prove that if they work together, they can do basically anything. Two heads are better than one!

3. Remember to have fun.
Beauty and the Beast showed us Cogsworth’s comedic chops with his iconic line, “If it’s not Baroque, don’t fix it!” Enchanted Christmas also gives Cogsworth another chance to have some pun, er, fun with words. One of the best lines of the film is easily his scolding the dinnerware with, “Don’t whine, glasses.”

batb christmas

4. The more the merrier.
Forte’s entire existence revolves around the fact that in his organ form, he feels useful to his master, Beast. He would do anything to keep it that way, even if that means keeping Beast and Belle from falling in love. Maybe if Forte branched out a little bit, he wouldn’t have turned into a creepy villain organ with glowing green eyes.

5. Stories are the best kind of magic.
Belle has always been an avid reader, and that’s also true in this film. Her song, “Stories,” pulls viewers into a world of “mermaids, kings, and sunken treasure,” reminding us that we can take inspiration and draw strength from the stories we read and travel to worlds that might otherwise have been beyond us.

6. Don’t mix bells with holly.
Take Angelique’s word for it: that’s an amateur move. Also, be careful to find the right balance of holly and mistletoe; there is such a thing as too much. But take pride in your decorations—it’s part of the fun of Christmas!

batb christmas

7. Celebrate the magic of the season.
Christmas is a time for hope and for believing in magic. Sometimes when everything seems to be going wrong, it’s easy to forget that, or to focus on the bad times like Beast does. But take a page from Belle’s book and stay hopeful, because believing in the magic of Christmas will help guide you and make the world a better place.

Did You Know? 10 Wizard Facts About Walt Disney’s The Sword in the Stone

By Jim Fanning

Timeless in its humor, music, and classic Disney animation, The Sword in the Stone ascended the throne in 1963 as Walt Disney’s 18th full-length animated feature. A scrawny 12-year-old boy nicknamed Wart, who is in actuality the future King Arthur, sets ancient England on its ear when the mystical but lovably muddled Merlin—“the incomparable wizard,” as Walt called him—uses wit and wisdom, as well as wizardry, to teach the boy who would be king life lessons that will ultimately lead him extract a mighty sword from an enchanted stone. A sparkling holiday gift for fans of Disney animation, The Sword in the Stone was released on Christmas Day, 1963. Let’s crown our celebration of 55 years of animated enchantment with these royally magical facts.

Bill Peet starboarding The Sword in the Stone

1. A Legend is Sung of When England Was Young
“Our story,” said Walt Disney, ”takes place at a time when England was ruled by might alone. But Merlin can see into the future—in fact, he’s been there—and he knows that a time must come when brains will triumph over brawn. So he sets out to educate the future king in his own peculiar way.” The film is based on T.H. White’s widely read novel The Once and Future King, first published in 1938. Legendary story artist Bill Peet introduced the book to Walt, who obtained the screen rights in 1939. Various attempts were made to develop the story over the years—in 1944 Walt announced that the film was soon to go into production, and story board drawings were created as early as 1949—but two decades would pass before work on the film officially began. Peet knew adapting the complex book would be a challenge. “Getting a more direct story line called for a lot of sifting and sorting,” he revealed. “Walt questioned the first version of my screenplay, pointing out that it should have had more substance. So I made an all-out effort by enlarging on the more dramatic aspects of the story.” Peet remained true to the sophisticated wit of the original, resulting in a humorously told tale contrasting the fifth century with today’s “modern muddle.”

Walt Disney and The Sword in the Stone

2. Walt Was an Inspiration for Merlin
In adapting the literary work, Peet incorporated Walt Disney—his own personal “wizard”—into the character of Merlin. “Walt the wizard never knew that I patterned Merlin the magician after him when I wrote the script,” Peet later recalled. “In his book, T.H. White describes the wizard as a crusty old curmudgeon, argumentative and temperamental, playful at times, and extremely intelligent. Walt was not a curmudgeon and he had no beard, but he was a grandfather and much more of a character. In my drawings of Merlin, I even borrowed Walt’s nose.”

Milt Kahl working on The Sword in the Stone

3. Milt Kahl, Master of Magic in Motion
Given the richness of the personalities, The Sword in the Stone was one of master animator Milt Kahl’s favorite projects. “I liked the characters in The Sword in the Stone very much,” said Kahl. “We made Merlin kind of a doddering magician. I thought that’s where he had his charm because he was so bumbling.” Fellow members of Disney’s elite Nine Old Men animation team Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston wrote that Kahl’s “Sir Ector and Sir Kay were the best humans ever done at the studio, as they were done without benefit of live action or the support of reference material.” For the wacky but wicked Madam Mim, Kahl added touches and bits of business that made working on this wild, witchy character a truly enjoyable experience. When The Sword in the Stone director and fellow Nine Old Man Woolie Reitherman saw Kahl’s first rough drawings of Merlin and Mim, he remarked to the animator that they could be displayed in a museum. His response was vintage Kahl: “Aw, you’re full of it!”

4. The Voice of the Wizard
Voicing the role of absentminded Merlin was versatile performer Karl Swenson. Skilled at creating vocal characterizations from his extensive career as an actor during the golden age of radio, Swenson was also in more than 100 television show episodes, and is most well-known for his recurring role as Lars Henson on Little House on the Prairie. The actor returned to the Disney Studios to appear with Ron Howard and Vera Miles in The Wild Country (1971).

5. The Wizard, the Owl, and the Rabbit
Junius Matthews performs the crotchety voice of the educated but irritable owl Archimedes. In addition to many appearances on the Broadway stage and television, this multitalented actor performed hundreds of varied vocal roles on radio. Karl Swenson recommended Matthews to Walt, pointing out the versatile actor had provided the voice of a potato on a radio program. However, he was originally cast as the voice of Merlin, but then switched roles with Swenson and became the voice of Merlin’s owl. Following The Sword in the Stone, Walt cast Matthews as the voice of Rabbit in the Winnie The Pooh featurettes.

The Sword in the Stone

6. Laughing it Up with Archimedes
In animating Archimedes, supervising animator Ollie Johnston brought to life one of his all-time favorite scenes of his own animation—the scene of Archimedes convulsed with laughter when Merlin crashes his model airplane. Johnston and Frank Thomas later wrote that Junius Matthews “sustained this infectious laugh for over 20 seconds without at any time letting it feel forced or insincere. By the final scene, both the actor and the owl were completely exhausted, and Archimedes only could point feebly at Merlin and finally slide to the floor where he rolled and gasped for air. Merlin, who had bickered with Archimedes throughout the picture, could think of no way to retaliate other than to puff on his pipe and look very irritated.”

The Sword in the Stone

7. A Magical Menagerie
Animals play an important part in the film’s mostly human world, for as Walt explained, “With his wizard’s magic, Merlin changes the boy into a fish, then a bird, and [a squirrel]… always very small creatures so that his survival will depend on brains and not brawn.” Transforming into animals is at the center of one of Disney’s most brilliantly animated sequences. “Storyman Bill Peet gave us the wizard’s duel,” reported Thompson and Johnston, “a perfect use of animation, maintaining personalities through a surprising change in forms and exciting action.” In this fast-paced skirmish of wizardly wits, Merlin and the underhanded Mim try to outwit each other by transforming themselves into a series of unexpected animals. The animators created 15 different visual personae for the battling magicians, with each creature maintaining the personality, visual characteristics, and even color scheme of either Merlin or Mim.

The Sword in the Stone

8. Three Voices, One Wart
The voice of the story’s young hero was Rickie Sorensen—a talented teenager who appeared in many classic TV series of the time, including Hazel and The Danny Thomas Show. When the young actor’s voice changed over the three-year production time of the film, director Reitherman drafted his own sons Richard and Robert to complete the vocal role of Wart.

The Sword in the Stone

9. Boy Meets Girl Squirrel
In one of the most unusual sequences in Disney animation, Merlin changes himself and Wart into squirrels where a lovely little girl squirrel falls for Wart, unaware that in reality he’s a human. The sequence was originally to focus on the squirrels trying to avoid the hungry wolf who is seen at different points in the film. But the performance of the actress providing the chattering voice of the female squirrel changed Frank Thomas’s entire concept for the scene. Thanks to her charming vocalization, Thomas transformed the sequence into a bittersweet encounter for animator, characters, and audience. When Walt saw Frank’s animation he suggested that a Granny Squirrel be added to pursue Merlin. Thomas was so fond of the squirrel sequence, it was screened at his memorial service after he passed away in 2004.

The Sword in the Stone soundtrack

10. Sword, Sorcery, and Sherman Songs
The Sword in the Stone was the first animated feature to include songs by Disney’s newly signed songwriters, Richard and Robert Sherman. “We enjoyed it immensely,” said Robert Sherman of conjuring up six songs for the magical motion picture, “because with animated films the songs seem so much more important to the entire story line of the film.” For example, “A Most Befuddling Thing” is Merlin’s way of explaining the mysterious force of love in the squirrel sequence. “Higitus Figitus” is one of a long list of Disney songs demonstrating Walt’s love of coined words, in this case Merlin’s magic sayings. “We didn’t want to say ‘Abracadabra,’ we just wanted to do different words,” explained Richard Sherman, “and so the conversation was he’s British, and we have to have sort of a British-sounding magic, and also it’s sort of Latin, because he’s very into Latin and Greek.” The Shermans’ songs helped composer George Bruns receive a 1964 Best Score Oscar® nomination for his inspired Sword in the Stone musical score.

Decorate the Halls with Boughs of Holiday Photos Using our D23 Days Photo Frames and Stickers

By Karina Schink

’Tis the season for holiday cheer and a special photo of the ones you hold dear. Decorate your photos with a special sprinkle of that famous pixie dust with a little help from our photo lab! Add a dash of snow or a cheerful character or two, and dust off the perfect spot on the mantle for your newly decorated magical memory (and don’t forget to share it online!).

Marvel Day at Sea Returns and American Idol Goes Tropical—Plus More in News Briefs

By Courtney Potter

Marvel favorites return to the high seas, and the search for America’s next singing sensation travels to Hawaii… Read more, along with other news from around Disney, in this week’s news briefs!

Marvel Day at Sea is Back on Disney Cruise Line in 2019

There’s so much happening in the Marvel Cinematic Universe as we head into 2019 (y’know, like those two little movies called Captain Marvel and Avengers: Endgame… heard of ’em?), so it stands to reason that Disney Cruise Line wants to take part in the fun, too! Yes, our friends on the high seas are bringing back Marvel Day at Sea—and starting next month, cruise guests on the Disney Magic will be among the first to meet Captain Marvel herself when she makes her big debut on board. Take a look at all the Marvel merriment you can expect in the clip, above.

Marvel Day at Sea is a spectacular day-long celebration that’s set to take place on select five-night Caribbean and Bahamian cruises sailing from Miami in early 2019. For more information, make sure to visit DisneyCruise.com—and don’t forget to bring your best Super Hero gear to wear; you’ll fit right in alongside all your Marvel favorites.

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

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
January 25, 2018
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Dave Smith
February 16, 2018
D23’s Happily Ever After Brunch
February 16, 2018
D23’s Magical Screening Series: Sleeping Beauty on the Lot
February 16, 2018
D23’s Magical Screening Series: Sleeping Beauty at Walt Disney World
August 23-25, 2019
D23 Expo 2019
Parks
January 25-February 17, 2019
Lunar New Year at Disney California Adventure
March 1-April 23, 2019
Disney California Adventure Food & Wine Festival
March 6-June 3, 2019
Epcot International Flower & Garden Festival
Summer 2019
Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge Opening at Disneyland Resort
Fall 2019
Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge Opening at and Walt Disney World Resort

Studios
March 8, 2019
Marvel Studios’ Captain Marvel opens in U.S. theaters
March 29, 2019
Dumbo opens in U.S. theaters
April 19, 2019
Penguins opens in U.S. theaters
May 24, 2019
Aladdin opens in U.S. theaters
June 21, 2019
Toy Story 4 opens in U.S. theaters
July 19, 2019
The Lion King opens in U.S. theaters
August 9, 2019
Artemis Fowl opens in U.S. theaters
Television
December 25, 2018
Disney Parks Magical Christmas Day Parade airs on ABC (10 a.m.–12 p.m. EST, 9–11 a.m. CST/MST/PST, airtimes vary, check local listings)
December 31, 2018
Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest 2019 airs on ABC (8 p.m. ET)

news briefs 12/19

American Idol Visits Aulani, A Disney Resort & Spa for the First Time

With ABC’s American Idol readying a return to the airwaves, that means the hunt for America’s next great singing sensation is officially on! And for the very first time, the show will be heading to paradise to hear some sure-to-be-amazing early contestant performances…

As host Ryan Seacrest revealed on his radio show last week, American Idol will be heading to Aulani, A Disney Resort & Spa in Hawaii to film its showcase rounds. In a fortuitous turn of events, current Idol winner Maddie Poppe was actually at the Aulani Resort—enjoying the trip she was given as part of her prize package—when Seacrest made his announcement. Naturally, Poppe just had to take a photo with Mickey and Minnie Mouse to celebrate such an auspicious occasion!

Look for American Idol when it returns for its second season—premiering Sunday, March 3, at 8 p.m. EST, only on ABC.

Say Hello to Cousin Topsy in Mary Poppins Returns Featurette

The time is finally here! Mary Poppins Returns has officially flown into cinemas across the world, and we couldn’t be more excited for folks to see the further adventures of that “practically perfect” nanny… who happens to have an eccentric cousin named Topsy, portrayed in the film by none other than Oscar® winner (and theater veteran) Meryl Streep. Meet Topsy and see what kind of shenanigans she’s up to in the featurette, above.

Mary Poppins Returns stars Emily Blunt in the title role and Lin-Manuel Miranda as her lamplighter pal Jack, with Emily Mortimer and Ben Whishaw as the now-grown Jane and Michael Banks; Julie Walters as housekeeper Ellen; and Colin Firth as banker William Weatherall Wilkins… with special appearances by Angela Lansbury and Dick Van Dyke. “Trip a little light fantastic” over to your local movie house now!

ESPN to Launch New Late-Night Shows in 2019

Sports fans, listen up: ESPN has announced that it’ll add two new late-night shows to its line-up late next month. Now or Never on ESPN2 (co-hosted by Steve Covino, Rich Davis, and Janelle Marie Rodriguez) and Ahora o Nunca on ESPN Deportes (co-hosted by ESPN Deportes’ Mauricio Pedroza, Herculez Gomez, and Rodriguez) will be dedicated to covering the intersection of sports and pop culture for young, diverse sports fans… and they’re set to debut on January 28.

Both shows will offer a new take on all things sports, with a fun, laid-back vibe that’s perfect for late-night TV fans. The co-hosts will not only report on the freshest sports headlines, but they’ll also be able to chat about all the latest news in movies, music, “E Sports,” celebrity culture, and so much more. Airing Monday through Friday, the two 30-minute shows will be produced from ESPN studios at L.A. Live in Los Angeles and air on ESPN2 and ESPN Deportes at 2 a.m. ET/11 p.m. PT.

ICYMI: The First Avengers: Endgame Trailer is Here!

Okay, so chances are pretty high that you’ve already seen this teaser trailer for the fourth Avengers film—considering it was one of the most anticipated trailers ever released. (Like, ever.) But just in case you missed it the first time ’round, or you want to take another look, check out the clip above.

Not much is known about Avengers: Endgame—outside of some fairly tantalizing clues within the trailer—except that it’s directed once again by Anthony and Joe Russo, and will be unleashed onto movie screens worldwide in April. Mark those calendars!

Did You Know? 9 Stuffed-With-Fluff Facts About Walt Disney’s Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day

By Jim Fanning

An eventful “Winds-day,” a bothersome rainstorm, a nightmare-full of honey-hungry hallucinations, and the first appearance of a very bouncy buddy—all of these elements combined to help create Walt Disney’s Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day. A whimsical sequel to Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree (1966), Disney’s second visit to the Hundred Acre Wood was even more popular than the first. So break open a new “hunny” pot, watch out for Woozles, and savor nine smackerals of behind-the-scenes celebrating 50 years of blustery fun.

Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day

The Pooh-rade Marches On
Although Walt Disney first envisioned his animated adaptation of the books by A.A. Milne as a feature, the savvy showman ultimately felt that American audiences were not sufficiently familiar with the British stories, so he decided to split the burgeoning story into three parts and release each as a separate featurette. With the popularity of Pooh’s initial featurette, Walt looked forward to producing the second, certain it would be an even bigger hit. After Walt’s death in late 1966, Disney executives decided in late summer 1967 that Blustery Day would be the first animated film to be put into production without Walt, and so the new Pooh project commenced under the working title of Winnie the Pooh and the Heffalumps.

Five Nine Old Men Walk Into the Hundred Acre Wood
John Lounsbery and Eric Larson of the legendary team of the Nine Old Men, animated on the first Pooh featurette, which was directed by fellow Nine Old Man Woolie Reitherman. Lounsbery and Reitherman continued in their roles for the next installment, while signing onto a Pooh project for the first time were Ollie Johnston, Frank Thomas, and Milt Kahl. Thomas and Johnston were particularly happy to be on Team Winnie the Pooh as they were fans of the original books and the Ernest H. Shepard illustrations. “I liked the Shepard drawings very much,” said Johnston, “but you have to go with what you can do in animation that requires the characters to do things they don’t have to do in a story illustration.” The animators kept in mind Walt’s edict that Shepard’s illustrative charm be maintained in the featurettes. Said Thomas of the designs in general and Pooh in particular: “If you take a design like that as your model and then get the personality just right, and with all the help of Sterling Holloway’s voice as Pooh, the audience accepts it as being the same as the original design because they’re swayed by the way he moves and the way they thought he should move.”

Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day

Tigger Bounces Onto the Scene
For his Disney animation debut, Tigger was animated almost entirely by master Milt Kahl. Though the first Pooh book, Winnie-the-Pooh, was published in 1926, Tigger was not introduced until the second book, The House at Pooh Corner, was issued in 1928. The hyper tiger was inspired by a new addition to son Christopher Robin’s menagerie of stuffed toys, but Milne based the manic personality of Tigger on Chum, a Spaniel who was always jumping onto people and just about everything, causing all kinds of chaos for his owners. Walt had considered Disneyland Park performer Wally Boag for Tigger’s voice, but ventriloquist-actor Paul Winchell was ultimately cast as the voice of the trouncy, flouncy tiger. “Paul did a great job, his voice was full of life,” said Johnston. “His vocal performance really inspired Milt to get that real brisk timing into Tigger.” The bouncy critter’s famed so-long statement, “TTFN—ta-ta for now” was ad-libbed by Winchell.

Tigger Sings with a Spring
One of the most wonderful things about Tigger is his upbeat signature tune. “We wrote a song about Tigger which exemplifies exactly what he did,” said Richard Sherman about the Sherman brothers song “The Wonderful Thing About Tiggers.” “It was a fun song to write, especially that last line: ‘The most wonderful thing about Tiggers is I’m the only one.’” Though sung with infectious gusto by Paul Winchell in Blustery Day—and heard on some of the Pooh record albums as performed by Sam Edwards—the second verse of the Shermans’ “Tigger” song was never performed onscreen until The Tigger Movie (2000).

Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day sound track

Milne or Sherman OR Gilbert and Sullivan?
The songwriting team of Richard and Robert Sherman composed the five songs heard in Blustery Day during 1963 and 1964, along with the other Winnie the Pooh songs. Said Richard: “The books are so charming and so filled with whimsy. We wanted to get that feel in our songs—that if Milne had written a song, he most likely would have written it that way. We wanted it to be Milnesque but it needed to be Disney, too. For the sequence featuring Pooh and Piglet swept away by the flood, we wanted a Gilbert and Sullivan quality. That’s very British and very apropos. So we had the words repeating—‘the rain, rain, rain came down, down, down’—a whole sequence of pure singing [by a chorus] with pictures. And the animators loved it.”

Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day

Trespassers William Would be Proud
Tigger wasn’t the only new character to join the cuddly citizens of Christopher Robin’s “enchanted neighborhood” in this new Pooh film. Pooh Bear’s very good and very timid friend Piglet swept onto the scene, sweeping leaves and being swept into the sky by the blustery wind. “To take something like a little rag doll, which is Piglet, and try to give him enough acting that communicates with the audience was a real challenge,” said Frank Thomas. The Disney animators gave Shepard’s Piglet design a rounder face complete with cheeks that could express emotion in animated movement. Piglet’s endearingly hesitant voice was performed by John Fiedler, perhaps most famous as one of the poker players in The Odd Couple (1968) and as Mr. Peterson, one of Bob’s patients, on The Bob Newhart Show. Fiedler performed the voice of Piglet longer than any of the other members of the original Pooh cast. His last performances as the very small animal included Piglet’s Big Movie (2003) and Pooh’s Heffalump Movie, released in 2005, the year this prolific, piglet-like character actor passed on.

Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day

They’re In, They’re Out, They’re All About!
Along with Piglet and Tigger, some imaginary honey-hoggers showed up, too. In the Milne original, the Heffalumps and Woozles were not described or shown (except one Shepard illustration of an elephant haunting Piglet’s dream), so the filmmakers had free reign to creatively convey these silly yet scary creatures dreamed up by Pooh. In composing the “Heffalumps and Woozles” song, Robert Sherman remembered that “there were no rules, really, so we could do whatever we wanted to do.“ Explained Richard Sherman: “We very much wanted to do kind of a fun, spooky kind of a thing. Heffalumps and Woozles were a wonderful concept of Milne’s. We loved the play on words.“ The Shermans’ imaginative song inspired Disney animators to new heights of surrealistic creativity in visualizing Pooh’s wild nightmare. “It’s an outstanding sequence,“ observed Richard Sherman.

Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day Blows Into Theaters
In anticipation of Pooh skipping back to the screen, Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty proclaimed October 25, 1968, as “Winnie the Pooh Day.” Direct from Disneyland Park, Pooh and his pals made personal appearances at Sears stores in 25 U.S. cities to tie in with its famous line of exclusive Pooh clothing and merchandise that began with Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree. In each of the cities lucky enough to have Pooh visit, including Seattle, St. Louis, Atlanta, Buffalo, Boston, and Washington, D.C.—the bear of very little brain and company arrived via the Disney company plane to attend tea parties and fashion shows, appear on local TV programs, and visit children confined to hospitals. Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day was released on December 20, 1968, on the same bill as The Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit starring Dean Jones and Kurt Russell. Advertised as “All-Nooh,” alerting audiences that this was not a re-release but a fresh visit with the lovable residents of Pooh Corner, Pooh’s latest big-screen adventure was a sweet sensation.

Wolfgang Reitherman

Winnie the Pooh Wins Big
Though production began after Walt’s passing in 1966, the story and songs had been created with Walt’s full engagement. According to Richard Sherman, who along with his brother was actively involved in the story sessions, “Every single note and every word was okayed by Walt.” On April 14, 1969, the new Pooh featurette was awarded an Oscar® as Best Cartoon Short Subject of 1968 at the Academy Awards® ceremony. Director Woolie Reitherman accepted the award on behalf of Walt Disney from presenters Tony Curtis and the Pink Panther, his voice cracking with emotion as he spoke of “another memorable moment we’ve all shared with Walt.” Winning an Oscar is quite the accomplishment for anyone, let alone a “silly old bear,” and Pooh and his plush pals were now firmly established in the Hollywood firmament—while at the same time winning Walt a final, posthumously earned Academy Award.

An Animated Behind-the-Scenes Look at Mary Poppins Returns

By Beth Deitchman

Whether you’re such a devotee of the 1964 film Mary Poppins that you can recite “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” backwards along with the beloved nanny herself—it’s “dociousaliexpilisticfragicalirupes,” for your information—or you just have an overwhelming feeling of nostalgia for the film, chances are you consider the film’s animated sequences to be among its most memorable. Disney’s Mary Poppins Returns, opening in theaters today, continues this wonderful tradition, as Mary Poppins, Jack the lamplighter, and the young Banks children are transported to a colorful and captivating animated world that exists within an exquisite (though cracked) Royal Doulton china bowl.

To shepherd this spectacular sequence from sketch to screen, director Rob Marshall enlisted animation veteran Jim Capobianco, whose more than 25-year Disney history includes stints in the story department on The Lion King and The Hunchback of Notre Dame, as well as work on Pixar films Ratatouille—for which he wrote the original story, and served as director and writer for Your Friend the Rat, which appeared on the film’s home entertainment release—and WALL•E, for which he animated the film’s end credit sequence. An expert in traditional “2-D” animation, Capobianco was a natural choice to serve as Animation Sequence Supervisor on Mary Poppins Returns.

Mary Poppins Returns

Capobianco assembled a multigenerational team of more than 70 animators, many who came out of retirement for the chance to work on a new film featuring the beloved Mary Poppins. The team researched English music halls to discover how different stage curtains open and Royal Doulton china to learn how “crazing” or cracks develop in glazed surfaces. They also, of course, spent some time studying penguins.

A quartet of penguin performers in Mary Poppins Returns serve as a nostalgic nod to the 1964 film and its waddling waiters. According to Capobianco, the filmmakers wanted the new movie to stand on its own, but during an early meeting to discuss the animation, “We went around the table and I think, to a person, everyone said the penguins should be included.” Penguin behavior informed the animation of the birds, but what was even more valuable, Capobianco says, was all of the rehearsal footage that Marshall shot of the dancers who served as penguin  stand-ins during the live-action filming: “We would use that as our research for the penguins. We’d just have to translate it to little stubby legs and those little bodies.”

Mary Poppins Returns

Beyond the fact that they live within a Royal Doulton bowl rather than within a chalk illustration, the penguins in Mary Poppins Returns are very different from the penguins of 1964. Capobianco explains, “Topsy says in the movie, ‘I’m Mary’s second cousin removed several times.’ That’s kind of the same with these penguins. I think they’re related but they’re definitely their own group.” The animators named them after classic movie stars, so keep an eye out for Fred, named in honor of iconic dancer Fred Astaire; the tall, slender Cary, after leading man Cary Grant; the diminutive Charlie, who was originally Chaplinesque but who would come to be called “Hammy” for his tendency to draw the spotlight; and the bigger-boned bird, Ollie, who reminded the animators of Oliver Hardy.

The nostalgia for the original film carried off screen, as well as on screen, as Capobianco found himself pitching animation sequences to the filmmakers inside the Hyperion Bungalow on the Disney Studio lot, a storied building that had been moved to the Burbank lot from its original location. Capobianco would pin his drawings to the walls, and “I would go through the sequence just like I used to do way back at Disney when I worked on The Lion King and in my early days at Pixar.” As he would pitch his ideas, Marshall might suggest changes to the music, which would inspire composer, songwriter and co-lyricist Marc Shaiman to sit down at the piano and rewrite the melody. “I would pull out the paper and re-draw some things and we would work back and forth that way,” Capobianco recalls, noting that the experience felt like one that could easily have taken place on the lot 54 years ago with Walt, the Sherman brothers, and Don DaGradi—and made for a practically perfect way to create enduring movie magic.

Christmas Carols of Disney’s Past, Present, and Future (Kind Of)

By Karina Schink

The star is placed perfectly atop the brightly lit tree, you’ve got a hot cup of hot cocoa and are curled up on the couch ready to partake in one of the most quintessential holiday traditions, a viewing of Mickey’s Christmas Carol.

Thirty-five years ago, this classic Mickey Mouse cartoon featurette premiered, and what a merry occasion it was! Mickey’s Christmas Carol was Mickey’s great return to the theaters—his most recent cartoon appearance prior was in 1953. In honor of this milestone, let’s celebrate by taking a look at all the A Christmas Carol-themed shows and films (past and present) you and the entire family can watch (and re-watch) this holiday season.

Films

christmas carols

Mickey’s Christmas Carol

Did you think we would start anywhere else? Our love affair with Mickey Mouse cartoons was reignited with this featurette back in 1983, and, as if propelled by the magic of Christmas, that love has never left us, even 35 years later. It’s the perfect place to start as we begin our journey down the path of Christmas Carols past.

christmas carols

Disney’s A Christmas Carol

In this 3D animated version of the classic Dickens tale, Jim Carrey takes on the role of Ebenezer Scrooge (and all three ghosts), with a couple of twists we all know (and love) so well. Watch as Ebenezer’s heart begins to thaw throughout this adaptation of the timeless Christmas story.

christmas carols

The Muppet Christmas Carol

This classic not only has you hooked to the screen, but singing along! Michael Caine, as well as some familiar Henson-esque faces, take the lead in this musical adaptation of A Christmas Carol. You can revisit this holiday classic either on screen or by listening to the soundtrack every merry day this season.

Television

christmas carols

“Last Christmas” – DuckTales

It wouldn’t be A Christmas Carol without a healthy dose of Scrooge… McDuck that is! We all know Huey, Dewey, and Louie’s Uncle Scrooge, who so famously fit his flippers into the role of Ebenezer back in 1983. And this year, he gets another visit from the same merry ghosts on season 2 of DuckTales.

“The Suite Life on Deck: A London Carol” – The Suite Life on Deck

All of us who grew up watching The Suite Life wanted a mirror just like London’s. Free fashion advice with a sarcastic flair? Yes, please! Well, in this Dickensian-inspired episode of The Suite Life on Deck, London’s talking mirror does a bit more than compliment the heiress’ clothes. Go on a time-traveling adventure with London herself, while also taking part in the never-not-funny double trouble that are Zack and Cody.

christmas carols

“Girl Meets a Christmas Maya” – Girl Meets World

While many of us find ourselves in the merriest of moods during holiday time, that isn’t the case for everyone, and it certainly isn’t for Maya in this special episode of Girl Meets World. But, just like the other episodes on this list, the lessons of giving and Christmas joy find their way to Maya, but in this episode, it comes in the form of a Christmas Carol-inspired play.

christmas carols

“The Girls of Christmas Past” – Best Friends Whenever

Instead of being visited by a trio of timely ghosts, in this homage to Carol, Cyd is the one travelling. In an effort to up her skills and beat Shelby at her own excellent gift-giving game, Cyd takes a look at Christmases past. And, instead of being faced with a trio of ghosts, Cyd seeks inspiration for a perfect Christmas gift.

christmas carols

“sANTa’s Little Helpers” – A.N.T. Farm

Join the entire A.N.T. family as Chyna, Olive, and Fletcher have a little A Christmas Carol story of their own. While the episode doesn’t completely follow the famed plotline from Charles Dickens, we may see some familiar characters hidden in there. Here’s a hint: Who does Susan Skidmore remind you of?

The Top 15 Most-Wished-For Toys This Holiday Season

By Beth Deitchman

The holidays are upon us, and the upcoming season of gift giving means one thing for Disney fans everywhere: a trip to the Disney store. It’s our one stop shop for all things Disney merchandise perfect for friends and family of all ages.

For the first time ever, Disney store and shopDisney.com have created a Holiday Toy Book that establishes Disney as the toy destination this holiday season. From Belle to Buzz, Hulk to Han, fancy tea sets to action figure playsets, there’s truly something for every Disney, Pixar, Star Wars, and Marvel fan.

The products themselves are sure to make kids and kids-at-heart giddy with excitement, but the magic doesn’t stop there. The Holiday Toy Book also includes festive character stickers to mark favorites, plus an opportunity to look for 42 hidden Mickeys placed carefully throughout the book. (Have you found them all?)

For those who aren’t quite sure what to get the Disney fans on their holiday shopping list, Disney store and shopDisney experts have compiled a list of the most wished-for toys this holiday season. Take a look at the Top 15 Holiday Toys below, and let the gifting begin!

Cinderella Castle Playset

1. Cinderella Castle Playset
With four levels of imagination, lights and sounds, it’s a Cinderella dream come true from Walt Disney World!

Buzz Lightyear Talking Action Figure

2. Buzz Lightyear Talking Action Figure
Buzz does plenty of talking and is in full protection mode with light-up details and karate chop action!

Mack Carrier with Six Die-Cast Cars Set

3. Mack Carrier with Six Die-Cast Cars Set
Mack features lights and sounds, plus space for an additional two vehicles.

Disney Parks Holiday Train Set

4. Disney Parks Holiday Train Set
All aboard! Towards the North Pole we go in our festive remote-control toy train gift set, including animated character surprises, plus more than 20 feet of track!

Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Playset

5. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Playset
Mickey is joined by his Clubhouse friends in this colorful set that features interactive light and sound effects.

Disney Animators’ Collection Doll Gift Set

6. Disney Animators’ Collection Doll Gift Set
Discover 13 classic characters together in one gloriously gift-boxed mini doll collection.

The Incredible Remote Control Vehicle

7. The Incredible Remote Control Vehicle
This detailed remote-controlled replica of The Incredibiles features working headlights and a light-up hood.

Millennium Falcon—Star Wars Toybox

8. Millennium Falcon—Star Wars Toybox
Part of the Star Wars Toybox collection, the Millennium Falcon Playset includes sound effects and light up features to guide you all the way through the dangerous Kessel Run.

Marvel Universe Mega Figure Set

9. Marvel Universe Mega Figure Set
Join forces with 20 of Marvel’s most iconic characters, complete with detailed sculpting and metallic detailing.

Spider-Man Talking Action Figure

10. Spider-Man Talking Action Figure
This talking action figure has plenty of fighting words to battle his enemies. And, if that doesn’t work, he can use his two web slingers!

Minnie Mouse Farmer’s Market

11. Minnie Mouse Farmer’s Market
This cart is full of fun produce and products, and play money makes every imaginary shopping trip a delight.

Incredibles 2 Deluxe Figure Set

12. Incredibles 2 Deluxe Figure Set
The 10-piece set includes the five members of the Parr family alongside other familiar faces.

Minnie Mouse Brunch Cooking Set

13. Minnie Mouse Brunch Cooking Set
Minnie is serving up a fine feast (and everyone’s invited) with her 30-piece brunch play set.

Disney Princess Doll Gift Set

14. Disney Princess Doll Gift Set
Featuring 11 of Disney’s most beloved heroines (plus Pua and Hei Hei!), this gift set celebrates the princesses that have captured our hearts.

Belle Tea Cart

15. Belle Tea Cart
Your little princes and princesses will always be prepared for an enchanted tea party with this delightful Beauty and the Beast Singing Tea Cart.

The Sweetest Stats About the Grand Floridian Hotel & Spa Gingerbread House

By Karina Schink

For 20 years, the magical pastry elves at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa have whisked, baked, and decorated to create the magical gingerbread house that warms guests’ hearts and tempts their taste buds. Sweet smells of ginger and sugar fill the lobby of the hotel every holiday season, as this larger-than-life house is constructed. But, while it’s always a sight to behold (and quite a whiff to sniff), there’s more to all that sugar than meets the eye.

Constructing Christmas
The gingerbread house stands 14 feet tall, using more than 60 sheets of plywood in its foundation, which is the first part of the house to be built. With 1,000 feet of trim, this molasses mansion stretches 100 square feet.

Grand Floridian gingerbread house

Pounds of Sugar, Spice, and Everything Nice
Creating something of this merry magnitude doesn’t come without pounds of all that sugary sweet stuff. It takes 1,050 pounds of honey, 700 pounds of chocolate (Anna and Elsa would be reeling), 600 pounds of confectioner’s sugar, and 35 pounds of spices to create the structure. That’s a bit more than your average gingerbread house!

Grand Floridian gingerbread house

Whisked Away
While it takes more than 400 hours to bake and 160 to decorate, it can’t be done without all of the essential baking ingredients. Eight hundred pounds of flour mixed with 140 pints of egg whites are the bread and butter of this holiday creation. And while all of this is used to create the delicious edifice, you can bring some holiday goodness with you when you leave the hotel: The house doubles as a sweet shop, where gingerbread cookies, shingles, ornaments, and cookie bags are available to take home.