Celebrating Frights and Delights at Disneyland’s Haunted Mansion

This story is excerpted from a piece originally published in the Fall 2009 issue of Disney twenty-three. If you like what you read, become a D23 Gold Member to receive the Disney twenty-three quarterly publication for more fascinating stories about all the worlds of Disney.

By Ed Squair

To this day, more than four decades after first opening its heavy wood doors to reveal the macabre mysteries lurking within, stepping from the cheery sunlight of Disneyland into the dark, shadowy world of the Haunted Mansion remains one of Disneyland’s creepiest—and most delightful—experiences. Before your eyes can adjust to the almost palpable darkness—do they ever?—a pale parade of ghostly spectacles begins to unfold with, um, frightening regularity. Hundreds of carefree haunts dance to their hearts’ delights, paintings stretch surreally before your amazed eyes to help disclose hair-raising tales of untimely deaths, and the ramblings of a beautiful woman’s severed head still induce goose bumps. Even now boarding a doom buggy is one of my greatest pleasures; disembarking and taking my leave of this faded home and its ghoulish inhabitants—if only temporarily—still deflates.

Guests in line for the Haunted Mansion
On opening day, the Haunted Mansion plaques out front were bright and shiny brass, not the now-familiar aged black and verdigris green. People who had waited anxiously, many for six years, finally lined up on August 9, 1969 to enter the Mansion’s gates.

The first and best stop for any research into Disney history has to be the Walt Disney Archives on the Studio lot in Burbank. Leafing carefully through precious pages of story development meetings in the collection, I come across a sketch of a portrait of a man holding a cat on his lap. It looks creepy even in its simplicity. A few handwritten lines beside it explain what his story was to be and indicate that his portrait would hang in the Mansion beside an old-fashioned canopy bed:

“Mr. Meaker was a very simple man who lost each of his five wives in a very tragic manner,” it reads. “They died in bed—apparently of natural causes. Mr. Meaker’s only compensation was that his wives were all insured. He smothered them with affection…”

At this point, the guide demonstrates that by a twist of a lever, the canopy of the bed descends slowly, silently, to smother anyone lying beneath. “One night he was testing the mechanism while his cat was sleeping on the bed,” the note continues. “When Mr. Meaker found out he had killed his pet, he was heartbroken. He hanged himself.”

This rang a (requiem) bell for me: The murderous canopy bed was likely inspired by a similar device seen in the low-budget horror film 13 Ghosts, produced by William Castle in 1960. When several years ago, I had the rare opportunity to sit down to lunch with Imagineering Legend Rolly Crump, one of the earliest guys to work on the Mansion, I was just polite enough to let him order his food before I graciously grilled him about everything he could tell me about the attraction. He told me that he went to see 13 Ghosts with Walt Disney while searching for inspiration. (Just for a moment, can you imagine that your job is to watch low-budget horror movies with Walt Disney?!) I confidently asked Rolly if the “stretching” door in the hall right before Leota’s séance was inspired by the 1963 film The Haunting, which had a similar effect, but he insisted that was not a film they saw. (One strike for me.)

The Archives’ files also contain several pages of notes and sketches explaining the ghost-trapping system that was used to lure ghosts to the Mansion: Apparently a container of “nectarplasm” (nectar plus ectoplasm) would draw ghosts to it, through the walls. When the ghosts drank it, they turned the same color as the nectarplasm, and were unable to pass through the walls to escape. An interesting idea, but I’m glad the Mansion’s ghosts today are happy haunts—would you want to enter a house with 999 unhappy spirits?

Sign in front of the Haunted Mansion
Marty Sklar wrote this sign, recruiting ghosts to retire at the Haunted Mansion.

Not all abandoned tales of the Mansion are only to be found buried in the files of the Archives. One afternoon I was invited out to the beautiful San Fernando Valley home of Disney Legend X Atencio, who is best known for writing the lyrics to both “Yo Ho (A Pirate’s Life For Me)” and “Grim Grinning Ghosts.” He told me about a Haunted Mansion story he created that came so close to life that raven-ous visitors to the Mansion can see a ghost of his tale even today.

X’s Haunted Mansion script is dated 1968, one year before the attraction opened—and contains the scenes we are so familiar with today: spooky halls, a spectral séance, a ghostly gathering in the ballroom followed by a graveyard in full phantasmic swing—with one subtle difference. The ghost host, that disembodied presence that guides us through the Mansion, warns us to watch out for the pesky raven wearing an odd little necklace in each scene: “Apparently, the restless spirit of an old nag has taken possession of that poor wretched raven’s mortal being. Be on your guardit may want to better itself!”

Conservatory coffin scene from the Haunted Mansion
The raven inspects mortals as they enter the conservatory. By the way, Imagineer X Atencio recorded the voice of the reluctant resident of the conservatory coffin.

In the final crypt, where the hitchhiking ghosts join us in our Doom Buggies, the Host reveals that he himself is the raven, and will now pick one unlucky visitor to possess and follow home. And in the mirror, we see exactly this: Most of the cars are occupied by the friendly, slightly-silly-slightly-spooky hitchhiking ghosts, but one bears a hideous phantom wearing the same necklace seen on the raven. To this day, riding through the Mansion, you’ll see the raven (without the necklace) in many rooms: by the casket in the conservatory, on the banister of the ballroom, perched behind Leota on a chair, on the tree outside the attic window (you know… the spot where the Doom Buggy turns backwards and your back gets that nice stretch!), and over the final crypt as we exit the graveyard. Whether or not he possesses one of our fellow travelers, though, is something that will always haunt us.

While I was with X, I took a moment to ask him the same question I’d asked Rolly Crump years earlier: Did they find inspiration in the 1963 film The Haunting for the stretching door? “Absolutely,” he said, “but we went on our own, not with Walt.” (Home run!) This confirmed something else Rolly had told me: Different groups of Imagineers worked on different scenes and effects with no knowledge of what the other groups were doing.

The organ from The Haunted Mansion
The organ in the ballroom was originally Captain Nemo’s from the movie 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.

There are probably two “best known” trivia facts about the Mansion. The first is that the organ in the ballroom was originally Captain Nemo’s from the movie 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. (This fact is contractually required to be included in every story about the Mansion, so there.) Second, is that Walt Disney did not want the Haunted Mansion to look rundown on the outside, because nothing at Disneyland should look shabby. “We’ll take care of the outside and let the ghosts take care of the inside,” He famously said. Almost as well-known is that cleaning crews are instructed not to tidy up cobwebs and dust that form naturally on the showpieces inside—the areas that guests travel through are cleaned every night, of course. But right at the beginning, Imagineer and Disney Legend Roger Broggie encountered a problem with one of the crews.

When new attractions open, there is a period where Walt Disney Imagineering keeps control of it, ironing out any little kinks, before officially “turning over the keys” to Disneyland Operations. One night, after Roger worked the nightshift, he and some fellow Imagineers were leaving in the wee hours of the morning, while the custodial help was outside waiting to go in. Roger walked out and said goodnight to them, but they didn’t go into the building. “Is there something wrong?” he asked. One of them said, “Don’t you hear that?” Roger stuck his head back inside the door and could hear Little Leota, on the up ramp at the end of the ride, her voice carrying through the whole silent building calling, “Hurry back… ” That particular projector wasn’t on show power, so it didn’t go off when the power was shut down. The apprehensive cleaning crew would not go into the building until Roger powered it down.

Part of the fun of the Haunted Mansion over the years has always been trying to guess how Madame Leota and other illusions are created. (One hint: no holograms.) Imagineer Kim Irvine followed in the footsteps of both her father-in-law, Dick Irvine, and mother, Imagineer Leota Toombs, who is seen as séance sorceress Madame Leota, and seen and heard as little Leota, the tiny spectre that implores guests to “Hurry back!” as they make their way safely out of the Mansion. In the transcript in the Archives, Kim shares a favorite story of her mom’s on people’s curiosity about the Mansion’s effects:

Imagineer Leota Toombs.
Imagineer Leota Toombs.

“People would recognize her because they knew (Madame Leota’s) face so well. They’d ask her for autographs, but my favorite was when she said one little gal ran up to her at Disneyland, a ride operator. And she said, ‘They tell me you’re Madame Leota. I know you are, I can tell by looking at you, you’re her, aren’t you?’ And Mom said, ‘Yes, that’ll be me.’ So [the ride operator] said, ‘I just have to ask one question: Don’t you get tired of sitting under that table with your head in that ball all day?’”

On the final leg of my research, I was granted an interview at WDI with Tom Fitzgerald,

a show designer who was charged with the happy task of updating the Haunted Mansion as part of Disneyland’s 50th anniversary celebration. Tom told me he shared my boyhood obsession growing up wanting to visit Disneyland. He was 13 years old when he finally made his first visit to Disneyland in December 1969—with one specific goal in mind: the Haunted Mansion. As soon as he made it through the turnstiles, he laughingly recalls, he took off running down Main Street, U.S.A. His parents knew, too, where his obsession was leading him: As he exited the Haunted Mansion, they were there waiting for him, arms folded. They didn’t know then that their son’s apparent obsession with the Mansion would lead him to a career, first as attraction lead at the Mansion in Walt Disney World, and later as a show designer for WDI, charged with the happy task of updating the attraction.

Haunted Mansion concept art
This image of Leota floating from The Story and Song from the Haunted Mansion album inspired Imagineer Tom Fitzgerald to help her really fly.

Tom felt that as long as they didn’t tamper with the “DNA of the attraction”—that is, as long as changes fit in with the Mansion’s feel and history, fans would accept them. For example, one change was that, for the first time, Leota’s crystal ball would levitate and float around the séance room. While new technologies allowed this illusion to come to life, it was actually inspired by an old piece of Collin Campbell art of Leota from the Story and Song of the Haunted Mansion album that Tom had had since he was a kid.

Imagineer Yale Gracey
Imagineer and Disney Legend Yale Gracey makes adjustments to a short-lived spirit of Disneyland’s the Haunted Mansion: the Hatbox Ghost. The apparition would not return to the Mansion’s attic until 2015. 

“It’s tricky when you enhance the classics,” Tom says. “We wanted to keep up Walt’s tradition of constantly plussing the attractions, while respecting and honoring their traditions. New technologies change the way we can create illusions, and the magic needs to keep pace with the world. That way the classics will remain classics forever.”

Available until November 6!  Hurry back to DisneyPhotoArchives.com to check out images from the Haunted Mansion and order a print on archival paper or top-quality canvas!

Happy Birthday, Mickey! Get Ready to Celebrate Our Favorite Mouse

By Nicole Nalty

When Steamboat Willie made its debut on November 18, 1928, a star was born. Mickey Mouse is one of the most beloved characters of all time, which is why we’re so excited to celebrate his birthday! Read on to see how you can join in the fun.

Mickey Mouse dances

A Magical Music Video
Mickey Mouse has had many adventures, but this might be his biggest one yet! Mickey is heading on a special trip, making surprise appearances to his friends around the world. You can follow Mickey’s globetrotting journey on Mickey Mouse’s Facebook page. The trip will also be captured in a magical music video, featuring the brand-new song “What We Got.” You can catch the music video on Mickey’s birthday, November 18, on Mickey’s Facebook page.

Say Cheese!
Facebook isn’t the only place you can follow our favorite mouse! Mickey Mouse recently launched his own Instagram account (@MickeyMouse). Make sure to share your favorite Mickey moments and join the celebration on any social platform with #HappyBirthdayMickey.

Mickey Mouse birthday

A Disney Channel Celebration
Get ready for a Mickey Mouse marathon on Disney Channel! The new Mickey Mouse shorts will play throughout the day on November 18, with the addition of two new cartoon series about the big cheese. Mickey Meows Club features felines in their very own web-based talk show, all about Mickey’s iconic shorts. Mickey’s How Not To is your new guide for––you guessed it––how not to do things, featuring Mickey’s funniest fails and moments. Be sure to keep an eye out for a teaser trailer for Mickey and the Roadster Racers, a new series debuting on Disney Junior.

Party at the Parks (and the Stores!)
What better place to celebrate Mickey’s birthday than at Disney Parks and Disney Stores? Select locations at Disneyland and Walt Disney World Resorts and Disney Stores in the United States will have commemorative “Happy Birthday, Mickey!” buttons. If you’re at Disneyland Park on this special day, don’t miss a pre-parade birthday celebration for Mickey! And if you’re at Magic Kingdom Park, you can see a special birthday-themed edition of Move It! Shake It! Dance & Play It! Street Party.

Mickey Mouse birthday save the date

And stay tuned to D23, where we’ll be celebrating with our favorite mouse moments leading up to Mickey’s birthday.

Wondrous Images from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

By Courtney Potter

“Animation can explain whatever the mind of man can achieve,” said Walt Disney. One of the 20th century’s most prolific—and successful—innovators, Disney created entire worlds through his use of state-of-the-art technology and imaginative storytelling. The animated films created under his tenure (until his passing in 1966) are classics in every sense of the word—serving as “a true standard of excellence.”

Over the years, many authors and historians have looked into Disney’s animated films—for their beauty, for their historical context, and for their sheer entertainment value. But there is always more to learn… and TASCHEN, the publisher of fine art books, has created one of the most expansive illustrated publications on Disney animation in history. The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968 takes us into the studio’s “Golden Age of Animation” with some 1,500 images, as well as essays by preeminent Disney experts. And it’s available now—just in time for the holiday season!

The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

We here at D23 are positively enamored of this first volume (all 620 pages), which traces Disney’s complete animation journey from silent films—such as his unique Alice Comedies—through his first full-length feature, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937), and on to the music-filled experimentation of Fantasia (1940), the colorful Cinderella (1950, see below), and so much more.

spread from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

With research conducted through the historical collections of The Walt Disney Company—including the Walt Disney Archives and the Animation Research Library—as well as private collections, editor Daniel Kothenschulte curates amazing concept paintings and storyboards to reveal just how these masterpieces came to life. Richly hued animation cels provide detailed illustrations of famous film scenes, while rare pictures taken by Disney photographers—and excerpts from story conferences between Walt and his staff—bring a true “insider’s view” to the studio’s creative process. Joining Kothenschulte as co-authors of The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies are noted Disney film historians Mindy Johnson, Russell Merritt, Charles Solomon, Robin Allan, J. B. Kaufman, Katja Lüthge, Brian Sibley, and Didier Ghez; legendary movie critic Leonard Maltin; and Pixar and Disney Chief Creative Officer John Lasseter… with input from Disney Legend and Walt Disney Archives founder Dave Smith, of course!

Alice in Wonderland concept art from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

All of Walt’s major animated feature films are included, and are given their very own chapter; gorgeous storyboard images (like the one from Alice in Wonderland, 1951, above) grace page after page. One of D23’s favorite chapters focuses on Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs… it’s truly fascinating to see how it came together, especially when you consider that no one else had ever created a feature-length animated film before! Just look at an example of the Snow White material that awaits readers (below)…

spread from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

But Kothenschulte and his cohorts haven’t forgotten less-familiar gems either, such as Make Mine Music (1946), Melody Time (1948), and Fun and Fancy Free (1947)—which features Mickey and the Beanstalk (see concept art below).

Mickey and the Beanstalk concept art from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

Even unfinished Disney projects, like the proposed sequels to Fantasia, are highlighted with rarely seen artwork—many of them previously unpublished! Below are several more of our favorite images from the tome… including concept art from Sleeping Beauty (1959), Dumbo (1941), Fantasia (1940), and Walt’s final animated masterpiece, The Jungle Book (1967).

Sleeping Beauty concept art from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

Dumbo concept art from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

Fantasia concept art from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

spread from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

The astonishing collection of images and stories inside TASCHEN’s The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968 will delight both fans of American film history and of Walt Disney and his pioneering work.

Walt Disney, Virginia Davis, and Roy Disney

Cinderella concept art from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

Sleeping Beauty concept art from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

spread from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

spread from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

spread from The Walt Disney Film Archives: The Animated Movies 1921–1968

Unforgettable Dumbo Art

By Nicole Nalty

Disney fans first saw an elephant fly 75 years ago with the debut of Walt Disney’s animated classic Dumbo. The underdog (underelephant?) film is unforgettable––sensational songs (admit it, you’ve cried during “Baby Mine”), lovable characters, and of course, amazing animation.

In honor of Dumbo’s big-screen debut, Disney’s Animation Research Library has shared a few pieces of archival art from the 1941 film, just for D23 Members! Read on to marvel at pieces of clean-up animation, concept art, and story sketches that helped bring everyone’s favorite elephant to life.

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

early artwork from Dumbo

It’s a Sparkling New Moana Clip—Plus More in News Briefs

By Courtney Potter

Wayfinder Meets Demigod in New Moana Clip!

We may have mentioned previously how excited we are for Walt Disney Animation Studios’ next adventure, Moana, to hit the shores of our local cineplex… (Is the date circled in red on our collective calendar? You bet!) So we’re tickled pink that a brand-new clip from the film has just hit the Internet.

In the video, above, our intrepid wayfinder Moana (Auli‘i Cravalho) has discovered Maui (Dwayne Johnson)—the self-absorbed demigod who may just be able to guide her on her quest to save her people. Can they learn from each other along the way? We’ll just have to wait and see, when Moana reaches theaters on November 23!

022415_news-briefs-February-24-2015-feat-2

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

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
November 4
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Glen Keane
November 5
The Official Walt Disney Studios Tour—Presented by D23
November 19–20
D23 Destination D: Amazing Adventures
July 14-16, 2017
D23 Expo 2017
Studios
November 4, 2016
Doctor Strange opens in theaters
November 23, 2016
Moana opens in theaters
December 16, 2016
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story opens in theaters
March 17, 2017
Beauty and the Beast opens in theaters
Parks
September 2, 8, 11, 13, 16, 18, 20, 23, 25, 29, 30; October 2, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 20, 21, 23, 25, 27, 28, 30, 31
Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party at Walt Disney World Resort
September 23, 26, 28, 30
October 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 14, 17, 19, 21, 24, 26, 29, 31

Mickey’s Halloween Party at Disneyland Resort
September 2–October 29 (Friday and Saturday Nights, plus October 31)
Club Villain, special ticketed event at Disney’s Hollywood Studios
September 14–November 14, 2016
Epcot International Food & Wine Festival
November 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 15, 18, 27, 29; December 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 9, 11, 13, 15, 16, 18, 22
Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party at Walt Disney World Resort
Television
November 20, 2016
Elena and the Secret of Avalor is simulcast on Disney Junior and Disney Channel at 7 p.m. ET

We’re Hooked on this Brand-New Teaser for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

Every since we met that hilarious band of misfit superheroes in 2015’s Guardians of the Galaxy, we’re been looking forward to watching them further navigate the perils of space… and to tide us over ‘til the movie’s sequel, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, hits theaters, we’ve been gifted with a fantastic new teaser trailer! Check out the clip—featuring Peter “Star-Lord” Quill (Chris Pratt), Gamora (Zoe Saldana), Drax (Dave Bautista), Rocket (Bradley Cooper), and still-tiny-and-so-adorable Groot (Vin Diesel)—above.

Disneyland Paris

Disneyland Paris Celebrates 25 Years in 2017

True, true—we haven’t yet hit Halloween, but that doesn’t mean we can’t get excited for things to come in 2017. A perfect example: Disneyland Paris’ big 25th-anniversary celebration! On April 12, 2017, the Parisian resort will officially observe its silver anniversary, and they’ve got some truly magical events in store.

From all-new decorations and exclusive shows, to a totally reimagined daytime Disney Stars on Parade and a glittering Disney Illuminations nighttime show featuring Le Château de La Belle au Bois Dormant (that’s Sleeping Beauty’s Castle, for the English speakers among us), there will be something fresh for every guest. Plus, visitors will find Star Tours: The Adventures Continue re-opened for business, and Star Wars Hyperspace Mountain will welcome Disneyland Paris thrill-seekers for the first time.

The resort has recently been undergoing a major makeover through their Experience Enhancement Program; rides have been refurbished (including the classic Peter Pan’s Flight), a new show was just added at the Animagique Theatre, and renovations are now complete at several resort hotels.

Look for more information on Disneyland Paris’ “big 2-5” as it becomes available… and make sure those passports are up to date! It’s sure to be “magnifique”!

Star Wars Rogue One

New Character Posters for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Itching for another peek at the amazing characters you’ll be meeting when Rogue One: A Star Wars Story hits theaters this winter? Look no further than these just-released, extremely cool posters!

Star Wars Rogue One

Star Wars Rogue One

The new posters feature the likes of Jyn Erso (Felicity Jones), Captain Cassian Andor (Diego Luna), Director Orson Krennic (Ben Mendelsohn), Chirrut Îmwe (Donnie Yen), K-2SO (Alan Tudyk), Saw Gerrera (Forest Whitaker), and more. What do those glowing lines represent? Is it a map to the Death Star? What are these characters really up to? And how do they relate to our favorites from The Force Awakens (or do they)? So many questions! Guess we’ll have to wait ’til Rogue One light-speeds onto a screen near us (in 3D, RealD® 3D, and IMAX® 3D) on December 16…

Mickey Mouse

Disney Junior Comes to Cinemas Nationwide, this November

Mickey Mouse has got a birthday coming up this fall… and to mark the occasion, he’s coming to the big screen! Kids and parents can celebrate Mickey’s birthday during a special one-day interactive cinema event on November 12—where they’ll be invited to jump up and sing, dance, and play along with some of Disney Junior’s most-loved shows and characters, including Elena of Avalor, Miles from Tomorrowland, Doc McStuffins, The Lion Guard, Sofia the First, and more.

In addition, fans in attendance will be among the first to see Disney Junior’s upcoming series Mickey and the Roadster Racers, on the big screen, before its big TV debut in January 2017. Attendees will also receive a $5 offer to the Disney Stores and a free e-book download, as well as other cool giveaways.

This super-amazing, one-day event, “Disney Junior at the Movies—Mickey’s BIG Celebration,” will screen in cinemas nationwide on Saturday, November 12, at 10 a.m. local time, courtesy of Fathom Events and Disney Junior. Tickets are on sale now; find out more—including a complete list of theater locations—by visiting FathomEvents.com.

“The Science Behind Pixar”: Now Open at L.A.’s California Science Center

Disney fans on the West Coast (or those of you planning a trip to Los Angeles), listen up: “The Science Behind Pixar,” the amazing exhibition created by the Museum of Science, Boston, in collaboration with Pixar Animation Studios, is now open at L.A.’s California Science Center! Fans can enjoy a unique, first-time look into the Pixar filmmaking process and explore the science and technology behind some of the most beloved animated films.

The 12,000-square-foot interactive exhibition showcases the science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) concepts used by the artists and computer scientists who help bring Pixar’s award-winning films to life; with more than 40 interactive exhibit elements, the exhibition’s eight sections each focus on a step in the filmmaking process… all the better to give you an exceptional view of the production pipeline and concepts used at Pixar every single day. Look for engaging hands-on activities, firsthand accounts from members of the studios’ production teams, and even re-creations of your favorite Pixar film characters.

Click here for more information about “The Science Behind Pixar”. To infinity, and beyond!

Charli XCX

Charli XCX to Host Freeform’s “13 Nights of Halloween”

Freeform’s “13 Nights of Halloween,” just got a spooktacular new host! Grammy®-nominated songwriter Charli XCX will be getting her scream on as she hosts the spine-tingling event from October 19 through 31. Over those frightfully fun 13 evenings, Freeform viewers and Charli fans will also get an exclusive sneak peek at her new single, “After the Afterparty,” which will be released the public on October 28.

Now it its incredible 18th year, the 2016 installment of “13 Nights of Halloween” will feature the network television premiere of R.L. Stine’s Monsterville: Cabinet of Souls, the Freeform premiere of Spooky Buddies, and—of course—the perennial favorite Hocus Pocus, starring Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Kathy Najimy.

So tune into Freeform, beginning October 19… if you dare.

Jingle Bell, Jingle BAM!

Jingle Bell, Jingle BAM! Coming to Disney’s Hollywood Studios

There’s a brand-new holiday spectacular coming to Disney’s Hollywood Studios at Walt Disney World—and it looks into what might happen if Santa Claus went missing! Debuting in mid-November, Jingle Bell, Jingle BAM! will come to life on, above, and around the park’s Chinese Theater with state-of-the-art projections, special effects, fireworks, a spirited musical soundtrack, and more holiday fun than you can shake a candy cane at…

Led by elves Wayne and Lanny, the hilarious duo from ABC’s animated special Prep & Landing, this new yuletide adventure follows a search-and-rescue mission to get “the Big Guy” back to the North Pole in time for Christmas—and it features memorable holiday moments from Disney films including Mickey’s Christmas Carol, Beauty and the Beast, Cinderella, Bambi, Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas, and much more. And yes, there will be snow!

The one-of-a-kind show will enchant young and young-at-heart from November 14 through December 31. Holiday hijinks ahoy!

A Perfect Stranger: Doctor Strange Comes to the Marvel Cinematic Universe

By Jim Frye

Is there a doctor in the house?

The Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) is about to change in subtle—and not-so-subtle—ways. That’s because there’s a new doctor in town, and his doctor’s bag has more than stethoscopes and tongue depressors. He’s got a bag of tricks—magic tricks. His name: Doctor Strange, Master of the Mystic Arts.

Doctor Strange

His magic tricks are more than parlor games and sleights-of-hands, though. And Doctor Strange is one of the most visually intriguing movies yet to come out of the MCU.

Doctor Strange

Based on one of Marvel’s more “out there” comic series, Doctor Strange is a world-renowned surgeon whose hands are badly damaged in a car accident, destroying his career. His search for healing leads him into strange and magical realms, where he transforms into the Super Hero we’ll see in November’s big-screen release. In the comics, he does interact with the other Marvel Super Heroes. He gets chummy with Spider-Man, faces off against the Hulk, and eventually teams up with Earth’s Mightiest Heroes, the Avengers. But for the most part, Strange is a very unique character.

Doctor Strange

Where does he fit into Marvel’s ever-expanding stable of blockbuster films? Director/writer Scott Derrickson says that the character of Doctor Strange—played by Benedict Cumberbatch—is on a spiritual path of growth, and it’s like nothing fans have ever seen. “We’re doing visual things that haven’t been done before,” he says. “It’s all unusual, weird and surreal. Even the fighting is in the context of magic.”

Scott Derrickson

Derrickson continues: “This is a new flavor in the buffet of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The spiritual aspects have to do with personal growth and the supernatural and dimensions outside of ourselves. That’s where the idea of unique personal evolution and growth combined with the fantastical and supernatural and otherworldly. That is the essential DNA of Doctor Strange.”

Doctor Strange

“This movie is really a stand-alone origin story,” Derrickson says. “The character will venture out into the MCU, but there were no restraints on me to create a film that would graft into that universe. It’s tonally very different than all the other movies. It’s visually very different than all the other movies. And it certainly is the creation of a character that’s going to belong in that universe, but it was not part of the challenge to me to fit into that world at all… I was free to make the world of Doctor Strange, as inspired by the comics. And the comics were that way, too. The [Doctor Strange] comics were a weird off-shoot of the Marvel comic universe. And it broke open a lot of things for the comics in the same way that I hope this film will break open other dimensions and expand the Marvel Cinematic Universe in the use of visuals and the Marvel multiverse. I think that’s the intention.”

In addition to Cumberbatch, Doctor Strange stars Tilda Swinton, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rachel McAdams, Mads Mikkelsen, and Benedict Wong. Audiences can get caught up in the magic on November 4.

13 Disney Characters that Make Our Spines Tingle

By Courtney Potter

When you think of Disney, what comes to mind? Well, if you’re anything like us, it’s laughter… heart… and a whole lot of “happily ever after.” But sometimes we forget there can be a spookier side to all things Disney. Halloween is the perfect time of year to remember some of the creepy characters that have faced off against our favorite Disney heroes and heroines… Thankfully, as in any fairy tale worth its weight in delicious candy apples, these vile villains have been thwarted—or shown the error of their ways. (Looking at you, Billy Butcherson!)

From Snow White’s adversary to the re-introduction of a Star Wars villain, D23 has gathered 13 of our favorite spine-tingling characters. Did your fave make our supernatural slate?

The Hag

The Hag (aka the Evil Queen) from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
A true creepy classic! Disney’s first antagonist in an animated feature, the Evil Queen is dead set on ridding Snow White (her stepdaughter) from the kingdom once and for all. When her huntsman fails in his mission to kill Snow White, the Queen takes matters into her own hands—using dark magic to transform herself into an old hag, in one final effort to do away with her beautiful rival. It’s the Seven Dwarfs who come to Snow White’s rescue, forcing the Queen to fly… and to eventually meet a boulder-fied fate.

The Horned King

The Horned King from The Black Cauldron
The Black Cauldron, the 1985 animated film based on Lloyd Alexander’s Chronicles of Prydain book series, features one of the creepiest villains in Disney’s canon—the evil Horned King (voiced by John Hurt). A skeletal specimen with fearsome horns and glowing red eyes, the King wants to use the Black Cauldron (which has the power to restore life) to unleash an army of undead warriors. But the cauldron’s magic backfires, eventually consuming the King and making a hero of unlikely warrior Taran (Grant Bardsley).

King Candy

King Candy from Wreck-It Ralph
(SPOILER ALERT: If you haven’t seen Wreck-It Ralph, you may want to jump ahead to our next creepy character)
One of the newer villains in the Disney canon, King Candy (formerly known as Turbo) was up to no good even before the events of 2012’s Wreck-It Ralph unfolded. He’d been a popular character in a classic racing video game—but when a new game stole the spotlight, Turbo was consumed by jealously and disappeared… though not for long. Due to Ralph’s penchant for wrecking things, Turbo reappears and takes over “Sugar Rush,” morphing into the deliciously devilish King Candy and wreaking havoc on the game’s ruler, Vanellope von Schweetz. Can Ralph “fix it” before it’s too late? (Answer: Yes, and how!)

Red Skull

Red Skull from Marvel’s Captain America
Talk about creepy! Red Skull, otherwise known as Johann Schmidt, was Steve Rogers’ nefarious nemesis in 2011’s Captain America: The First Avenger. When we first meet Schmidt (played by Hugo Weaving), he’s the leader of HYDRA, the science branch of the Nazis. (We told you he was creepy.) Though he initially steals the Tesseract (an “infinity stone” of unparalleled power) and plans to bomb the world’s capitals, he’s done in not only by the good Captain’s strength, but also by the fully charged Tesseract itself.

Madame Medusa

Madame Medusa from The Rescuers
In 1977’s The Rescuers, an orphan named Penny is kidnapped by shifty pawnshop owner Madame Medusa—who intends to use her to find the world’s largest diamond, the Devil’s Eye, inside a pirate cave. Luckily, Miss Bianca and Bernard of the Rescue Aid Society (an international organization of mice with headquarters in the basement of the United Nations building) take on the case… thwarting Medusa and her henchmen; rescuing Penny; and keeping the Devil’s Eye in safe hands.

Claude Frollo

Claude Frollo from The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Widely considered to be one of the darkest and most cunning villains in Disney history, Claude Frollo of 1996’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame is a ruthless Parisian judge who finds himself the reluctant caretaker for the physically deformed, kind-hearted Quasimodo. Defying the orders of his surrogate father, Quasimodo ventures into the streets of medieval Paris where he meets a beautiful gypsy girl named Esmeralda. Naturally, Frollo wants the girl for his very own—but it’s Quasimodo (and his gargoyle friends) to the rescue.

Billy Butcherson

Billy Butcherson from Hocus Pocus
Okay, so not all of the creepy characters on this list are truly bad. Case in point: Billy Butcherson from Disney’s 1993 live-action comedy adventure Hocus Pocus. Back in the 1600s, ol’ Billy was Winifred Sanderson’s boyfriend… but he had a fling with Winnie’s sister Sarah. Next thing you know, he’s as dead as a doornail! Three hundred years later, Winnie resurrects him and orders him to help retrieve her spell book from plucky young Salemites Max, Allison, and Dani—but he winds up helping the kids to defeat the sisters once and for all.

Oogie Boogie

Oogie Boogie from Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas
Leave it to Tim Burton to turn what is essentially a sack filled with bugs into one of the creepiest and most entertaining characters that has ever graced the silver screen. Oogie Boogie, Jack Skellington’s nemesis, kidnaps the real Santa Claus (from under Jack’s nose!) and puts poor Sally in danger too. Shenanigans ensue, but Jack does realize the error of his ways… sending Santa back to Christmastown and vanquishing Oogie Boogie forever.

Davy Jones

Davy Jones from Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
A creepy character that pre-dates his appearance in the second film of the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise (by many, many years), Davy Jones is a supernatural sailor—complete with octopus-like facial tentacles!—that’s condemned to captain the Flying Dutchman for all eternity. As far as villains go, Jonesy will have some stiff competition from Captain Salazar (Javier Bardem) in the next Pirates of the Caribbean film, Dead Men Tell No Tales.

The Headless Horseman

The Headless Horseman in The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, one half of the 1949 Disney animated adventure, is based on a 1800s short story by Washington Irving. Ichabod Crane, a new schoolteacher with an eye on marrying rich, arrives in Sleepy Hollow and sets local hearts aflame—well, except for Katrina Van Tassel (daughter of a wealthy farmer), and her suitor Brom Bones… who tries to scare Ichabod away with the tale of the Headless Horseman. On Halloween night, Mr. Crane actually encounters the terrifying phantom—and goes missing! Don’t forget, you can catch the Headless Horseman live and in person during Mickey’s Halloween Party at Disneyland Resort!

Sid Phillips

Sid Phillips from Toy Story
You wouldn’t think a kid would wind up on our list of “creepy characters,” but this one’s a real doozy! Sid Phillips first wreaked havoc over Andy and all his beloved toys in 1995’s Toy Story. The vaguely sociopathic youngster becomes the only other human in Andy’s world to realize that the toys are alive—but any worry that Sid would spill the beans is mitigated when Andy and his family move away. (Fun fact: In Toy Story 3, we catch a glimpse of adult Sid, who now works as a garbage man.)

Henry J. Waternoose

Henry J. Waternoose from Monsters, Inc
Take one look at Waternoose (the CEO of Monsters, Inc.) and you can probably gauge a strong “creep” factor from the jump… what with those five beady eyes and those crab-like legs. Initially, he seems like a gentle, fatherly sort—until he’s faced with keeping his company afloat during an unprecedented energy crisis. But once he commits to weird little Randall’s evil scheme, it’s all over for him… Sully and Mike won’t let anything bad happen to adorable human Boo, and they’ll stop at nothing to protect her!

Grand Admiral Thrawn

Grand Admiral Thrawn from Star Wars Rebels
Thrawn is a recently re-introduced creepster in the Star Wars canon; while he first appeared in a 1991 Star Wars novel, he wasn’t made an official part of that galaxy far, far away until his introduction in the third season of Star Wars Rebels. He’s a Grand Admiral who serves the Galactic Empire as the Commander of the Seventh Imperial Fleet; cold and analytical, Thrawn allows the Rebels to escape—hoping to manipulate them into orchestrating the complete downfall of their own rebellion.

Everything You Need to Know about Disneyland Paris’ 25th-Anniversary Celebration

By Nicole Nalty

There’s always something to celebrate at Disney Parks! Disneyland Paris just shared exciting details surrounding its 25th-anniversary celebration, beginning March 26, 2017. From a new parade to new attractions, there’s much to see during this sparkling jubilee:

1. Mickey presents “Happy Anniversary Disneyland Paris”
Watch as Mickey invites all of his famous friends for a larger-than-life anniversary party, taking place daily in Disneyland Park.

2. See the Stars
What better way to commemorate a milestone anniversary than with a brand-new parade? Disney Stars on Parade will debut on Disneyland Park’s parade route and will feature favorite Disney characters on stunning new floats.

Star Wars at Disneyland Paris

3.  Feel the Force
A favorite at Walt Disney World Resort and Disneyland Resort, Star Tours: The Adventures Continue will land in Disneyland Park, taking guests on an epic journey through multiple Star Wars destinations. Space Mountain: Mission 2 will also feel the Force when Star Wars Hyperspace Mountain debuts in Disneyland Park.

4. The Starlit Princess Waltz
Mickey’s not the only host during this party—the Disney Princesses will enjoy their own festivities at Disneyland Park. Fans of the Disney Princesses will be able to see some of their favorite leading ladies during this sparkling new show.

5. Disney Illuminations
Favorite Disney stories come to life in a brand-new nighttime spectacular at Disneyland Park. Sleeping Beauty Castle will transform with dazzling lights, projections, and breath-taking special effects, taking guests into the world of Disney animated films—including The Little Mermaid and Frozen—and live-action favorites, such as Beauty and the Beast, Star Wars, and Pirates of the Caribbean.

13 Classically Creepy Disney Parks Attractions That Will Make Your Halloween Terror-rific!

By Jocelyn Buhlman

When hinges creek in doorless chambers and strange and frightening sounds echo through the halls… That is the time when you are at Disney Parks, prepared to experience Disney’s eeriest attractions with ghoulish delight. If you want your Halloween chills and thrills to have that special Disney magic to them, look no further then D23’s international list of the spookiest (and sometimes silliest!) attractions that Disney theme parks have to offer. You’ll be so captivatedly creeped out that when Halloween comes again next year, you’ll be sure to want to hurry baaaack…

Tower of Terror

1. Tower of Terror

To start off this creepy tour, let’s set the scene: Halloween, 1939. You’re standing in a rainy street on the dark side of Hollywood, and lightening crackles across the sky. The hotel in front of you shimmers with a “VACANCY” sign drawing your eye. Are you so desperate for a dry place to stay that you don’t even pause to wonder just what kind of vacancy you’re filling?

Located at Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida and Walt Disney Studios Park in France, and operating for a limited time at Disney California Adventure, the The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror immerses you in the world of the iconic series The Twilight Zone. The queue is filled with props and references to all your favorite creepy episodes (did you catch the book To Serve Man sitting on the library shelf?), so that you’re already feeling the spooky spirit. But just wait until you enter the maintenance service elevator: Your destination is unknown, but this much is clear—a reservation has been made in your name for an extended stay. Are you prepared to enter the Twilight Zone?

Or perhaps you’re looking for a place to stay with a more adventurous flavor. In that case, Tokyo DisneySea has the hotel for you: Hotel Hightower, owned by famed explorer Harrison Hightower III. But his love of collecting stolen artifacts has brought a curse down on his hotel—the ancient idol of Shiriki Utundu has cursed it—and you can experience the curse yourself… if you dare!

Wherever you decide to stay during your tour of creepy Disney attractions, one thing is for sure: They will be so glad that you dropped in.

Mystic Manor

2. Mystic Manor

The next stop on our attractions tour is the colorful and mysterious mansion standing in Mystic Point at Hong Kong Disneyland. Lord Henry Mystic has invited you into his mansion, full of curios and tchotchkes from his travels all over the world—including a magical music box. But what happens when the music box falls into the hands of Albert, Henry’s pet monkey? Well, then you’re in for the ride of your life as you venture through the manor to face vicious Venus flytraps, paintings that come to life, and suits of armor on the attack. Lord Albert Mystic’s treasure collection has always been considered a wonder to view—but no one has ever viewed it like this!

Snow White’s Scary Adventures

3. Snow White’s Scary Adventures

In Disneyland, Tokyo Disneyland, and Disneyland Paris, you can experience the thrills and chills of the animated classic Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. What starts as a fun night of silliness and dancing with the Seven Dwarfs turns mysterious and sinister as you rush through a forest of glowering trees and stumble through the Queen’s dungeons—you may even catch her wicked transformation from beautiful queen to dangerous hag. If you can resist her offers of “Apple?” and enlist the help of the Dwarfs, you’ll make it to the end! But not without experiencing the scary adventures that Snow White herself once endured back in Walt Disney’s groundbreaking film.

Space Mountain: Ghost Galaxy

4. Space Mountain: Ghost Galaxy

For this Halloweentime adventure in space, everyone can hear you scream. Unique to the Halloween celebrations of Hong Kong Disneyland and Disneyland park in California, the iconic, domed space station is haunted by galactic ghouls and nefarious nebulae. This is an essential stop on any creepy attraction crawl, as the special ride experience is only available during the Halloween season. With all the ghostly faces and starry spirits swirling around you as you ride this famous thrill ride, you’ll be screaming with genuine terror by the time the camera flashes for your on-ride photo.

La Tanière du Dragon

5. La Tanière du Dragon

There is something mysterious lurking under the castle at Disneyland Paris. Below the magical exterior of Le Château de la Belle au Bois Dormant, you can find a monstrous dragon chained against jagged rocks. He is sleeping, but be careful! When he wakes up you’ll find that this dragon has a fiery temper.

La Tanière du Dragon is an essential stop for any Disney fan looking for a scare. At 89 feet long, the Audio-Animatronics® dragon at the centerpiece of this attraction was the largest Audio-Animatronics® figure ever built at the time of the park’s opening in 1992. Such a spectacular feat of fright and Imagineering is sure to have you shivering in no time.

Pirates of the Caribbean

6. Pirates of the Caribbean

So, you come seekin’ adventure and salty old pirates, eh? This iconic Disney attraction reminds us that dead men tell no tales in Disneyland, Magic Kingdom, Disneyland Paris, Tokyo Disneyland and the newest iteration in Shanghai Disneyland. And who can resist the life of a pirate? Hop aboard a boat to enter the world of devils and black sheep and really bad eggs—as they lived and as they died. Whether you’re sailing through the fiery blasts of a battle between ships and forts or you’re watching the lightning flash across the deck of a crashed ship captained by a skeletal buccaneer, you’ll soon be saying “a pirate’s life for me!” this Halloween.

Matterhorn Bobsleds

7. Matterhorn Bobsleds

What could possibly be scary about a nice toboggan ride through the Swiss Alps? Wait, did you hear that sound? I don’t think that was the wind howling…

Now featuring a brand-new Audio-Animatronics® Abominable Snowman reaching out of the ice caves to come after you, the Matterhorn Bobsleds is one classic roller coaster you must ride if you want to experience thrills that are uniquely Disney. This attraction is not only an iconic Disneyland landmark, but an adventure of snowy scares as you ride your toboggan through the Abominable Snowman’s icy lair.

Indiana Jones Adventure: Temple of the Forbidden Eye

8. Indiana Jones Adventure: Temple of the Forbidden Eye

Deep within the jungles of Disneyland’s Adventureland lies a mysterious temple, bearing snakes carved in stone and the remnants of an excavation site. But now, it’s a tourist attraction and you are in for a lifetime of opportunity, because this magical temple offers you wondrous treasures of eternal youth, future vision, or earthly riches! Of course, there’s only one catch… Don’t look into the eyes of the—wait, what do you mean you already looked? Once you lock eyes with the stone visage of the deity Mara, you’ve booked your entire car on a one-way trip through the Gates of Doom!

Giant snakes, spooky skeletons, tumbling boulders, and more await you on this thrilling journey that’s so detailed, you’ll feel like you’ve really entered the world of Indiana Jones. And the creeps aren’t just limited to the ride—adventuring through the queue exposes you to the wide variety of booby traps within the mysterious temple. Watch out for falling spikes! And be careful where you step! Danger and mystery are everywhere in the attraction, but so is our hero, Indiana Jones. You may be gripped with fear at the twists and turns of your adventure through The Temple of The Forbidden Eye, but remember that Indy is in there with you, ready to save the day! You’ll be begging to ride the attraction again and again, and maybe this time you won’t look into the eye of the—oh, man! Someone already looked again. But you’re ready for another round of adventure!

Roaring Rapids

9. Roaring Rapids

Shanghai Disneyland, the newest Disney theme park, holds a mysterious peak called Roaring Mountain, home to a rapids ride that cuts right through the mountain’s caves. If the unexpected drops and mysterious caverns aren’t enough to send chills down your spine, then perhaps you should consider the legends surrounding Roaring Mountain. They say the mountain is haunted by a beast called the Q’aráq. Do you believe in the fearsome, crocodile-like beast? Do you want to test your belief? Then step into the rafts of Roaring Rapids and prepare for thrilling twists and turns—and perhaps an encounter with a legend will show you why it’s a “roaring” good time.

Dinosaur

10. DINOSAUR

Our crawl has taken us through pirate caves and mysterious mountains, but now we enter a new destination: the past! At the Dino Institute, you’re on a secret mission to rescue an Iguanodon only moments before the meteor that drove the dinosaurs to extinction impacts the earth. But, of course, your mission doesn’t go exactly as planned and now you’re on a high-speed chase through the jungles of the Cretaceous period, racing to avoid the meteor and the jaws of the massive Carnotaurus! This journey into the past will have you clutching at your seat and screaming as loud as a dinosaur’s roar! Will you make it out of the past in time? You still have so many more rides you need to get on, you know…

Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride

11. Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride

Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride at Disneyland may seem like a simple attraction based on a whimsical animated movie at first glance, but once you hop in a car and feel your own rush of Motormania, you’ll understand why we included this on our list. As you speed along in your joyride around London, you encounter all sorts of dangers—from driving through boxes of dynamite to running headlong into a train! But the real scares come from the unexpected fire-and-brimstone ending, where the devil himself declares you guilty and a dragon greets you with a breath of fire. But you can relax that white-knuckled grip on your steering wheel! Because you’re on a journey to nowhere in particular, and you’re not stopping just because the devil doesn’t like your driving! The next thing you know, you’re breathing a sigh of relief back in Toad Hall, swearing you’ll never let your Motormania get the best of you again… until you decide to ride the attraction again, of course…

The Nightmare Experiment

12. The Nightmare Experiment

This creepy crawl is coming to a close, so let’s stop by an attraction unique to Hong Kong Disneyland. The Nightmare Experiment is a walk-through attraction that lets you into the dark side of Disney films. Guided by the mysterious Professor Wu, you enter a dark dreamscape exploring frightening scenes like Dr. Facilier’s friends from the other side, Captain Jack Sparrow’s skeletal pirate jail, Sid’s mutant toys come to life, and the Red Queen’s insane asylum. Can you handle all the nightmares this experiment has to offer? You’ll just have to come visit the professor and find out for yourself…

Haunted Mansion

13. Haunted Mansion

Is there any other way to end this crawl than with the original home of 999 happy haunts? And from Halloween through Christmas time, if you walk into New Orleans Square at Disneyland or Fantasyland at Tokyo Disneyland, you’ll find that Jack Skellington and his crew have wrecked the halls for <em>Haunted Mansion Holiday. Are you prepared to see what happens when two holidays collide? You’ve never seen Christmas like it’s done in the mansion, with Jack playing “Sandy Claws” and filling you with visions of monsters and skeleton heads!

Are you feeling more feisty than festive? Then the old, Victorian-style house at the edge of Liberty Square in the Magic Kingdom is where you should stop next on your tour. There’s no holiday cheer here—only creepy old crypts and mysterious sights. Can you make it through the maze of the queue, reading about the past residents of the mansion when they existed in their “corruptible, mortal” state? Wait—did a shadow just pass through the upstairs window? And your friend swore he saw the face on that tombstone blink. Are you willing to walk through the doors and join in on a swingin’ wake?

If you’re ever at the Big Thunder Mesa in Disneyland Paris, you must stop by the old ranchhouse out on the hill. What, you heard the rumors about the mysterious phantom who haunts the house? Nonsense! Come inside, as the lady of the house, Melanie Ravenswood, has invited you to a party and she would just die if you didn’t show up. Phantom Manor at Disneyland Paris is a little different from the other Haunted Mansion attractions—instead of visiting a swingin’ wake, you’re here for the party of a macabre debutante and her vanishing groom, for a ghostly celebration of nuptial doom! Once you leave the mansion, can you find your way through the ghost town of Phantom Canyon? The Phantom of the house sure hopes you don’t, but Melanie is there to point you to the way out.

Whichever haunted house you choose to explore, you know you will find all the spirits, ghouls, and grinning ghosts that your heart desires. And if you’re still craving chills once you step outside the mansions and our creepy crawl has ended, never fear, for a ghost will follow you home!

Secrets Revealed in New Elena of Avalor TV Movie—Plus More in News Briefs

By Courtney Potter

Elena and the Secret of Avalor: Coming to Disney Channel and Disney Junior

Fans of Disney’s newest princess, escúchame! Elena and the Secret of Avalor, a very special television movie event, will premiere in simulcast on both Disney Channel and Disney Junior (double the fun!) on Sunday, November 20, at 7 p.m. EST. The TV movie will tell the intriguing tale of how Elena was imprisoned in her magical amulet by the evil sorceress Shuriki, voiced by legendary actress Jane Fonda (Grace and Frankie), and eventually set free by Princess Sofia of Enchancia. But that’s not all: Elena’s anthem “My Time,” performed by Aimee Carrero (who voices Elena in the series), makes its big debut during the special event!

Also featuring the voices of Ariel Winter, Sara Ramirez, Chris Parnell, and Ana Ortiz, Elena and the Secret of Avalor combines the creative teams of Sofia the First and Elena of Avalor for a truly memorable hour of TV! The perfect way to head into the Thanksgiving holiday…

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

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
November 4
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Glen Keane
November 5
The Official Walt Disney Studios Tour—Presented by D23
November 19–20
D23 Destination D: Amazing Adventures
July 14-16, 2017
D23 Expo 2017
Studios
November 4, 2016
Doctor Strange opens in theaters
November 23, 2016
Moana opens in theaters
December 16, 2016
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story opens in theaters
March 17, 2017
Beauty and the Beast opens in theaters
Parks
September 2, 8, 11, 13, 16, 18, 20, 23, 25, 29, 30; October 2, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 20, 21, 23, 25, 27, 28, 30, 31
Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party at Walt Disney World Resort
September 23, 26, 28, 30
October 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 14, 17, 19, 21, 24, 26, 29, 31

Mickey’s Halloween Party at Disneyland Resort
September 2–October 29 (Friday and Saturday Nights, plus October 31)
Club Villain, special ticketed event at Disney’s Hollywood Studios
September 14–November 14, 2016
Epcot International Food & Wine Festival
November 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 15, 18, 27, 29; December 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 9, 11, 13, 15, 16, 18, 22
Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party at Walt Disney World Resort
Television
November 20, 2016
Elena and the Secret of Avalor is simulcast on Disney Junior and Disney Channel at 7 p.m. ET

When Will Our Lives Begin? When Tangled: The Series Debuts in 2017!

If you’re anything like us (and we’re pretty sure you are), you’ve been wondering about Rapunzel, Flynn, and the rest of our faves from Disney’s adorable 2010 animated hit Tangled. We caught a glimpse of their wedding shenanigans in the 2012 short Tangled Ever After… but what other adventures came over our heroes’ horizons? Have no fear—we’ll find out so much more when Tangled: The Series debuts on Disney Channel in 2017. Watch the teaser trailer, above, for a special sneak peek…

Tangled: The Series takes place between the original film and the ’12 short—so expect to see Rapunzel re-acquainting herself with her parents, her kingdom, and the people of Corona. Mandy Moore and Zachary Levi will reprise their roles as Rapunzel and Flynn (aka Eugene), and the series will also feature the dulcet tones of Ashley Judd, Jeffrey Tambor, Sean Hayes, Richard Kind, and Broadway stars Eden Espinosa (Wicked), Jeremy Jordan (Newsies), and James Monroe Iglehart (Aladdin).

Tangled

Vote Now for the Next Disney Emoji

Wanna have a say in which Disney character next gets the emoji treatment in Disney Emoji Blitz? You’re in luck! With more Disney and Pixar emojis added to the mobile game every month, it’s time for you—the fans—to vote on which emoji should join their icon-ified cohorts!

Head on over to Oh My Disney to cast your vote, now through October 23. And don’t forget, Disney Emoji Blitz recently welcomed Beauty and the Beast emojis to the super-fun and super-popular game… just in time for the movie’s big 25th anniversary next month.

Marvel’s Spider-Man

Marvel’s Spider-Man to Debut on Disney XD in 2017

One of the biggest announcements to come out of last week’s New York Comic Con sent our spidey-senses into overdrive: Disney XD is bringing an all-new, original animated television series, Marvel’s Spider-Man, to the network in 2017! Produced by Marvel Television, the show will follow the story of an unsure but courageous teen who has to figure out how to be a superhero from the very beginning.

As to how this new show will jive with Marvel’s Ultimate Spider-Man… well, that Disney XD series will culminate in January 2017 with an exciting two-part finale arc titled “Graduation Day”—in which Spider-Man must stop Doctor Octopus and the Superior Sinister Six from destroying all of the heroes in New York City. Marvel’s Spider-Man will focus on the teenage Peter Parker, as he navigates this newfound “web” of abilities. Stay tuned for more spidey-scoop as it becomes available.

Moana

Catch a Peek at Moana This Month at Disney California Adventure Park!

We’ll soon be taking to the ocean with a brave young wayfinder—and her seafaring demigod pal—when Walt Disney Animation Studios’ latest, Moana, sails into theaters on November 23. But if you’re heading to the Disneyland Resort this fall, you can see a very special preview of scenes from the film at Disney California Adventure Park, beginning October 14. Look for it at the Bug’s Life Theater, where it will be presented in 3-D with very cool in-theater effects!

Directed by the legendary animation filmmaking team of Ron Clements and John Musker, Moana stars Auli‘i Cravalho and Dwayne Johnson—and features the musical talents of Lin-Manuel Miranda, Mark Mancina and Opetaia Foa‘i. Oceanic adventure, ahoy!

Toy Story Vans shoes

To Infinity and Beyond with New Toy Story-Inspired Footwear from Vans

OK, we’re so adding these to our Christmas wish list! Just last week, Vans—the über-cool sports footwear and apparel brand—debuted a brand-new collection celebrating the original characters of Disney•Pixar’s Toy Story… and they’re pretty dang cool!

Vans is showcasing Andy’s favorite toys across an extensive assortment of adult and kids footwear, as well as apparel and accessories, this holiday season. Look for Sheriff Woody, Buzz Lightyear, Slinky Dog, Rex, and even the cute three-eyed Aliens adorning everything from high-tops and Vans classic “Old Skool” shoes to slip-on styles, hats, and backpacks for the kids and toddlers in your clan.

The Disney•Pixar Toy Story collection from Vans is available now, both in retail stores and online at Vans.com.

Eric Stonestreet

The Toy Box: Kids and Inventors Come Face-to-Face on ABC

ABC just announced a cool new series, perfect for the whole family! The network is partnering with Mattel Creations, the content creation and distribution division of Mattel, Inc., to launch a first-of-its kind primetime television show that turns all the excitement, drama, and big-time creativity of the toy-invention process into a high-stakes contest.

Hosted by Eric Stonestreet (Modern Family), The Toy Box is the ultimate toy-competition series, providing talented designers with the chance of a lifetime: an opportunity to bring their toy concept to life with industry giant Mattel. The toys—and their inventors—will be put through a series of trials and tests before facing the ultimate judges: a panel of no-nonsense, toy-loving kids! Each episode will feature expert toy inventors from around the world as they compete for the opportunity to present their creations in the huge The Toy Box season finale. And what awaits the winner? The opportunity to bring their creation to market, thanks to Mattel! Yes, the winning design will be available for purchase at retail stores as the season finale airs, allowing fans of the show to play with the very product they just watched come to life.

Keep your toy-lovin’ eyes peeled for more info (including a premiere date) as it becomes available…