Disney Channel to Begin Casting High School Musical 4

More than 10 years after High School Musical became a global phenomenon, Disney Channel is getting ready to return to East High one more time with the announcement of High School Musical 4.

A nationwide casting search begins today for the planned Disney Channel Original Movie that will continue the story of the global sensation High School Musical—and introduce new East High Wildcats and their cross-town school rivals, the West High Knights.

Gary Marsh, president and chief creative officer, Disney Channels Worldwide, said, “High School Musical is part of Disney Channel’s DNA. It embodies all that we stand for. As a way of continuing to embrace that heritage, we’re excited to announce ‘the start of something new’—as we launch a search for a new class of East High Wildcats to star in a fourth installment of the High School Musical franchise.”

DGA Award nominee Jeffrey Hornaday (Disney Channel’s Teen Beach Movie, Teen Beach 2) is attached to direct and choreograph the movie.

Dan Berendsen (creator/executive producer of Freeform’s Baby Daddy, writer of Disney’s Hannah Montana: The Movie, Disney Channel’s Teen Beach 2 and Wizards of Waverly Place The Movie) and Peter Barsocchini (writer of all three High School Musical movies) are the screenwriters of High School Musical 4. Bill Borden and Barry Rosenbush return as the executive producers.

Directed and choreographed by Kenny Ortega (also of Disney Channel’s Descendants) High School Musical is remembered fondly by a generation of kids and families and renowned for inspiring viewers to explore and participate in music, dance and theater. The now iconic Disney Channel Original Movie premiered January 20, 2006, delivering 7.7 million Total Viewers in the U.S.—at the time, the highest ratings for any telecast ever on Disney Channel. It broke new ground as the first-ever TV movie soundtrack to reach No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200 chart and went on to become the No. 1 album of 2006 as well as the No. 1 soundtrack and No. 1 Kids album of that year.

Its critically acclaimed sequel, High School Musical 2, ranks as the No. 1 cable TV movie of all time (18.6 million viewers for its August 17, 2007 premiere). The High School Musical 2 soundtrack is triple Platinum and its DVD release was the top-selling TV property on DVD for 2007. Walt Disney Pictures debuted High School Musical 3: Senior Year in October 2008. Its premiere weekend box office sales marked the highest debut ever for a musical and for a live-action G-rated film. It grossed more than $250 million at the worldwide box office.

High School Musical received two Emmy® Awards, the Television Critics Association Award, an Imagen Award (recognizing the positive portrayal of Latinos in entertainment media), a Billboard Music Award for Soundtrack of the Year, an American Music Award and a Producer’s Guild of America Award. The movies also delivered licensed amateur and professional touring stage productions, a bestselling junior novel, a popular consumer products franchise at mass retailers, a themed show at Disneyland Parks and Resorts in Anaheim, Orlando, and Paris and a sold-out 42-date arena concert tour in North America and Latin America.

Merida Actress Amy Manson Talks About Brave Role on Once Upon a Time

A veteran of British TV and film, Scottish actress Amy Manson took a brave new step, so to speak, into American television this season when she was cast in the recurring role of Merida in the hit ABC adventure fantasy series Once Upon a Time. Currently enjoying a mid-season break after appearing in six episodes last fall, Manson, 30, recently talked with entertainment journalist Tim Lammers for D23.com. She discussed the origins of Merida—who, of course, debuted in the 2012 Disney/Pixar Best Animated Feature Oscar® winner, Brave—her work on Once Upon a Time, and when she’ll appear on the show next after Season 5 resumes March 6.

Tim Lammers: During the mid-season break, have you had time to step back and let everything sink in about just how amazing this opportunity has been?

Amy Manson: Maybe when I went home for Christmas to Scotland. It’s one thing to be in your homeland as opposed to trying to re-create a place as your homeland, when you only have yourself, your thoughts, and your memories when you’re filming. Having time with my family in Scotland, and especially with my father—given the events of Merida’s storyline in the show—made me feel grateful. Being home really gave me my first chance to think of everything.

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TL: This almost goes without saying, but you must be a big fan of the Disney/Pixar version of Merida in Brave.

AM: I really am! She’s really everything, right up to that Afro and wild, unruly curls. Had that film come out when I was a young girl, it would have had a huge effect on me. She only becomes brave, as the title says, over the fear of losing something in her life and that’s her mother. Merida pulls out all the stops and lets go of her ego, and becomes a determined young lady, and wants to put everything right between her mother and her. I love Pixar in general, anyway, and I love the tender moments when Merida is trying to teach her mom how to catch fish in the river scene.

TL: Merida’s appearance in Once Upon a Time is groundbreaking, of course, because she’s not only the first Pixar character to be named a Disney Princess, but the first Pixar character to be realized in live- action form. That must be incredibly satisfying and humbling to have the opportunity to play her.

AM: Yes it is. Merida’s just put a big spin on the whole archetypal Disney Princess. I think it’s because she just takes matters into her own hands. It’s not that she doesn’t listen, it’s just because she’s quite capable and she fights for what she believes in, mentally and physically, because that’s who she is and grown up seeing. She’s grown up with her father, who made her who she is, which is a capable young lady. Her upbringing is what makes her unique. She wears her heart on her sleeve, because she’s from Scotland, where you do it yourself and don’t need help from anyone else. There’s a mantra we have of ‘being borne of the rugged land’ and you just have to get on with things. I guess her character sticks out, too, in Once Upon a Time because it’s not a fantasy land and it’s not modern day. It’s just a whole, other unique land.

TL: Growing up in Scotland, were the Disney Princesses accessible to you as they are to viewers in the U.S.?

AM: Disney movies certainly were, but I watched things like Bambi. I learned princess and fantasy types of stories from where I grew up. I’m from Aberdeenshire, which is also known as Scotland’s castle country. I spent a lot of holidays with my family touring the castles, stately homes, ruins, and landscapes. Aberdeen has more castles per acre than anywhere else in the UK, so I used my time to explore them since they were on my doorstep and so accessible. You could get lost in the storytelling and ghost stories and go to nightly events at castles and festivals during the day. That’s where I was able to let my mind loose and dream of other worlds and places.

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TL: When you were cast as Merida for Once Upon a Time, did the expectations of the huge fan base of Merida and Brave weigh heavy on your mind?

AM: It really did, mostly on the first day filming the first scene for the first episode that Jennifer Morrison (The Dark Swan) and I are in. I kept mixing up my lines, but I was told ‘Oh, no, it’s fine! It’s fine!’ It took me about five takes to get things right before I found some momentum. To help, I found myself coming back to such thoughts as, ‘Why am I enjoying this?’ It’s because I love doing the research, being on set and using the language—that’s where I get my kick. What you say determines who you are, especially with Merida. Doing these things helped ease me into playing her.

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TL: There are so many things to love about Merida: her spunk, compassion, and skill with the bow and arrow. What character attribute or attributes do you admire most about her?

AM: I love her honesty and her attitude about doing the right thing. She’s just an old soul. Merida’s definitely borne of the land and I just wanted to capture the heart of the Scottish population with her, and that always starts with the land—which makes you who you are. It’s the only thing we can trust in life, since we’re all moving, evolving, and becoming the people that we are. The stability we have is the land, and the land for me is Scotland. She has a ‘never give up’ attitude and she knows there is always somebody else to help. It’s not about her, it’s about helping others. That’s what I love the most about playing her. She’s taught me a heck of a lot in the past year.

TL: I can’t help but think the people of Scotland are very proud of you and your portrayal of Merida.

AM: I really hope so. It’s one of those things, where you first go off in search of a dream and someone gives you an opportunity to act, and after that, you want to go off to America. Now that I’m here, it’s been an absolute blessing to play a Scotswoman for my first role in America. I think that’s how everybody feels back home as well, that I’m able to play a Scot and not have to condense anything, because we’re animated creatures [laughs]. I’m not playing The Dark Swan. I’m not muddled in my head. She has one direction and one goal, to save her brothers, and then she’s on to the next goal.

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TL: How proficient were you with the bow and arrow before the series?

AM: I was awful. I think I used the bow upside down the first time I picked it up—I’m not sure what I did [laughs]. But once I started to learn, I thoroughly enjoyed it. I asked for a few days of training before we started filming to learn with an archer. It was about practice and repetition. It was nice to have him on set just to say things like, ‘Your elbow’s too high’ or since you can’t aim your live bow at a cast or crew member, change out the string for a loose one so if I accidentally did pull it, the arrow would just drop to the ground.

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TL: If there’s a bow and arrow contest between Merida and Katniss Everdeen from The Hunger Games. Merida wins every time, right?

AM: (Laughter) Yes! I think those two would be best friends in the real world. But yes, I think Merida wins!

TL: Of course, the mid-season premiere of Once Upon a Time is just around the corner. How soon will we see Merida again?

AM: Funny enough, I just found out today that Merida will return for the season finale. Maybe it will be about planting the seeds for next season. You’re the first person to know! I start shooting in early March.

Make It A Disney Leap Day

Happy Leap Year! We get one extra day, every four years, to keep our calendar in alignment with the Earth’s revolutions around the Sun. (Without it, we’d lose almost six hours every year. Crazy, right?) As February 29 rolls around, we wonder just what to do with those extra 24 hours… and that sparked a thought: There’s got to be a way to fill this year’s “bonus time” with a bit of Disney fun! Check out our ideas for a Disney Leap Day—and let us know your ideas on Facebook and Twitter.

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Watch The Good Dinosaur

This adorable Disney•Pixar animated film—now available on Blu-Ray® and DVD—is the perfect way to while away the afternoon of your Leap Day… Bonus points if you, like Arlo, have a good, true friend to watch it with.

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Sing a “Happy Working Song” While Doing Chores

Now hear us out: Using your extra day to clean your house might not sound so fun. But if you add in a dash of music—like Giselle in 2007’s Enchanted—the work goes by in a snap! (We’d steer clear of recruiting any rats to help tidy up.)

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Spend Some Time Doodling—Like Walt

Every so often, we begin to sketch or “doodle” on a napkin or a scrap of paper… it’s a relaxing, almost meditative exercise, and you don’t have to be an “artist” to create something fun!

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Make a Disney Recipe

You have 24 extra hours—so why not make a delicious Disney dish? This recipe for New Orleans-style chicken gumbo will have you feeling like Tiana in The Princess and the Frog.

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Have a Disney Movie Marathon

This one’s a no-brainer: There are so many Disney (and Disney•Pixar, and Marvel, and Lucasfilm…) films available to enjoy—online at Disney Movies Anywhere or on Blu-ray®/DVD—that you could fill all 24 of your extra hours! We dare ya…

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“7 a.m., usual lineup…”

Truth be told, you might be tempted to spend your day as you normally do—like Rapunzel in 2010’s Tangled. But resist that “same ol’ thing” urge and fill your day with things you might not normally have time to enjoy.

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Walk Around a Disney Park

Free day? Why not take a stroll through a Disney Park? We’ve already measured some “magical miles” at several Disney Parks and Resorts around the world; add to those daily 10,000 steps while reveling in some Disney magic!

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Create a Disney Craft

Keep busy during your bonus day with some Disney-related craft projects—like this Princess Paper Craft that leaves you with adorable paper dolls of Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella, and Snow White.

Learn to Draw a Disney Character

Who better to teach you how to draw a Disney animated character than one of Disney’s very own animators? Let Byron Howard guide you through some Leap Day drawing lessons! Perfect for the fledgling Walt Disneys in your life…

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Plan a 2016 Disney Vacation

The year is still young—why not spend some time during your extra day by planning a sure-to-be-amazing Disney trip? There is so much to see and do, you might find you’ve spent a whole afternoon drafting up an itinerary. Start your research at DisneyParks.com or AdventuresByDisney.com.

Happy Leap Day from D23!

Your Votes Are In. The Award Goes To…

With the Academy Awards® just a few days away, we asked D23 fans on Facebook and Twitter to pick their Disney favorites from our Oscar® ballot and the results are in.

The winners are…

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Best Mode of Travel:
Car—The Absent-Minded Professor
Black Pearl—Pirates of the Caribbean
WINNER—Balloons—Up
Umbrella—Mary Poppins

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Best Character in a Disney Short:
WINNER—Winston—Feast
Sanjay—Sanjay’s Super Team
Geri—Geri’s Game
Susie—Susie, the Little Blue Coupe

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Best Food in a Disney Movie:
Grey Stuff—Beauty and the Beast
Tony’s Spaghetti—Lady and the Tramp
WINNER—Ratatouille—Ratatouille
Tiana’s Gumbo—The Princess and the Frog

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Best Technical Excellence:
Light cycles—Tron
WINNER—BB-8—Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Wall•E—Wall•E
Jarvis—Iron Man

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Best Supporting Character:
Fairy Godmother—Cinderella
WINNER—Philoctetes (Phil)—Hercules
Mama Odie—The Princess and the Frog
Bagheera—The Jungle Book

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Best Act of Magic:
Three Fairies enchant Prince Phillip’s sword to defeat Maleficent—Sleeping Beauty
Blue Fairy turns Pinocchio from a puppet to a real boy—Pinocchio
Eglantine Price uses Substitutiary Locomotion—Bedknobs and Broomsticks
WINNER—Fairy Godmother creates Cinderella’s carriage—Cinderella

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Best Song by a Disney Villain:
Friends on the Other Side—Dr. Facilier
Hellfire—Frollo
Be Prepared—Scar
WINNER—Poor Unfortunate Souls—Ursula

Catch the Oscars® this Sunday, February 28, at 8:30 p.m. ET/5:30 p.m. PT on ABC! Missed out on voting? Make sure to follow us on Facebook and Twitter for more Disney fun!

Sanjay’s Super Team‘s Filmmakers Ready to Descend upon Oscars®

The spotlight won't only be shining on Pixar director Pete Docter and his Best Animated Feature nominee Inside Out at the 88th Academy Awards® Sunday night on ABC. Two other Pixar veterans—director Sanjay Patel and producer Nicole Paradis Grindle—will also be at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, representing the animation studio as their film Sanjay's Super Team vies for the Oscar® for Best Animated Short.

Based on Patel's real-life experiences, the seven-minute film follows young Sanjay, an Indian-American boy whose love of comic books, super hero cartoons, and action figures distracts him from actively participating in his father's daily meditation rituals. But when Sanjay daydreams of a lively battle between three Hindu deities-turned-super heroes and a frightening monster during a prayer session, the boy begins to look at his father's teachings from a different perspective.

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Sanjay's Super Team is featured on The Good Dinosaur Blu-ray and DVD, new this week from Walt Disney Home Entertainment, and online at DisneyMoviesAnywhere.com. Movie journalist Tim Lammers talked with Patel and Paradis Grindle about the film and its Oscar nomination for D23.com.

Tim Lammers: Has the idea of being nominated for an Oscar sunk in for either one of you yet?

Sanjay Patel: The weight of it didn't hit me initially, but bit by bit, as so many people have been excited about the film being nominated, it's really added up to how exciting the ceremonies will be. It's pretty special.

Nicole Paradis Grindle: It does feel unreal. It's like I've been having an out-of-body experience during many of the events surrounding the Oscars.

TL: It seems that a lot of projects made at Pixar turn to Oscar gold. Is it a competitive environment there? And not necessarily in a head-to-head, film-project-against-film-project sort of way, but in a way to challenge yourself to deliver something people haven't seen before?

NPG: It's not so competitive, but we're working in an environment dedicated to excellence, and the people that we work with are incredibly talented—especially Sanjay, because this story came from his heart.

TL: Because the story is so personal, Sanjay, did that add any extra pressure to deliver?

SP: Yes, but in terms of the spirit and environment of the studio, as soon as people got a whiff of the story, everybody was so supportive. In many ways, if people can smell what's special and unique about a project, they can get really get fired up about it.

TL: Nicole, from what I understand, this idea went through (Pixar and Disney Chief Creative Officer) John Lasseter in 2012 before you joined the project as a producer. What do you recall of your initial reaction to Sanjay's idea? I can't help but think you were floored by it.

SP: [Huge laughter… ]

TL: Did Nicole literally pass out and fall on the floor, Sanjay?

SP: Tim, you should have seen what she saw initially [laughter].

NPG: It was pretty crazy and intimidating. My first impression was, 'This is going to be really cool,' and second I thought, 'I don't know how we're going to make this [laughter].’ It was a very big idea, and I knew my job was going to be to contain it somewhat without losing the brilliance.

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TL: Sanjay, this is such of an introspective piece. Now that you've seen the film through viewers’ eyes and experienced their reactions to it, is there anything that you've learned about yourself that you didn't realize before?

SP: There's been a lot going on in my mind because of all the attention that the film is getting. One of the things that I've been reflecting on is how I used to tell myself, ‘I'm not ready for things. Things aren't safe for me to explore.’ But in fact, I was ready, probably years ago, but I held myself back. It wasn't because people were stopping me from opportunities, it was my own lack of self-esteem and readiness and fear of putting myself out there. Now that I have, it's been so rewarding and confirming to have so many people react so positively to the film. It makes me feel like, ‘Yeah, there is something that I have to express that is valuable.’ The best part about it is that I'm working at Pixar and have this great team behind me to not only express things, but to do it in an entertaining way.

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TL: I love how Sajay's Super Team opens with the words, ‘Based on a True Story – Mostly.’ Was young Sanjay's fantastical vision of the Hindu gods based on your imagination from childhood, or is the fantasy sequence something you came up with as an adult?

SP: In terms of the boy’s daydream, that is something that we absolutely crafted to tell the story. When I was a little kid, I used to sit next to my father—just as we depicted in the short—but I wasn't thinking about my parents’ Gods. I wanted nothing to do with them. I would stare into the carpet and daydream, and if you stare long enough, you start seeing imagery. The initial spark of the film was based on me spacing out, but also noticing that my father would literally place money next to the idols. This is true to my life experience: I would notice the money there, but wondered why I didn't get an allowance. I told John Lasseter that in order for me to worship the Gods I love, was to bit by bit, little by little, steal from my father’s gods so that I could buy the comic books and toys that I love. That was the initial germ of the concept, and I also told John jokingly that the karmic irony, 30 years later, is here I am, completely falling in love with the mythology and have dedicated so much of my life to it. I'm paying off my karmic debt by doing this.

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TL: And to continue the real-life story, you're the one in the father role now, with a young son who I understand loves Mickey Mouse.

SP: [Laughs] And I love Mickey Mouse. I love watching those old, classic Disney Treasures with him. That's my favorite thing to do, reliving the entire medium that I went to school for, and now seeing it through a child’s point of view. It’s been a gift.

TL: Back to the Oscars. Now I know you’re both professionals, but we’re all allowed to be starstruck once in a while. Is there anyone you’ll be thrilled to meet at the Oscars? Or have you met them already at the Oscars luncheon?

NPG: I can say that I've met (Mad Max: Fury Road director) George Miller, and I was starstruck by him. I love the work he’s done, which is sort of a crossover. He uses comic book/animator sensibilities in live-action style.

SP: I was really excited to meet (fellow nominee) Don Hertzfeldt, who created the beautiful short World of Tomorrow. I know he’s pretty reclusive, so it was pretty nice to sit down and talk with him and put a face behind the film that we're nominated with. That was a pleasure.

TL: No matter the outcome at the Oscars Sunday, there has to be part of both of you that feel you've already won in a sense, having this glorious opportunity to not only do the work, but do the work at Pixar.

SP: I feel that way, big time. Big, big, big time.

NPG: I have to add, having a platform like Pixar for this story has been really gratifying and exciting.

Disney’s Red Carpet-Ready Magical Movie Makeovers

This Sunday night, the biggest names in Hollywood will come out for The Oscars® and movie fans—not to mention Disney fans—will be watching to see which films and nominees take home the iconic statue. But the fun really starts hours before, when the stars begin to arrive on the red carpet and we see this year’s buzzworthy fashions—the latest statements in sartorial splendor.

As a rule, Disney characters clean up pretty well—and often undergo dramatic and (sometimes) magical transformations over the course of their heroes’ journeys. Their inner beauty is always there from the start, of course, and their new, red carpet-worthy looks go beyond a gorgeous gown or a dapper suit to embody the qualities that make them such inspiring figures.

Here are some of our favorite examples of Disney characters whose red carpet looks go way beyond the question, “Who are they wearing?”

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Elizabeth Swann—Pirates of the Caribbean
When we meet Elizabeth Swann in Pirates of the Caribbean, she’s about as refined and as ladylike as a governor’s daughter is expected to be—but Elizabeth proves immediately that she’s prone to the unexpected. Her final appearance in the Pirates series—Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales is in super-secret production now for release in 2017—has the proper English girl fully transformed into full pirate regalia. Elizabeth might not walk the Oscar red carpet in a traditional gown, but she won’t be walking a plank, fashionably speaking. Her confidence and independence will turn heads, along with her ruffly blouse and boots.

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Rapunzel—Tangled
After years spent in the tower, where she’d brush and brush and brush and brush that long blonde hair, Rapunzel ends up with a brunette pixie cut when Flynn Rider cuts it, to set his true love free from Mother Gothel’s control. It’s quite the dramatic makeover, and the simplicity of style might cause some fashionistas to think of it as a makeunder. But we see it as a testament to Rapunzel’s daring and adventurous spirit, which Flynn also recognized and knew had to be free of that tiny tower room. Short hair, don’t care!

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Cinderella—Cinderella (2015)
Who is she wearing? Why, a fabulous vintage number that’s been updated with the help of a Fairy Godmother who was so moved by Cinderella’s courage and kindness that it took little more than a sprinkling of pixie dust to turn Cinderella’s mother’s tattered (Thanks to the Stepsisters!) dress into a stunner that would be the talk of any red carpet. Though not yet a princess when Cinderella arrives at the ball in the dress, her inner goodness even manages to outshine even that fabulous gown—because we know that Prince Kit was smitten when he first encountered her, wearing rags in the woods.

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The Incredibles—The Incredibles
It’s not necessarily enough to simply be a superhero—you have to feel like a superhero, and that just might mean wearing the right suit. Edna Mode takes on the challenge of designing a supersuit that provides exactly the boost that each member of the Incredible family needs—from Bob down to Baby Jack Jack. They always had the power, but their suits allow them to show that unity and strength to the world. Hmm… Super suits just might be all the rage on next year’s Oscar red carpet.

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Bert—Mary Poppins
Chimney sweeps spend a lot of time covered in ash. And sidewalk painters are a messy bunch as well. But Bert proves that he can clean up for a Jolly Holiday—or a red carpet awards ceremony?—without so much as a speck of coal dust on his spotless white gloves. Bert is a charismatic charmer who knows how to dress for any occasion, and can move among any crowd of people—from fellow chimney sweeps to upper-crust English society, and presumably, the Hollywood elite.

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Aladdin—Aladdin
A street rat when we meet him, Aladdin is the quintessential “diamond in the rough” but oh, how he shines when Genie uses his magic to turn the humble urchin into the “fabulous he,” Prince Ali. Aladdin longs for people to see him for who he truly is, and his noble heart, his dashing spirit of adventure, and his inherent goodness are on display in his royal re-imagining, even more so than his white suit and turban—which, we think you’ll agree, contrasts nicely with a scarlet red carpet.

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Tiana—Princess and the Frog
It’s not that Tiana isn’t beautiful as frog. She is—eyes as bright as those just can’t be dimmed. And she makes an especially lovely amphibious bride. But when Tiana is returned to human form—after bestowing a frog-princess kiss upon Prince Naveen—she has truly come into her own. Tiana’s own effortless style is on display—instead of Charlotte’s hand-me-downs—whether she’s in the kitchen of her own restaurant or cutting up a rug on the dance floor. She’s way beyond “almost there” on the way to making her dreams come true—her course is set for even happier ever after.

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Ariel—The Little Mermaid
Some folks like to say that “father knows best,” but at a certain point a princess has to stand on her own two feet (even if those feet are initially fins!) and commit to what she really believes in. Ariel makes the transformation from mermaid to human look (relatively) easy, precisely because she’s always been so sure of where she really belongs.

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Mulan—Mulan
During Mulan’s arduous training to become a warrior, Li Shang sings “I’ll Make a Man Out of You.” Well… not exactly—Mulan can only keep her true identity concealed for so long, but she shows everyone that she’s complex and driven and that there’s so much to her—or any girl—than meets the eye. A demure young girl when first introduced, Mulan emerges as a tougher, stronger, and more courageous young woman than she or anyone else ever believed possible.

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Beast—Beauty and the Beast
For a beast, the Beast is surprisingly refined—and could easily hold his own on the red carpet, at least sartorially speaking, alongside George Clooney or Brad Pitt. He’s certainly rough around the edges, but he knows how to dress for a formal occasion! It’s clear to Belle, probably even before it’s clear to us, that there’s a kind and thoughtful man deep inside—a kindred spirit for her. When Beast is returned to his human form at story’s end, those qualities that were there all along are simply allowed to come to the surface.

To see another tale as old as time—how some of your favorite Hollywood stars go from designer rags to riches for this year’s Academy Awards—tune in this Sunday, February 28, for The Oscars, beginning at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT on ABC.

Ginnifer Goodwin Hops to It

Ginnifer Goodwin is an animal. We mean, she voices an animal in the new Walt Disney Animation Studios film Zootopia. As Officer Judy Hopps, the first bunny on the Zootopia police force, Goodwin is determined to make her mark—something Goodwin (a D23 Charter Member!) has been doing since she stepped into the enchanted world of Once Upon a Time as Snow White. In the Spring 2016 issue of Disney twenty-three, we sat down and spoke with the actress, married to Josh Dallas (Once Upon a Time’s Prince Charming) and soon-to-be mother of two (their second son is due later this spring). Here, in this D23 Member-exclusive web extra, we talk more about the movie, D23, and the chances of Judy showing up in Storybrooke.

There’s a moment in the film where Judy thinks about throwing in the towel. As an actor in Hollywood, did you ever have a moment like that?
Ginnifer Goodwin (GG): Oh, a million. But I think Judy and I are very much alike in that we have never taken our rejections personally, which, I think, is why we’ve both been successful in our chosen field. You know, Judy’s rejection was by “the man,” and she never thought of it, in my opinion, as her being inadequate. It was that there was just so much up against her. But instead, it just inspired her to step up—her inspiration reignited.

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So there was never a moment where you said “I’m packing up and moving back East”?
GG: No. I’ve gone broke a couple of times, and that was kind of scary. I remember one of the times I went broke because I refused to take anything in which I didn’t believe. It’s not that I was saying no to all the things that were being thrown at me, but I just was really holding on to my dream of doing a certain quality of work. So there were some really huge dry spells. I remember calling my mother at one point, and I just said, “I don’t have any money, so I don’t know how to stay here.” And she said, “Well, you have a lot of friends, and they all have couches. And you might have to sleep on a couple of those couches, but you are going to make this work.” And, like, that’s all it took for me to keep at it.

What do you think the overall message of Zootopia is?
GG: I feel like there are a couple of underlying and very profound themes. But I love that Judy believes that anyone can be anything. It’s not about the things you’re born with. It’s what you make of your life. She puts it far more succinctly but, in general, that’s what I would say it’s about for me.

How does it make you feel to know there’s going to be tons of Judy merchandise out there?
GG: I mean I can’t wait to buy everything. My poor sons are going to be bunnified. Like, everything in their life is going to be Judy Hopps! But I’m blown away. We were sent the Once Upon a Time “Pop” dolls, and there’s the Once Upon a Time Barbie-esque dolls. We gave some of them to family for a stocking stuffer, and my sister just took me by the shoulder, and she was like, “You realize you’re a doll?” It does not feel commonplace. Like, I recognize that it’s bananas.

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What did you enjoy about D23 overall?
GG: Oh, my gosh. Well, first of all, I need to tell you that my son is obsessed with the magazine, and he goes through and identifies the characters, which kind of blows my mind because he’s never seen anything on a screen before. He just knows from us going to the park and reading books and things. [I was a member] before I was involved with anything Disney professionally. I loved doing things like going to the Arclight. [Editor’s Note: In 2010, D23 partnered with Arclight Cinemas in Southern California to screen Disney movies.] I won one of the trivia contests there! D23 is a club of celebration of my favorite subject matter.

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Have you had a chat with the Once Upon a Time producers about getting Judy onto the show?
GG: [Laughs] I don’t know how we would do that. I also think that I would have problems if I wasn’t asked to play her! Like, if suddenly Judy was cast I don’t know what I would do.

Maybe it could be a real bunny like in Once Upon a Time in Wonderland?
GG: Right. Fair enough. If she had a voice, I hope I’d be cast as her voice.

Mary Margaret would be, “You sound a lot like me!”
GG: Yeah, right? People keep asking me what kind of voice I do [for Judy]. I’m like, “I don’t do voices.” I don’t even know what that means. They all just sound like me. All my characters just sound like me.

#ShareYourEars for Make-A-Wish—Plus More in News Briefs

#ShareYourEars for Make-A-Wish with Disneyland Resort

Have a few more Mickey ears recently popped up on your social media feed? There’s a great reason why! In honor of Disneyland Resort’s ongoing Diamond Celebration, Disney Parks announced they’ll donate $5 to Make-A-Wish® (up to $1 million) for every “ear photo” folks share on Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter… just make sure to use the hashtag #ShareYourEars.

Since 1980, Disney and Make-A-Wish® have worked together to grant more than 100,000 wishes for children with life-threatening medical conditions. It’s a truly unique relationship that’s touched the lives of millions of people around the world—from wish children and their families, to the countless medical professionals, volunteers, and donors who help make the wishes come true.

So from now until March 14, spread some hope and joy just by posting a single #ShareYourEars photo! The more creative, the better… and best of all, you’ll be able to help make wishes come true!

Mark your calendar with upcoming Disney events

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

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
March 3
Have a Wild Time with Zootopia
March 4
D23 Presents Walt Disney’s Chicago
March 18
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Charlie Ridgway
March 19
D23’s Very Important Date: 65 Years of Alice in Wonderland—Florida

April 8
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Don Iwerks
April 9
D23 Day at the Walt Disney Studios
April 20
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On Tour in Portland, Oregon
June 8
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On Tour in Salt Lake City, Utah
Studios
March 4
Zootopia opens in theaters.
April 15
The Jungle Book opens in theaters.
May 6
Captain America: Civil War opens in theaters.
May 27
Alice Through the Looking Glass opens in theaters.
June 17
Finding Dory opens in theaters.
July 1
The BFG opens in theaters.
August 12
Pete’s Dragon opens in theaters.
November 23
Moana opens in theaters.
December 16
Rogue One opens in theaters.
Parks
March 2—May 30
Epcot International Flower & Garden Festival
April 1-May 1
Disney California Adventure Food & Wine Festival
June 16
Shanghai Disney Resort to open
Television
February 28
The Oscars® will be presented live on ABC beginning at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT
May 1
Disney Channel Presents the Radio Disney Music Awards airs on Disney Channel from 7–9 p.m. EST

First Look at Pete’s Dragon

Disney first told the story of young Pete and his friendly pet dragon Elliott in 1977… but now, a re-imagining of the film is coming to a screen near you this summer! Check out the first look at Pete’s Dragon—starring Bryce Dallas Howard, Oakes Fegley, and Robert Redford—above.

It may be a teaser trailer, but luckily we have a bit more info about the film for you: Wood-carver Mr. Meacham (Redford) has delighted locals with tales of a fierce dragon that resides deep in the woods of the Pacific Northwest. To his daughter, Grace (Howard), who works as a forest ranger, these stories are little more than tall tales—until she meets Pete (Fegley), a mysterious 10-year-old with no family and no home who claims to live in the woods with a giant, green dragon named Elliott. And from Pete’s descriptions, Elliott seems quite similar to the dragon from Meacham’s stories. With the help of Natalie (Oona Laurence), an 11-year-old girl whose father, Jack (Wes Bentley), owns the local lumber mill, Grace sets out to determine where Pete came from, where he belongs, and the truth about this mysterious creature. Look for Pete’s Dragon when it opens in theaters on August 12!

Shanghai Disneyland Resort: Almost Ready to Wow!

Sunday night’s “Wonderful World of Disney: Disneyland 60” on ABC was an absolute blast—showcasing not only the amazing history of Walt Disney’s first theme park, but also giving audiences a glimpse of what’s to come at Disney Parks. Case in point: a super-special look at the ramp-up to Shanghai Disneyland Resort’s opening this June!

The video above (aired as part of Sunday’s special) gives us a glimpse of Shanghai Disneyland’s Enchanted Storybook Castle (the largest castle at any Disney Park worldwide); the all-new TRON Lightcycle Power Run ride inside the park’s Tomorrowland; and several of the park’s other cool new lands.

Don’t be surprised if this clip makes you want to renew your passport!

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New Star Wars Entertainment at Walt Disney World Resort

Fans of Star Wars, take heart: We may have to wait a while for those fantastic Star Wars-themed lands to make their way to Disneyland and Walt Disney World Resorts, but that doesn’t mean galactic fun isn’t on the horizon. Walt Disney World Resort just unveiled more Star Wars-themed entertainment starting this spring—including one of the most elaborate fireworks and projection shows ever!

You’ll feel the Force at Disney’s Hollywood Studios this April 4 with the arrival of the new Star Wars entertainment experience Star Wars: A Galaxy Far, Far Away (a live stage show celebrating iconic moments from the Star Wars saga), plus a new First Order Stormtrooper procession… lead by Captain Phasma, of course. And to kick off summer, the park is launching a new nightly fireworks and projection show called Star Wars: A Galactic Spectacular that will eclipse anything of its kind in the park’s history. It’s the “next generation” of the current Star Wars-inspired fireworks show, and it’s truly unprecedented; look for Star Wars-themed fireworks, lasers, light projections, and other special effects combined with music and iconic characters and scenes from throughout the saga.

Coupled with other Star Wars experiences already delighting guests at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, Walt Disney World Resort is a fabulous place for fans to celebrate all their Star Wars passion! Lightspeed to Endor!

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ABC’s Once Upon a Time Celebrates 100 Episodes

The citizens of Storybrooke have been bringing fairy-tale adventures to the small screen since 2011—and just recently, the cast and crew of the ABC series celebrated their 100th episode in style! Actors including Jennifer Morrison, Lana Parrilla, Robert Carlyle, Rebecca Mader, Jared Gilmore, Colin O’Donoghue, and Josh Dallas partied alongside executive producers Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz… and like any good birthday party, the guests of honor cut a Once Upon a Time-themed cake!

Look for Once Upon a Time’s special 100th episode—featuring Emma, Regina, Mary Margaret, and Gold’s arrival in the Underworld on a mission to rescue Hook—on March 6, only on ABC.

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Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 Begins Production

Are you still “hooked on a feeling” from Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy? If so, we don’t blame you. And the good news is, a sequel to the film has just started production!

Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 just began principle photography at Pinewood Studios in Atlanta. You’ll have to wait just a bit for all the music-filled space escapades; the film is slated to hit U.S. theaters on May 5, 2017.

Returning for the sequel are stars Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana, Dave Bautista, Vin Diesel, and Bradley Cooper; adding to the mix this time ’round are Pom Klementieff (Oldboy), Elizabeth Debicki (The Great Gatsby), and Kurt Russell (The Hateful Eight). The film continues the Guardians’ adventures as they unravel the mystery of Peter Quill’s true parentage.

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Pirates of the Caribbean Tsum Tsum Sail into Disney Parks

A new collection of Disney’s totally adorable Tsum Tsum—created especially for Disney Parks—is set to sail into shops across Disneyland and Walt Disney World Resorts. Seven new Pirates of the Caribbean Tsum Tsum (featuring a pup with keys, a skeleton, the Captain, and more!) will be available on Friday, February 26… and with this release, a bunch of new Disney merchandise locations will begin carrying Disney Tsum Tsum—including World of Disney at Downtown Disney District; Once Upon a Toy at Disney Springs Marketplace; ImageWorks at Epcot; and Chester & Hester’s Dinosaur Treasures at Disney’s Animal Kingdom.

Get ’em while the gettin’ is good on February 26!

23 Questions With Alice Davis

Alice Estes Davis instantly makes you feel at ease. Her home, in the Los Feliz section of Los Angeles where she’s lived since the late 1950s, resembles a museum more than a dwelling. Alice, along with her husband and fellow Disney Legend, Marc Davis, moved here not long after they were married, and the rooms are brimming with his sketches and paintings, as well as an impressive collection of wood-carved treasures from Papau New Guinea. We arrive early one Monday afternoon and are greeted not only by Alice, but by her two sweet-natured dogs, Circe “The Enchantress” and Boeing 707 (“Bo” for short). And what starts out as a scheduled one-hour visit turns into a full afternoon of stories, laughter, and fond reminiscences.

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Recalling childhood adventures, such as winning an art contest when she was five, or being taken by her artist mom—who had literally saved her pennies for a month—to see Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs on her eighth birthday, Alice always seems to have a smile in her voice. And her mind is sharper than most 20-year-olds. When asked about her amazing memories, she says, nonchalantly, “They involve people… I love people.” Whether talking about her husband, whom she clearly adored, or working alongside Walt Disney, or about her own remarkable accomplishments—such as designing and creating costumes for the it’s a small world and Pirates of the Caribbean attractions and giving back generously to her community, her stories paint vivid pictures of people and places from days gone by. Alice Davis is a Disney Legend for sure, and she’s also a living treasure.

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D23: You’ve pretty much been an Angelino all of your life?
Alice Davis (AD): I’ve lived right here for 50+ years. I can get downtown in about 12 minutes. I can get to the Studio in about 12 minutes. I can get to Glendale quickly. And I’ve lived in this area since my family first came to Southern California when I was 4.

D23: Has it changed dramatically since you first moved here?
AD: It sure has! When we moved here, we lived on Franklin, and when you walked around the corner and down a couple of blocks, you were at the Disney Studios with the Mickey Mouse sign on top. But I was born in Escalon. My father was training to be a high school principal. We came to Hollywood when he lost his job. This was during the Depression, and he used to jokingly say, “The Depression had to come, but you had to come too… another mouth to feed.” We moved to Southern California, and the only job he could get was selling life insurance.

D23: So your mom had to work, too?
AD: Yes, she went back to work, and lied about my age so she could sign me up at the grammar school for kindergarten, and she could get a job. That’s when I won the all-city painting competition for children in the Los Angeles school system. I was 5. And you had to be 6 to be in kindergarten. I was tall for my age; I looked 6.

D23: What was the subject of the painting?
AD: It wasn’t modeled after anyone in particular. It’s a painting of a woman wearing a fancy pink dress. She has a black-and-yellow belt and black shoes. They put it on exhibit at a local bank. They had a parade, and I was supposed to walk in front of the parade with the painting on a stick. But I just wanted to be one of the kids. When nobody was looking, I went home and hid in my closet. When it came time for me walk with the painting, I wasn’t there. They didn’t find me until 4:00 that afternoon. Boy, was I in boiling water with my parents!

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D23: Did winning that contest inspire you?
AD: I wanted to be an artist. My mother was an artist and taught. She was a tremendous influence on me. She had a huge pair of scissors, and at the age of 1, I was cutting out paper dolls, and everybody who came to the house thought I was going to hurt myself. My mother said, “No, I’ve taught her, and she knows that if she does something she shouldn’t, the scissors will be taken away.”

D23: After high school you were accepted to Chouinard, right?
AD: I won a scholarship. Chouinard was close to where I lived when I was in grammar school. If I walked a couple blocks out of my way home from school, I would walk by Chouinard, and they always had exhibits. I would go in and look through the gallery and tell everybody I was going to go there someday. When I graduated Long Beach Polytechnic, I thought I wasn’t good enough to get a scholarship. But I had a portfolio and my mother came home from work and said, “Did you turn in your portfolio today,” and I said, “No, I don’t think I have a chance.” She said, “You go upstairs and get that portfolio right now!” She put me in the car with the portfolio. There were still lifes, portraits, landscapes, flower arrangements.

D23: Chouinard was made up mostly of men students?
AD: Oh was it! Fortunately for me Mrs. [Nelbert] Chouinard was helping sign up some of the students, including me. She said, “We have GIs coming back from the service, and this is their second chance to get a decent job and be an artist, so we won’t be able to get you in for two years.” I’m not a weeper, but I started to cry. I told her I wanted to be an animator. She said only men are in animation class. I said, “I can’t understand that. I was raised to understand that if you were capable of doing a job, it didn’t matter whether you were male or female.” She smiled and said, “I think that way too.” She left and came back with a woman in a white smock with a tape measure around her neck. They looked at me, whispered, and left. Mrs. Chouinard came back and said, “You’re starting school Monday, and you’re going to be a Costume Design major.” That’s how I became a costume designer. I called Mrs. Chouinard “my mother away from home.” We were friends until she passed away.

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D23: You must have been very happy even though that wasn’t the course of study you were expecting?
AD: I was, especially since you had to take Fine Art the first year. But I didn’t know anything about clothes. When Mrs. Chouinard signed me up for classes, she said, “We have a new teacher, Mr. Marc Davis. He’ll be teaching Animation Drawing. She said that he would teach how the figure works, how muscles stretch, and so forth. And you have to learn to draw everything. You’ll have a sketchbook and sketch all the time.” She said the class is Tuesday nights, and if I take two perfect pieces of white chalk for Mr. Davis to do his lectures, she’d let me take the class free. It was a marvelous class; it helped me more with costume design than any costume class I ever took. When I left Chouinard, my first job was designing brassieres and girdles and lingerie. I knew exactly how the legs worked and how muscles would make clothes work.

D23: How did your relationship with Marc evolve?
AD: After I’d graduated and went to work, a friend called me. Her fiancé, who’d been in Marc’s class, was going to Mexico to study sculpture, and she was giving him a going-away party, but he wouldn’t go unless Marc was there because he was the teacher whom he most respected. The only person my friend knew who knew Marc was me, so she called me and asked if I’d invite him to the party. I said, “Sure, I can ask him.” I told Marc to bring a date and gave him the address. He came by himself. The next night, he called to thank me for inviting him and say how much he enjoyed seeing the students. He asked if he could thank me by taking me to dinner. So we went to dinner. He had lots of lady friends, and I was busy working so I figured that was that. But he started calling me, and we started going out regularly. We got to be good friends, but he got angry because I kept calling him Mr. Davis. He said, “My name is Marc!”

D23: How long before you got married?
AD: We didn’t get married until I was 27, in 1956.

D23: When did you first meet Walt?
AD: We bought a house in 1957. While Marc was working, I was stripping wallpaper off walls, things like that. I called Marc and told him I was tired, how about we go out to dinner at the Tam O’Shanter. He said, “Fine.” We were having a cocktail and this hand came on Marc’s shoulder. I looked up and just about swallowed my glass. It was Walt Disney. He said, “Marc, is this your new wife?” Marc said “Yes,” and Walt pulled up a chair. He joined us for a cocktail and asked what I did professionally. He was very curious. When he heard me say “elastic,” he wanted to know all about elastic fabric. He stayed for at least a half hour, asking me all kinds of questions. Marc was sitting there wondering what was up his sleeve. Eventually, he said, “Well, I’d better get going.” He started to walk away, then turned and said, “You know, you’re going to work for me someday.” He said goodbye and left, and I remember thinking, “Oh, sure, sure.” Years later, I got a call from Walt’s secretary who said, “Alice, Walt wants to know if you’d like to do the costumes for small world.” And I said, “Would I!” She said, “Be here at 9:00 tomorrow morning.”

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D23: You weren’t still working at the lingerie company anymore?
AD: No. I had a couple jobs after that before Marc and I were married. The companies hired me because at Chouinard, you had to be able to do children’s clothing, women’s clothing, men’s tailoring. This was Walt’s thinking, too, because I could do patterns for children’s clothes, women’s clothes, and men’s clothes. I could sew them and put them together. But I also had a fine art background. Anyway, Walt knew he’d have somebody who knew the whole system for the Audio-Animatronics® figures. Plus Marc was working on it, and I could do the costumes. Later, the only figure Walt saw for Pirates that was finished and working was The Auctioneer. Then, a day or so later, he went into the hospital. He never saw the finished Pirates ride. But he’d been very excited about it. And I did the costumes for that show.

D23: What was your first assignment at Disney?
AD: Walt didn’t know that I’d worked for him before Marc and I were married. My first job was when Marc was doing Sleeping Beauty. He was doing Aurora dancing in the forest with the prince. For live-action reference, he wanted the skirt to take a shape and turn, and Marc knew that I knew what he was talking about because I’d been in his animation class. So I designed it.

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D23: You didn’t start working for WED until 1962, many years later. What was your first formal job there?
AD: Small world. I had one year to do the whole thing. Design the costumes, start doing the patterns. When Marc and I went to New York in 1956 on our honeymoon, I got to meet Mary Blair. I adored her work from the time I was in junior high. When I met her, I lost my speech. The best part is we became good friends, and I was able to work with her on small world.

D23: Did your image of Walt change over the years?
AD: When I first met him at the Tam, he was very gracious, and when he sat down to talk, you could see how brilliant he was. Always thinking ahead. You could feel the machinery going. He could do idle talk and make conversation, but there was always a question somewhere. Over time, you realized his mind was like a steel trap.

D23: Didn’t Walt like to have various concepts to consider?
AD: Yes. If he asked for an idea for something, Marc would give him at least three or four, or three or four drawings. So Marc was training a young man at WED [now Imagineering]. This guy was excited about an assignment, and he came to Walt with one painting for the idea. Well, Walt looked at it and got that questioning look on his face. He said to the young man, “This is very interesting, but it’s very difficult to choose between one.” He was letting him know gently. But if he did the same thing twice, it wouldn’t be so gentle.

D23: When you and Marc were working at the Studio, was there shop talk in the Davis household?
AD: Marc tried not to talk about it at home. When he’d come home, he’d ask me what was on television that night… An opera? A rodeo? A circus? And he always had a sketchbook. He would sit and draw while he was having his cocktail and talking. What marvelous sketchbooks! Circuses were always fascinating him. He would draw everything as fast as it happened. He always insisted that he’d never tear a page out of a sketchbook. Even if he had drawings he didn’t like, he left them in. He said that’s how you’d know if you’re keeping up with yourself. Never take yourself for granted.

D23: What was the working environment like at the Studio in those days?
AD: It was the best job I ever had because there were no class distinctions. Everybody had a job to do. None of us had titles. We all went by first names. And we all worked for the same thing: putting on the best show possible. We’d be at work before we had to be, and we’d stay as long as we had to. Walt would come in and say, “That’s looking good,” or he’d say, “That’s a good idea but it doesn’t work as well as we thought it would. What if we did thus and so…” Then he’d say, “How long do you think it’ll take to get that ready?” If you said, “Next Tuesday,” he’d say, “Fine, I’ll be back at 1:00 Tuesday.” He never wrote anything down, but at 1:00 the next Tuesday, he’d be there, and you’d better be there too!

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D23: Your mother was a great influence. Were there other teachers or mentors, too?
AD: I had lots of good teachers, but I also had people who saw that I wanted to be an artist, and they liked helping people. I always say that good friends are the jewelry of your heart. They’re your riches. The jewels of your heart are your friends. If you don’t have friends, you can have all the money in the world, but you’re not happy. You can be poor and have lots of friends, and if nothing else, you can sit on the side of a hill and enjoy the sunset with a bottle of wine and a loaf of bread and be happier than any rich person. Because you have all these riches around you.

D23: Walt was really inspired by all kinds of things?
AD: Here’s an interesting story. Marc would sometimes stay at his desk and get books on fine arts down at the Studio library and read them on his lunch hour. Walt came in one time when Marc was looking at one of these books, one on Salvador Dali, and Walt looked at it and saw the abstract and the realistic parts mixed together. He said, “Who is that?” Marc told him and started explaining some of the things in the book, and Walt was intrigued. He thanked Marc for letting him disturb his lunch. A day later, Walt’s secretary called and said that Walt wanted to borrow the Dali book. Before he knew it, Dali was working at the Studio. And it all started with Marc reading that book and Walt being curious.

D23: Though you didn’t end up being an animator, you went in a different direction and were very successful. You must be proud of that?
AD: When I’m asked to talk to students, I tell them, there are a lot of courses you’re asked to take, ones you might think you don’t need. I tell them to take everything they tell you to take. I didn’t think I needed Children’s Fashion or Men’s Tailoring. I took them and worked hard. I tell students to take everything, because you never know: The one thing you think you don’t need could be the one that’s going to get you where you want to go.

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D23: Your house is filled with art from New Guinea. Why does it appeal to you so much?
AD: Marc and I started collecting New Guinea art as soon as we could afford it. We went twice and we stayed with the tribes. What appeals to me about them as people is that they are all individuals. The way they put feathers in their hats is all different, the hats are all different, their skirts are all different, no two necklaces are alike, but yet when they all stand together, you can see they are one unified group. They believe they are descendants of crocodiles, and they have beautiful patterns carved on their chests, on their arms, on their backs… each one is a creative person, a designer in their own right.

D23: Is there anything we might have left out?
AD: I get angry reading negative things about Walt. He was a joy to work with and for. There was all kinds of freedom, mentally as well as physically. When I was pressed on small world, I was allowed to come in to work weekends. I didn’t have guards looking over me. Meeting Walt and working for him was one of the pleasures of my life. He was the best boss you could have. My husband would agree and said it best: Working for Walt Disney was the best school he ever attended.

Disney Details: From Epcot with amore!

Recognize this whimsical Murano glass chandelier? If you have recently visited Epcot, you may have spotted it as you walked into the Italy Pavilion’s Via Napoli restaurant, a Patina Group-operated fine-dining eatery that opened in August 2010. Since then, Executive Chef Charlie Restivo and his lively open kitchen—which features three wood-burning ovens that represent Etna, Vesuvius, and Stromboli, Italy’s three active volcanoes—have been serving up authentic Italian cuisine so delizioso, you’ll think you are in Naples eating at nonna’s house. Oh, and don’t skip the pies. Their Pizza Napoletana will surely make you say, “Now that’s amore!”

It’s all in the Disney Details!