5 Favorite New Eats from the 2016 Epcot International Food & Wine Festival

By Rachel Bshero, Disney Parks Food & Beverage Marketing Communications Coordinator

For me, fall is the most magical time to visit Walt Disney World Resort. The season brings cooler temperatures, autumnal decorations, Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party, and, of course, the event foodies wait for all year—the Epcot International Food & Wine Festival.

Today I’m sharing my top five can’t-miss items with D23 Members—each one new to the 2016 Epcot International Food & Wine Festival.

Beer-braised Beef served with Smoked Gouda mashed Potatoes

Beer-braised Beef served with Smoked Gouda Mashed Potatoes, Belgium
It may have replaced my beloved Potato Waffle with Braised Beef from last year’s festival, but this new item has earned its place on the menu. The tender, beer-braised beef falls apart beautifully over the creamy mashed potatoes, complimented with smoked Gouda.

Chicken and Dumplings

Chicken and Dumplings, Farm Fresh
Looking for comfort food? This hearty stew features creamy chicken with fried potato dumplings, mushrooms, and spinach—fresh from the farm to your fork!

Loaded Greek "Nachos"

Loaded Greek “Nachos,” Greece
My mom is a vegetarian, so I’ve always loved trying new meatless dishes. I’m happy to say the Loaded Greek “Nachos” do not disappoint! Pita chips are topped with meatless sausage crumbles, lettuce, red onion, Kalamata olives, crumbled tofu, and vegan tzaztziki (made using cashews and almond milk). I think you’ll agree, this dish is a fun twist on a classic snack!

Ghiradelli Chocolate Raspberry Torte

Ghiradelli Chocolate Raspberry Torte, Chocolate Studio
The Chocolate Studio marketplace is new for 2016, and so is this richly decadent torte. Made using delicious Ghiradelli chocolate for the chocolate custard and ganache, and topped with fresh raspberries—no chocolate-lover will want to miss this treat!

Peanut Butter and White Chocolate Mousse with a Caramel Drizzle

Peanut Butter and White Chocolate Mousse with a Caramel Drizzle, The CHEW Collective
Inspired by ABC’s Emmy®-award winning show The Chew, each item at The CHEW Collective features masterful techniques and modern technology to create extraordinary flavors. This dish is no exception—layers of rich peanut butter mousse and white chocolate mousse are topped with candied peanuts. YUM.

Happy eating, D23 Members!

How Classic Disney Characters Led Paige O’Hara to Discover Her Own Disney Destiny

By William Keck

Most every little girl dreams of one day growing to be a Disney princess. But Paige O’Hara—the melodic voice behind Beauty and the Beast’s Belle, actually managed to make her Disney dream come true—and without an ounce of Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo!

How’d she do it? By drawing inspiration from classic Disney characters and working her ponytail off in grade school musical productions that led her all the way to the Broadway stage and beyond.

Cinderella and her Fairy Godmother

“I’ve always loved Disney,” says O’Hara, born Donna Paige Helmintoller. “When I saw Cinderella, I thought, ‘Wow, what an amazing job she has to be the voice of Cinderella.’ I never in my wildest dreams thought I’d ever do it.”

But it was another fairy-tale character who first inspired young Paige to gaze up toward the second star to the right. One of the many millions who had seen Broadway legend Mary Martin take flight as Peter Pan on a 1960 television special, O’Hara recalls being “totally mesmerized by her performance. I said, ‘I want to be like Mary,‘ and I didn‘t give up from that day forward!”

Mary Poppins art

That was followed by another flight of fancy at age 8, when O’Hara’s parents took her to see Mary Poppins on the big screen. Says O’Hara, “I think Julie Andrews was [to me], like Belle is to some little girls today.”

The Ft. Lauderdale native’s first lead role came at age 9. Appropriately, she was cast as Cinderella. “That was a big turning point for me,” she says. “It gave me a lot more confidence.”

By age 12, O’Hara’s powerful singing voice was beginning to reveal itself. Selecting one of Martin’s Peter Pan show-stoppers, O’Hara performed “I Gotta Crow” for a local talent competition. The grand prize: $75, “which as a little kid was a big deal,” remembers O’Hara, who was awarded an honorable mention. “Of course I just copied Mary; that’s all I knew. And that was the beginning of the bug for me.”

Enrolled in the performing arts program at Nova High School in Davie, Florida, young Paige began studying voice with a former opera singer from the Metropolitan Opera of New York and won more leading roles in the Fort Lauderdale Children’s Theatre. Finally, at age 17, O’Hara set her sights on Broadway and relocated to New York City. Each Saturday she would take in a Disney double feature at a revival house. “When I was very poor, it would be the one thing that would lift me up,” remembers O’Hara, who would also sneak in at intermission to the second act of Gypsy, starring her future teacup matchmaker, Angela Lansbury. “Eventually the ushers got to know me and they let me come in and see the whole play.”

Taking a cue from both Cinderella and Dick Van Dyke’s amiable Poppins chimney sweep, Bert, O’Hara supplemented the meager income she was earning as an actress by cleaning apartments and showcasing her artistic side on the city sidewalks. “I would paint at night, watercolors,” she says. “I would paint Disney characters as well as a lot of Judy Garland portraits, and I’d sell my little watercolors on the street. My favorite spot was 84th Street and Broadway. And that would pay my rent.”

One time, her protective older brother Mark came to visit and began crying the minute he entered her modest apartment.

“What are you crying about?” she asked Mark.

“You just… you’re living so poor and, you know, your jeans look horrible,” Mark told his kid sister.

“Excuse me,” O’Hara shot back. “I think my apartment is beautiful, and I love my jeans. And if you don’t like it, you can just leave right now.”

Cinderelly couldn’t have said it better herself.

Within a few years, O’Hara was cast in such Broadway productions as Show Boat with the legendary Donald O’Connor and as understudy to the lead in The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Among those who caught one of her performances as Drood was Disney animator Mark Henn— who would supervise the animation of Belle, drawing significant inspiration from O’Hara.

“For whatever reason I kept the program as a souvenir,” recalls Henn, a Broadway enthusiast who also caught Lansbury as Mrs. Lovett in Sweeney Todd. “When they said Paige O’Hara was going to be Belle, I said, ‘Boy, I know that name.’”

Paige O'Hara

Ultimately, it was a fish-tailed heroine who baited O’Hara in to audition for the role that would change her life forever. “I heard about the Beauty and the Beast auditions coming up,” O’Hara recalls. “And I had seen The Little Mermaid and absolutely like everyone else fell in love with it.” Dressed in what she calls her “lucky Belle blue” dress, O’Hara arrived for what would be the first of several auditions. One in the room who was already cheering for her: lyricist Howard Ashman, who’d seen her perform at Carnegie Hall. “I sang the Belle number (and) kept trying to alter my voice a little bit. They were all (saying), “We want your voice. Just your voice.’”

Disney Princess voices at Expo 2011

By the time her agent called to confirm she’d been chosen as Disney’s newest princess, O’Hara was already feeling like one, having received a marriage proposal the day before. This also happened to be her birthday week. “I was sort of on cloud nine,” says O’Hara (pictured above, left), who was named a Disney Legend at 2011’s D23 Expo alongside fellow Disney princesses Jodi Benson (pictured above, right) (Ariel), Lea Salonga (pictured above, left center) (singing voice of Jasmine and Mulan), Linda Larkin (Jasmine speaking voice) and Anika Noni Rose (pictured above, right center) (Tiana).

In the years following, O’Hara was given the opportunity to sing her Belle number at the Academy Awards in front of an audience that included Barbra Streisand, and perform with her sister princesses on Central Park’s Great Lawn for the 1995 premiere of Pocahontas, in New Orleans’ Super Dome to celebrate The Hunchback of Notre Dame’s 1996 arrival, at the 2005 opening of Hong Kong Disneyland and at the Hollywood Bowl. “Having the opportunity to play Belle was truly life changing,” she says with never-wavering gratitude.

Belle in the library

But for O’Hara, the command performances most dear to her heart are the anonymous ones that take place in hospital rooms as part of her ongoing volunteer work with children’s charities. “They find out you’re Belle, and they kinda look at you strangely,” says O’Hara. “But then I say, ‘Okay, close your eyes; listen to this.’ And they’ll close their little eyes and I’ll say, ‘Gaston, you are positively primeval.’ Their eyes pop up and all of a sudden there’s no age anymore. It’s timeless and I’m Belle and it’s wonderful.”

Celebrate These Disney Grandparents—and Yours—on National Grandparents Day

By Beth Deitchman

There’s a Chinese proverb that goes, “To forget one’s ancestors is to be a brook without a source, a tree without a root.” While this is important to keep in mind every day, this Sunday, you might want to spend a little extra time showing your grandparents how much you appreciate them in honor of National Grandparents Day.

Truly, what’s not to love about grandparents? They’re older (or, as we prefer to think, “younger at heart”), wiser, and aren’t generally opposed to spoiling us at least a little bit. Disney grandparents are a pretty impressive bunch, always there to offer love, support, and counsel to our favorite characters. We’ve rounded up a few especially amazing ancestors from Disney films and TV series. Take a gander and see if any of them remind you of your own great grandparents (or great-grandparents, while you’re at it!).

Milan's Grandmother Fa

Grandmother Fa (Mulan)

Grandmother Fa has earned the right to say exactly what’s on her mind, whether she’s expressing her admiration for Li Shang’s handsome good looks or complaining about the Matchmaker’s bad attitude. But family comes first for Mulan’s grandma, who is always concerned for their safety and who doesn’t hesitate to remember her own ancestors and pray to them for her family’s good fortune.

Grandpa Clyde and Grandma Betty Joe (Phineas and Ferb)

Phineas and Candace’s grandparents’ lake house is so much fun to visit in the summer that Phineas refers to the getaway as “Camp P & F.” And both Clyde and Betty Joe are an inspiration in how to stay young at heart: Not only are Phineas and Ferb’s friends invited to the lake house in a “more the merrier” approach to family time, but Betty Joe is still ready to revisit her roller derby days on a homemade rink while Clyde provides color commentary—when he’s not busy regaling the grandkids with stories about Bigfoot.

Gramma Tala from Moana

Gramma Tala (Moana)

We’ll meet Gramma Tala in Walt Disney Animation Studios’ Moana when it opens in theaters on November 23, but we already know that she and her granddaughter share a special connection to the ocean. Gramma Tala is Moana’s best friend and confidante, a warm and loving presence in the young girl’s life.

Elena of Avalor's Grandparents

Francisco and Luisa (Elena of Avalor)

Being a teen is challenging, but even more difficult when you’re learning how to rule a kingdom. It’s no wonder Elena’s Grand Council is made up of people she knows she can rely upon, with her grandparents, Francisco and Luisa, her most trusted advisors. Traditional and protective, Francisco can’t help but be concerned at times about whether the young princess is ready to rule, but he and his optimistic wife, Luisa, will stand by her and share the wisdom of their experience while she is learning to lead.

Meet the Robinsons Grandparents

Bud Robinson and Lucille Krunklehorn (Meet the Robinsons)

Bud and Lucille, Wilbur’s grandparents in Meet the Robinsons, share a love of science and invention with each other and with the members of their family. Grandpa Bud may wear his clothes backward and, yes, he has a hard time keeping track of his teeth, but he’s eccentric in the best possible way. Lucille, whose motto is “Keep moving forward,” is both an accomplished athlete and a brilliant inventor whose “caffeine patch” is a product truly ahead of its time.

Abuelita (Gravity Falls)

Soos’ grandma, Abuelita, keeps a tidy house, to be sure. Her hobbies seem to include vacuuming, vacuuming, and more vacuuming… but don’t forget, when you’re a kid it’s super fun to push a vacuum around the house. Abuelita is the grandma who’ll let you “help” with household chores, even if you end up making more of a mess in the process. Like any good grandmother, Abuelita overlooks all of Soos’ mistakes and shortcomings and wants only for him to be happy.

Grandmother Willow

Grandmother Willow (Pocahontas)

The wise matriarch—whose spirit lives on in the form of a willow tree—is always there for Pocahontas, prepared to offer sagely advice and help her granddaughter find her own path; and though she may have stood her ground for quite some time, she’s the first to admit that there’s “still snap in her old vines.” When it comes to “knowing your roots,” there may be no better illustration of that concept—literally and figuratively—than Pocahontas’ relationship with Grandmother Willow.

Enchanting Concept Art from Beauty and the Beast

By D23 Team

Without doubt, Beauty and the Beast is one of the most majestic movies in the Disney animated film canon. In honor of the film’s 25th anniversary, we asked our friends at the Animation Research Library to share some of the magnificent story sketches, concept art, and drawings that served as inspiration for the visual look of this unforgettable masterpiece. Each of these works of art is “ever a surprise” and a startling reminder of the artistic imagination, talent, and passion at the heart of all Disney animated films. Enjoy!

5 Must-Haves for Marvel Fans

By Nicole Nalty

After a summer of fun, sometimes you need something super to get you through the day. Whether you’re heading back to school or just feel like collecting something marvelous, here are just a few Disney Store must-haves for any Marvel fan. (Don’t forget your D23 Discount!)

Disney Store Marvel merchandise

Marvel MXYZ Sweatshirt for Women
Some of our favorite Avengers assemble in this precious pullover.

Disney Store Marvel merchandise

Terrific Tees
No need for a super suit when you have a super tee! We love these Black Panther– and Captain America-inspired tees; Iron Man and Captain America fans will love this two-sided tee.

Disney Store Marvel merchandise

Marvel Comics Duffel Bag
Get ready for your next adventure with this epic duffel featuring Marvel Comics…

Disney Store Marvel merchandise

Marvel Heroes Backpack
Or head back to school in super style.

Disney Store Marvel merchandise

Marvel’s Avengers Mini “Tsum Tsum” Plush Collection—Series 2
Heroes don’t get much cuter than this!

Celebrate Marvel’s Super Hero Spectacular with a visit to your local retailer, Disney Store, or DisneyStore.com and check out @StyledByMarvel on Instagram for more super style.

9 Life Lessons from Mr. Feeny and Mr. Matthews

By Jonathan McMullen

We all have memories of the sage advice that we were imparted to help us get through the adventure that is life, and one of the first things that comes to mind for us are the lessons from Boy Meets World’s legendary teacher, Mr. Feeny. It seemed almost every episode, Mr Feeny had a profound lesson to help Cory, Topanga, Eric, and Shawn navigate life’s trials. These days—on Disney Channel’s Girl Meets World—Cory Matthews has become a teacher, guiding students with lessons of his own. So we gathered some of our favorite life lessons from Mr. Feeny and Mr. Matthews.

Mr. Feeny and Cory Matthews - Boy Meets World

Mr. Feeny:

  • “Friendship is a real gift. It’s given with no expectations, and no gratitude is needed between real friends.”
  • “If you let people’s perception of you dictate your behavior, you will never grow as a person.”
  • “To me, a real hero is someone who does the right thing when the right thing is not the easy thing to do.”
  • “Sometimes a sure thing is not the best thing.”
  • “Believe in yourselves. Dream. Try. Do good.”

Riley and Cory Matthews - Girl Meets World

Mr. Matthews:

  • “The friends we choose can have the most profound influence on our entire lives, one way or the other.”
  • “People change people. No matter what I teach you in here, learning from the people you care about is more important than the words on any page.”
  • “History shows us bad things happen when you don’t know who you are.”
  • “You know what the funny thing is about history, Miss Evans? It repeats. I mean ‘do good’. That will always be my lesson plan.”

Beauty and the Beast Gets the Emoji Treatment—Plus More in News Briefs

By Courtney Potter

See Belle, Gaston, and the Beast in New As Told By Emoji

Here at D23, we’ve just begun our huge, amazing, full of delicious “grey stuff” Fanniversary, themed after Beauty and the Beast’s 25th jubilee… and they’re celebrating Belle and the Beast’s big 2-5 over at Disney Interactive as well! Case in point: the brand-new Beauty and the Beast As Told By Emoji short! “Be our guest” and take a gander, above. (We especially like the use of the enchanted rose as the phone’s battery-life indicator. Super clever!)

All month long, D23 will be honoring Disney’s groundbreaking 1991 animated classic, so keep a keen eye on our Fanniversary page for more fun and frolic… and don’t forget to check out the new 25th-anniversary edition of Beauty and the Beast from the Walt Disney Signature Collection—available now on Digital HD and Disney Movies Anywhere, and Blu-ray® on September 20!

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
September 10
Be Our Guest as Fanniversary Celebrates Beauty and the Beast Across the Country
September 17
Be Our Guest as Fanniversary Celebrates Beauty and the Beast Across the Country
September 23
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Bill Sullivan
September 24
D23 Presents Bedknobs and Broomsticks: 45 Bewitching Years (Florida)
October 5
D23’s Sip & Scream
October 5
D23 Behind-the-Scenes Experience: A Midnight Soirée at the Tower of Terror
October 8
D23’s Age of Believing: 45 Years of Bedknobs and Broomsticks (California)
November 19–20
D23 Destination D: Amazing Adventures
July 14-16, 2017
D23 Expo 2017
Studios
September 23, 2016
Queen of Katwe opens in theaters
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
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
September 18
68th Emmy® Awards broadcast on ABC at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT
October 3
Milo Murphy’s Law premieres on Disney XD at 8 p.m. EDT

“Go Rogue” with the Reveal of New Star Wars Toy Line

Star Wars superfans recently united to help reveal a slew of new toys based on the highly anticipated film Rogue One: A Star Wars Story—and they did it in just about the coolest way possible… with the first of a series of fan-made animated shorts, launching on the Star Wars YouTube channel! Check out the inaugural installment, above; new shorts will roll out through September. The stories follow the adventures of Rogue One toys from Hasbro, LEGO, FUNKO, JAKKS Pacific, Mattel, and Disney Store as they try to track down the building instructions to the LEGO Star Wars Death Star set, which have been misplaced by the Empire. Fans can now pre-order a handful of select items seen in the “Rogue Stories” at mass retailers, Disney Store locations, and disneystore.com; the full range of new Rogue One and Star Wars products will be available globally starting on September 30.

As part of a competition in collaboration with creative network Tongal, a (very lucky) team was assembled to write, direct, and produce these original, fan-made stop-motion shorts starring toys from the new line… and it’s all to kick off a global contest that asks fans to share their own “Rogue Stories.” The contest, which also begins September 30, invites fans to share short stories or skits set “in a galaxy far, far away”; winning entries from around the world will be chosen by a panel that includes Rogue One: A Star Wars Story director Gareth Edwards.

For more info, lightspeed to StarWars.com/GoRogue—and kids ages 8 through 12, here in the States (and in parts of Canada), can get in on the action as well by visiting Disney.com/MyRogueStory. Winners will be invited to Lucasfilm in San Francisco to attend a screening of Rogue One, and see their short story on the big screen. How cool is that?! Ready to enter, are you?

MECH-X4

Disney XD’s MECH-X4 Gets Second Season—Before its Big Debut!

Looking forward to Disney XD’s cool new live-action sci-fi adventure series, MECH-X4? We are too! And we’ve got some great news: Well before its premiere episode (okay, actually two episodes simulcast on Disney XD and Disney Channel on Saturday, November 12, at 8 p.m. ET), the show has already been picked up for a second season! Plus, beginning Friday, October 28, a preview episode will debut on several online platforms, including the Disney XD App, Disney XD VOD, and the Disney XD YouTube Channel. Get a head start on all the fun!

MECH-X4 follows Ryan Walker, a freshman at Bay City High, as he discovers he’s a “technopath” with the extraordinary ability to control technology with his mind. His superpower mysteriously awakens a 150-foot robot known as MECH-X4, over which Ryan has full control… When another monster suddenly begins to attack Bay City High, Ryan recruits his two best friends and older brother to help; the team of unlikely heroes must quickly learn to work together under dire circumstances in order to save their school, and ultimately the world, from mass destruction.

New Queen of Katwe Featurette: “Never Surrender”

Disney’s Queen of Katwe opens in theaters on September 30… thankfully, we’ve recently been privy to several intriguing featurettes to help tide us over. The latest, “Never Surrender” (above), looks at how one young girl’s story can inspire others to greatness.

Directed by Mira Nair (Monsoon Wedding) and based on the book by Tim Crothers, Queen of Katwe the colorful true story of a girl from rural Uganda whose world rapidly changes when she is introduced to the game of chess—and, as a result of the support she receives from her family and community, is instilled with the confidence and determination she needs to pursue her dream of becoming an international chess champion. The film stars Lupita Nyong’o, David Oyelowo, and newcomer Madina Nalwanga.

Walt Disney Studios has also partnered with Grammy®-winning recording artist Alicia Keys on a song from the film. “Back to Life,” written by Keys, Carlo Montagnese and Billy Walsh and produced by Illangelo and Keys, appears in the film and on the motion picture soundtrack from Walt Disney Records. Take a look and a listen in the video below, which provides a special first look at the song and how the film’s powerful story inspired Alicia Keys.

Hocus Pocus Apparel

Hocus Pocus Apparel Returns, Just in Time for Halloween!

Last year, Disney Parks Online Store introduced some spooktacular T-shirts that resembled the outfits worn by the hilarious Sanderson Sisters in Disney’s 1993 film Hocus Pocus… and they proved so popular, they’re bringing them back—but only for a short time!

Disney Design Group artist Richard Terpstra used high-resolution images of the actual dresses from the live-action film to design the T-shirts—and they’re releasing those shirts again, for guests who may have missed them the first time around. Plus, for the first time, fans can procure a costume T-shirt inspired by the character William “Billy” Butcherson, as well as a new graphic T-shirt and hooded sweatshirt with artwork (created by Disney Design Group artist Cortney Williams) featuring dialogue and other iconic elements from the film.

So get ’em while the getting is good: These limited-release items will be offered only until September 11, and only on DisneyStore.com/ParkEvents. But if you’re heading to Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party at Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World, look for some additional Sanderson-inspired items. Truly an embarrassment of “spell-rific” riches!

How to Relax—Disney-Style

By Nicole Nalty

Here at D23, we believe Labor Day is an underrated holiday: a guaranteed three-day weekend, plus a day dedicated to rest and relaxation? Yes, please! If you’re a Disney fan who is always on the go (just look at your pedometer after a day at the parks!), here are a few ways to chill out this holiday, straight from some of our coolest characters. And make sure to check out the Disney Gif app, for Apple and Android, for more moments from your  favorite Disney films.

After a long day, it’s tough to unwind.

Cinderella - zzz

So take a stretch break…

101 Dalmatians - zzz

And get ready for some serious R&R.

Winnie the Pooh - zzz

You could watch a movie…

WALL-E gets a new hat

Or listen to some of your favorite music.

The Aristocats

You could beat your high score…

Big Hero 6 - zzz

Or just enjoy the outdoors.

Olaf - Relax

Take a swim…

Olaf - swim

Or treat yourself to a sensational snack.

Remy - eat grapes

Whatever you do, just don’t think about going back to work or school tomorrow…

Winnie the Pooh

Happy Labor Day!

5 Amazing Eats from Tokyo DisneySea

By Nicole Nalty

During a busy day at a Disney park, sometimes the main attraction is meal time. We love trying all of the delicious offerings at Disney parks and resorts around the world: From beignets in New Orleans Square to sushi in Epcot at the Japan Pavilion, food and beverage at Disney parks are just another avenue of immersion into the already amazing atmospheres. Our friends at Tokyo DisneySea are celebrating their 15th anniversary today, so to celebrate, we’d thought we’d highlight some of their most interesting eats!

Goofy green steam buns

Gawrsh, we’d love to have a taste of these Goofy green steam buns!

Chip and Dale dessert

Does this dessert duo remind you of another dynamic (and rather nutty) duo?

purple sandwich

Where else can you get a sandwich with purple bread?

Duffy panna cotta

We’re of the opinion that Mickey-shaped food just tastes better, and we’re sure this applies to our pal Duffy in this scrumptious strawberry panna cotta, too.

Duffy dessert

Speaking of Duffy, he’s the perfect sweet to garnish this tasty treat!

Have you tried any of these Tokyo treats? Let us know on Facebook and Twitter!

Beauty and the Beast: Journey to a Classic

By Jim Fanning

A beastly leading man, a bookworm princess, a brittle brood of supporting characters in a story confined to a dark castle. These unlikely elements make up one of the most well-known yet unlikely fairy tales ever—and only the magic of Disney animation could bring it to the screen with such unforgettable enchantment. As Beauty and the Beast (1991) celebrates its 25th anniversary, a look back at its development reveals an epic odyssey of creative discovery as twisting and turning as Belle’s journey through the forest to the Beast’s castle.

Ever Just the Same: Origins
Literary scholars trace the Beauty and the Beast legend back to ancient folklore of every culture, with the theme of a beastly groom and human bride almost as prevalent as the Cinderella story. “It’s perhaps one of the last of the red-hot fairy tales,” says producer Don Hahn. “It existed in the verbal culture of storytelling long before it was ever written down.” Giovanni Straparola first recorded the Beauty and the Beast story in writing in 1550. Later versions, including two by Madam Le Prince De Beaumont and Madame Gabrielle de Villenuve, come from the French courts of the 1700s. Beaumont’s version was published in France in 1756 and in England in 1783, and it is this retelling of the tale that became the most famous version. In the 1940s, Walt Disney gave serious consideration creating an animated feature inspired by this famous story. “Probably before Cinderella (1950), Walt asked us to read Beauty and the Beast and come up with some ideas for it,” legendary animator Ollie Johnston once recalled. “The story guys may have done some work on it, but I never heard anymore about it.” Years later, Walt confided to another top animator, Frank Thomas, that Beauty and the Beast was one of the stories he most longed to transform into an animated feature. But it never happened, apparently because of the restrictive nature of the tale. “This was a very challenging story to tell,’’

Beast upset at Belle

Don explains. “In the original fairy tale, Beauty’s father goes to the castle and picks a rose. The Beast is enraged, throws him in a dungeon but agrees to let him go if he sends his daughter back in his place. She very passively follows her father’s instructions, and the rest of the story is essentially about two people having dinner together every night with the Beast repeatedly asking her to marry him.”

Once Upon a Time, in a Faraway Land:  The Fairy Tale Moves Forward
The next effort to adapt this daunting tale came decades after Walt when Disney story artists Pete Young, Vance Gerry, and Steve Hulett created a 1983 treatment wherein Belle is aided by forest animals instead of animated objects. (Cogsworth would undoubtedly be mortified at the very idea.) In 1986, another story team took a crack at adapting the crackling good fairy tale, this time incorporating some elements from the famed 1946 live-action film directed by Jean Cocteau.  In 1988, animation screenwriter Jim Cox prepared two treatments, setting the story in rural France and giving greater emphasis to the castle’s animate but silent objects. Two scripts followed, one by Jim and the other by Gen LeRoy, featuring an overly complicated plot with such characters as three suitors and two sisters for Belle (Maurice would be more befuddled than ever if he had to deal with all that).

Belle reads with Beast

When Linda Woolverton was assigned as screenwriter, she began by reading—and then disregarding—the various versions of the original fairy tale. “We felt we needed to energize the story by creating more dramatic scenarios,” notes Don Hahn, “and making our heroine move things forward by valiantly going to the castle on her own to fight for her father’s release.” “Belle is a strong, courageous woman,” Linda once said of Disney’s version of the Beauty. “She sacrifices herself for her father. There are great themes of passionate love in the story, almost operatic themes.”

Song as Old as Rhyme: The Music and the Story
To create an animated fairy tale so fantastical that book-loving Belle herself would be entranced by it—full of “far off places, daring swordfights, magic spells, a prince in disguise”—a special approach was needed. So it was that in mid-1989, producer Don Hahn and a key group of artists journeyed to London for 10 weeks of development. The result of the London session, under the guidance of husband-and-wife animation team Richard and Jill Purdham, was a serious drama, conveyed through majestic art by production consultant-visual development artist Hans Bacher—and with no songs and precious little humor. It was decided to start from scratch, and first-time feature directors Kirk Wise and Gary Trousdale were recruited. By December 1989, with The Little Mermaid a smash in theaters, the decision was made to transform the burgeoning feature into a musical.

Lumiere, Mrs. Potts, and Cogsworth look out a window

Linda Woolverton flew to Cold Spring, New York, to work with Mermaid lyricist/producer Howard Ashman on the placement of songs in a new story structure. “Before Howard came onto the project, the enchanted objects were not really leading characters,” revealed Linda. “They just sort of floated around magically and didn’t speak at all. Howard really needed the objects for the music and his greatest contribution was in bringing them in, giving them personalities and making them an important part of the story.” Both Howard and his creative partner, composer Alan Menken, thought of each song as a chapter in the story. Their sophisticated use of song as story led to one of the most effective uses of musical storytelling in the film.

Beast and Belle in the library

“The biggest issue to me was how the audience was going to really believe that Belle falls in love with the Beast,” said Beast’s supervising animator Glen Keane. “We didn’t have that moment until we were about six months from being done. Howard Ashman wrote a song, ‘Something There.’  It was this moment where the Beast actually does something very unselfish and is sensitive to what Belle loves, which is reading. He gives her a library as a gift. As soon as that happened, suddenly Belle could really fall for the guy and the whole movie turned on that moment.”

As with all the great Disney animated classics, powerful storywork, artful songs and music, and brilliant personality animation combined to make Beauty and the Beast an unforgettable cinematic narrative that for many people has become the version of the famous tale. “Doing your own version of Beauty and the Beast is as much a tradition as is the story itself,” Don Hahn explains. “Part of the fun is that each generation and culture adapts this story to be its own. The themes—you can’t judge a book by its cover, and beauty is only skin deep—are as relevant today as ever.”

Read more about the creation of this classic in the Fall 2016 issue of Disney twenty-three.