Print a Cars Road Trip Scavenger Hunt

Nothing like a good road trip to visit friends and family during the holiday season… Take in all the sights and sounds around you by playing along with our Cars Road Trip Scavenger Hunt! It’s as simple as spotting each element (a red car, an orange traffic cone, etc.) and marking them off as you go along.

Want to make the fun last? Laminate your Scavenger Hunt card (you can find self-adhesive laminating sheets at your local craft store) and use dry-erase markers to keep track of your progress. Season’s Speedings!

Supplies:
8.5 x 11-inch white cardstock (printable)
Scissors
Pencil or pen

OPTIONAL:
Self-adhesive laminating sheets
Dry erase marker

  1. Download and print out the Cars Road Trip Scavenger Hunt template (Page 1) onto your cardstock.
  1. Using scissors, cut along the image’s outline to eliminate any white “border.”
  1. On your next road trip, take your Scavenger Hunt card and a pencil or pen—and keep watch! You can play by yourself or with others…

OPTIONAL:
After cutting out the image, laminate using self-adhesive laminating sheets (follow directions on package). Cut away the unused, clear border with your scissors and, voilà! You have a reusable game! (Don’t forget the dry erase marker to keep track of your “score.”)

Dazzling, Dancing, De-LIGHT-Ful

Since 1995, the twinkling, sparkling, glittering Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights has been gloriously lighting up the night at Disney’s Hollywood Studios Park at Walt Disney World Resort. Vibrant wreaths, spinning carousels, soaring angels, and Santa Claus and his radiant reindeer immerse guests into an enchanting world of millions of Christmas lights, all synced up to a set of jolly tunes. This holiday season—after 20 years with only a one-year hiatus in 2003—the beloved lightshow that immerses guests into a world of millions of lights set to lively seasonal songs is being retired. We bid the Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights a fond farewell in its final season, with an enlightening glimpse at this holiday extravaganza’s history.

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The idea for this has-to-be-seen-to-be-believed spectacle first sparked when Walt Disney World Executive Vice President Bruce Laval saw a remarkable Christmas light display in a cable news report. The stunning spectacle had started modestly in 1986 as a single home’s annual display, created by Little Rock, Arkansas, businessman Jennings Osborne as a holiday treat for his daughter. The ever-growing—and glowing—phenomenon became so enormous that a larger “home” had to be found. Laval asked Joe Phelan, show director for Disney Creative Entertainment, to contact Jennings, who was overjoyed his merry but massive show would “glow on” at a Disney theme park.

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Four 18-wheeler moving trucks were required to ship the elaborate display to Disney-MGM Studios (now Disney’s Hollywood Studios). Eyes & Ears, the Walt Disney World Resort in-house newsletter, reported in November 1995: “The full complement of more than two million lights—including Osborne’s breathtaking 70-foot-high tree of lights and ‘wall of angels’—will be moved from the family’s west Little Rock home to the Residential Street in the backlot area.” That first year, the Osborne light display stretched 760 feet on each side of Residential Street, delightfully decking eight houses, including facades for the homes of the Golden Girls and Empty Nest television shows. “A crew of 40 is spending about three weeks to complete the decorating, which will include erecting a globe of lights 30 feet in diameter, a ‘snow’ wall of lights 200 feet long and 60 feet high and two 30-foot-tall carousels, each bearing 12 angels,” reported Eyes & Ears.

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And 1995 was only the sparkly start. By the time the Spectacle moved to the Streets of America in 2006, the holiday extravaganza glowed and flashed with more than five million lights. That same year, approximately 400 dimmer relay and control switches were added, allowing the lights to be choreographed to a musical score, including songs by the Trans-Siberian Orchestra, as well as lively Yuletide tunes as “Feliz Navidad” by Jose Feliciano and ”Jingle Bells” by Barbra Streisand, as well as songs from Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas and Phineas and Ferb, and, in 2012, a special arrangement of the classic “Winter Wonderland” by Creative Entertainment Music Director Dan Stamper. In 2011, new RGB (red, blue, green) LEDs meant that the famous canopy of lights on Brownstone Street added to the spectacle, allowing a Christmas cavalcade of colors that can flash in 16 million different combinations and patterns.

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Each holiday season saw a multitude of Santa-worthy surprises, such as Roger Rabbit, Baby Sinclair from the Dinosaurs TV series, and Pongo, Perdita, and an assortment of spotted puppies popping up here and there. Naturally, there have been dozens of Hidden Mickeys. As of 2014, the count was up to more than 80 with Mickeys spotted among the sparkles within a teddy bear’s face, the smoke coming from a locomotives stack, and in the flames leaping inside a fireplace.

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When Jennings Osborne passed away in 2011, a lone white angel was added to join the traditional blue angels already in the show to honor the show’s original creator. This final year, a special “Osborne Electric” window in New York Street covers the history of this holiday favorite with newspaper stories, photos, and TV clips, while a twinkling Tinker Bell lights up a sparkling “20” logo. Even though this mesmerizing mix of music and brilliant lights is “glowing away” after this 20th anniversary run, the unforgettable Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights will continue to flash through our memories like illuminated sugar plums dancing though our heads.

Ginger Glazed Carrots

The combination of ginger ale and fresh ginger will give these tender carrots a hefty dose of flavor. A big thanks to our friends at ABC’s The Chew for this tasty recipe.

For more recipes and crafts, visit TheChew.com and tune in WEEKDAYS 1e|12c|p on ABC.

Servings: 6
30 to 60 min

Ingredients
1 ½ pounds baby carrots (peeled and trimming the greens; leaving about 1 inch of the green tops)
olive oil
salt and freshly cracked black pepper
2 oranges (zested and juiced; divided)
2 smashed cloves garlic
½ cup ginger ale
1 tablespoon ginger (finely minced)
¼ cup chopped hazelnuts (toasted)
¼ cup chopped parsley (divided)

Step-by-step Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. In a large bowl, toss the carrots with 4 to 5 tablespoons of the olive oil and season generously with salt and pepper. Zest the orange over the carrots, squeeze the juice, add the garlic cloves, and toss to coat.
  2. Put the carrots out into a large sauté pan that has been heating over medium high heat. Arrange in an even layer. Pour in the ginger ale and cook the carrots on the stove top until they begin to color, and then transfer to the oven and cook for about 25 to 30 minutes, or until fork tender.
  3. Once the carrots are cooked and the glaze is reduced, remove from the oven and allow to cool slightly.
  4. Meanwhile, in a small bowl, mix together the remaining orange zest, juice, ginger, hazelnuts, parsley, salt, and pepper. Garnish the carrots with the hazelnut mixture.

Create Minnie Mouse Mini Grapevine Wreaths

What’s the world’s most fashionable mouse up to this holiday season? Why, Minnie’s making mini wreaths, of course—and now you can, too! Hang these adorable little wreaths in a window; on a tree (like an ornament); or even on your bedroom door. Make a few extra to give to friends and family as gifts. (Our tip: Decorate and enjoy a few extra cookies… just because!)

Supplies:
Frosting, green (or other desired color)
Frosting spatula or butter knife
Cutout Christmas cookies, baked and ready to decorate
Miniature marshmallows, colored sprinkles, or other edible decorations
1½-inch-wide wire-edge ribbon, red-and-white polka dot, 1 yard for each wreath
Pipe cleaners, brown or red
Craft glue
Grapevine wreaths, 6–8-inch diameter (found at your local craft store)
4-inch-long wooden dowels, ¼-inch diameter

  1. Spread the colored frosting on the cookie with the spatula or knife. Push the mini marshmallows or other large decorations into the frosting. If you like, shake on the colored sprinkles (or other edible decorations), as well. Let the frosting harden.
  1. Take your yard of ribbon and tie it into a bow with long tails. Slide a pipe cleaner through the back of the bow. Place the bow on a wreath, and secure it by twisting the pipe cleaner ends around the vines. Twist the ribbon tails into pretty “swags,” as shown in the picture, and glue the ends to the wreath.
  1. Glue a dowel to the back of the cookie, leaving about 1 inch of dowel extending below the cookie. Apply glue to the extending dowel. Place the cookie on the wreath, inserting the dowel between the vines. Let the glue dry.

BONUS TIPS:
+ Use scissors to cut up a dozen (or more) “mini-bows”—instead of one large one—and attach them all around the wreath.
+ Using wire or pipe cleaners, attach small, wrapped lollipops or other candy to the wreath.
+ Use air-dry clay instead of cookie dough to make long-lasting decorations. Roll out the dough and cut out shapes using your favorite holiday cookie cutters. Let the clay dry, and then decorate it with acrylic or puff paint and beads, sequins, or other festive trims.

NOTES: Cutting should be done by an adult. If using a knife to spread frosting, please use caution—or have an adult complete the task.

New Stars Align for Star Wars: The Force Awakens

By Tim Lammers

When Star Wars opened in 1977, the film’s stars—Carrie Fisher, Harrison Ford, and Mark Hamill—became household names, seemingly overnight. The young actors breathing life into the brand-new characters being introduced in Star Wars: The Force Awakens are about to become just as familiar to you. At the recent global press conference for the film, John Boyega, Adam Driver, Oscar Isaac, and Daisy Ridley all talked about joining the iconic franchise.

In addition, an exclusive interview for D23.com, movie journalist Tim Lammers talked with Gwendoline Christie, 37, about playing Captain Phasma, and how the Star Wars saga has influenced her life.

Here’s what they had to say:

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John Boyega (Finn), on the greater cultural impact of Star Wars: The Force Awakens:

“For me, I’m going to be honest. I really don’t care about the black stormtrooper stuff. I couldn’t care less. This is a movie about human beings, about Wookiees, spaceships, and TIE fighters; and it has an undertone and a message of courage, and a message of friendship and loyalty. And I think that’s something that is utterly important. I watched the movie with Kathy [Kennedy, producer and Lucasfilm President] just last week, and I really relate to Rey more than any of the characters. And to be in a circumstance where you have to find something bigger than who you are within yourself is something that’s an inspiration to me.”

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Adam Driver (Kylo Ren) on carrying on the Star Wars Saga’s legacy of great antagonists:

“Early on, we tried to not think of him being bad or evil or a villain and tried to make something that was more three-dimensional, because that—to me—seemed more dangerous and unpredictable. Someone who feels morally justified in doing whatever they need to publicly kind of state that what they’re doing is right seems more active to play than just being evil for the sake of it.”

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Oscar Isaac, on crafting his character, Poe’s, possible backstory:

“I think that one of the coolest things about working on this with J.J. [Abrams] and with Lucasfilm is that there’s been a real sense of collaboration with that kind of thing. It was almost a bit of a sandbox element to it… I mean, for example with me, after we started filming I was talking a bit about where Poe could have been from. And the thing is, in A New Hope [Star Wars: Episode IV], at the very end at the Medals Ceremony, one of Guatemala’s claims to fame is that the last shot where the ships are leaving, where you see the temples, was shot in Guatemala. And for me, the fact that I was born there and that’s a rebel base, and I’m playing a rebel—a resistance fighter, a rebel fighter—I thought, ‘You know, maybe Poe was there. He was—you know, that’s where he’s from.’ And then this comic book comes out, called Shattered Empire, where Poe’s parents ended up going to Yavin 4 and making sweet love… And it’s kind of a beautiful thing, that it feels like we’re creating these things together.”

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Daisy Ridley (Rey), on her character’s “walk-up song,” the song that “pumps [a character] up, and expresses who they are”:

“I actually have one—it’s Mulan, “I’ll Make A Man Out of You.” I used to play it in the trailer before I went on set.”

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And Ridley on how her character is adding “girl power” to the franchise:

“She’s brave and she’s vulnerable and she’s so nuanced. That’s what’s so exciting playing a role like this. She doesn’t have to be one thing to embody a woman in a film and, for me, she’s not important because she’s a woman—she’s just important. It just so happens that she’s a woman.”

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Gwendoline Christie takes command as Captain Phasma:

Continuing the “girl power” theme, without question, one of the most popular characters to emerge out of the trailers for Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens is Captain Phasma, played by acclaimed British actress Gwendoline Christie from the smash HBO series Game of Thrones. A caped villain suited up in chrome-plated Stormtrooper armor, Captain Phasma is in charge of the Stormtroopers of the First Order in the universe set 30 years after the events of the Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi.

Tim Lammers: What are your earliest memories of Star Wars?
Gwendoline Christie: I remember the first time I saw it when I was about 6 years old. It was Christmastime and my family showed me the film, and I remember being totally enthralled by it. I loved the characters – a group of misfits who were thrown together who all seemed so completely unique since they were virtually from other worlds.

TL: Do you remember the sort of feelings it inspired in you?
GC: It had an enormous impact. I just couldn’t get over the magic of the whole thing. It seemed to have some kind of spiritual and mythological elements to it, yet it felt like something familiar and something we could connect with. I also found The Dark Side so enthralling. It was terrifying, yet so magnetic … Overall, I loved the film’s foundation about good vs. evil, and how it was told in such a genuine and imaginative way that made us all feel like children in awe of the story unfolding.

Christie said while her favorite characters in the first Star Wars film didn’t have hearts, they had a whole lot of soul: “The droids, R2D2 and C3PO, I just loved them. I was surprised that I could form such an affection for two machines. They could make me laugh and make me worry for them when they got into trouble. R2D2 was my favorite because I found him so charming and entertaining. I just adored him.”

As for the film’s human characters, Christie said she was most inspired by the person who gave the famous order, “Would someone get this big walking carpet out of my way?” (poor Chewbacca), and continued to evolve as a life force over the original Star Wars trilogy: “I loved Princess Leia. I remember thinking at such a young age that this is a woman that I really haven’t seen before in films. It felt like she got to do the guy stuff and was driven. She got to be powerful, single-minded, witty and uncompromising. I do think that had an influence on me. I remember thinking, ‘I want to be like that.'”

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Donning a helmet and being completely covered by armor, the 6 foot 3 inch Christie said playing Captain Phasma afforded her the unique opportunity to tap into some different acting sensibilities: “I was so excited to go about the acting process in a totally different way than I have done before. What happens with Captain Phasma below the neck is just as important as what happens above the neck. When I realized that the costume was so wonderfully imposing and prominent, it became an exploration of physicality, as well as an intellectual exploration. I knew every gesture would mean something. The way I held my hand meant something. The way that I walked and the way that I ran meant something. Everything that I did physically helped illustrate the character of Captain Phasma and her story.”

Described by The Force Awakens producer Kathleen Kennedy as the first female villain in the Star Wars saga, Christie pointed out the dramatic differences between Captain Phasma and various femme fatales audiences see in other films: “She’s a villain that you relate to as a character initially through her actions, rather than the more conventional form of how she is made in flesh. To me that’s very progressive, heartening and refreshing. It’s so modern. The reaction to her from fans has been so positive. I couldn’t be happier.”

Christie said Game of Thrones has no doubt opened doors for other acting opportunities. And while Captain Phasma and Brienne of Tarth both wear armor and capes, Christie said that’s where the characters’ similarities begin and end: “They’re totally different roles in totally different worlds. I will be forever grateful to Game of Thrones for giving me this incredible platform, and to George R. R. Martin for creating the most wonderful character of Brienne of Tarth, who I am so attracted to because she’s unconventional and unlike any other character I’ve seen in a television program. Brienne of Tarth is dedicated to the moral good and what’s necessary for her to do her job. Captain Phasma is a member of the Dark Side and part of the First Order, so I would say she’s entirely the opposite.”

Being released 38 years after the debut of the first Star Wars film, Christie is thrilled that diversity associated with the film saga continues to grow with The Force Awakens: “I was obviously happy to be cast in the role because I desperately wanted to be in Star Wars, but when I really learned who this character was and what the filmmakers were doing with her in the film, that’s when I was truly delighted. J.J. Abrams has been open about the fact that the filmmakers want to honor the authenticity of the previous films, yet are really bringing things up to date by immersing The Force Awakens with a more diverse cast.”

Christie said she was thrilled to be cast in The Force Awakens by director and co-screenwriter J.J. Abrams, since she’s long been a fan of his films: “I loved his Super 8 because it was such a brilliant piece of work and so multi-dimensional, and I loved what he did with the Star Trek movies, which were so fantastic and a breath of fresh air.”

The ultimate geek-out, Christie said, was taking direction on the set by Abrams: “Meeting him and working with him on The Force Awakens, I can’t think of anyone better to have made this film. It was a very creative opportunity, very inspiring and very collaborative, and I felt that we were all shown such great respect and support. He would listen to us and had such great enthusiasm and was so hilarious. It was a real great time.”

Mark Hamill Loves Disney, Animation, and Twilight Zone

Mark Hamill loves Disney. And not just a little. He really loves Disney. While we’re introducing ourselves, we mention that we’re from D23, and he immediately jumps in with, “That’s the year that Walt Disney came to California.” Yes, that’s right. (And the reason behind the name D23.)

Mark Hamill plays the iconic character Luke Skywalker in the blockbuster Star Wars film saga and returns this December in Star Wars: The Force Awakens, along with fellow actors Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford, returning to the roles of Leia Organa and Han Solo. It must have felt like a homecoming, right?

“What do you mean ‘did it feel like a homecoming?’” he laughs. “It was a homecoming! They’re so much a part of my life now, they are like family now… like family you don’t see for years and years and years.

“It’s so special and it’s so unexpected to be doing this again,” he continues. “It was such a wonderful thing, coming full circle in a way. For me, the original films did have a beginning, middle, and end, but in terms of the world, it never really ended. It’s an incredible opportunity, but it’s all the more savory because it was so unexpected.”

“I went to the park the very first year it was open, the summer of ’55, and I remember the Jungle Cruise. My family loves to tell the story about how I hid in terror at the bottom of the boat.”

MARK HAMILL, THE VOICE ACTOR

What many people don’t realize is that in addition to his film work, Mark Hamill is also a prolific voice actor, having worked on such Disney shows as Gravity Falls, Miles from Tomorrowland, and The Little Mermaid TV series. “My earliest memory of realizing that you could be someone who provided the voice for a cartoon character—I was just dumbstruck,” he says. “It just never occurred to me because they were so alive and real. It was Clarence Nash voicing Donald Duck. Not only was it a revelation, but I never saw cartoons the same way again.”

Mark Hamill voices the villain Gadfly Garnett in Disney Junior’s intergalactic animated series, Miles from Tomorrowland.
Mark Hamill voices the villain Gadfly Garnett in Disney Junior’s intergalactic animated series, Miles from Tomorrowland.

He continues, “I was young when I could connect the fact that, ‘Oh, that’s the same actress in Rocky and Bullwinkle as the witch in the Bugs Bunny cartoons and the witch in Trick or Treat with Huey, Dewey, and Louie! [June Foray].’ That’s the same actress! I know, this doesn’t sound that impressive now in the days of instant gratification where you can just Google it or Wikipedia it. And I loved comedy records as well: St. George and the Dragon Net was the first comedy record I ever bought… with my own money, my allowance. In those days I probably got like 30 cents or something. I thought it was funny! It was a parody of the old Dragnet series, with Stan Freberg, Daws Butler, and June Foray doing the voices. I had it memorized, and I’d do all the voices. I just adored that whole aspect of show business from the get-go.”

HIS LOVE OF DISNEY RUNS DEEP

“You know, I was a Disney baby,” Hamill says. “I went to the park the very first year it was open, the summer of ’55, and I remember the Jungle Cruise. My family loves to tell the story about how I hid in terror at the bottom of the boat. I was sitting next to Alan Horn, and the thing that I wanted to mention to him, but didn’t—my wife later told me it would have been shameless pandering to bring it up—is that my firstborn son was born in England while we were filming The Empire Strikes Back. When I had to find a name to bridge Nathan to Hamill, I picked Walt Disney’s middle name, so he is Nathan Elias Hamill. It’s a very melodic name, but it also shows you the depths of the Disneyphile that I am. I have all the animation tin sets [from Disney]. It’s really such a woven fabric of my childhood.”

WORKING WITH J.J. ABRAMS

The Force Awakens is Hamill’s first time working with prolific director J.J. Abrams. “He’s clearly a very gifted writer and filmmaker,” Hamill says. “Bright and full of ideas, but very personable, very exuberant in his passion for this project. It’s infectious and real fun to be around.” But there’s another thing that both Hamill and Abrams have in common. “We like so many of the same things,” he says. “I’m jealous he has the Twilight Zone board game! It’s in the lobby of Bad Robot. It’s so hard to find, that one and Outer Limits. But it’s something to live for. He’s wonderful.”

THE SKY-HIGH EXPECTATIONS

In April, Hamill was also a guest for the Star Wars Celebration in Anaheim, which saw the first look at the newest trailer from The Force Awakens (the “Chewie, we’re home” trailer). For him, that moment is hard to beat. “With a certain segment of people, the mania has never really gone away,” he says. “I knew the passion was there [in Anaheim]. The thing I’ll take away is that as soon as we left the stage and the lights went down, I went down to the floor. No one would have seen me, even if I was doing cartwheels,” he says. “So I got really close to the audience, stage right, and watched the crowd as they watched the trailer. I just wanted to watch them! It was absolutely moving. I can’t tell you—when you see that many people just transported with joy [laughing]… that’s the peak and that’s what I’ll remember forever.”

Catch that joy, and Mark Hamill, in Star Wars: The Force Awakens now in theaters.

Bantha Milk Hot Cocoa

This sweet drink, made with white chocolate chips and tinted with food coloring, is inspired by the mysterious blue beverage Aunt Beru made for Luke Skywalker while chiding him to eat his vegetables in Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope.

Ingredients

  • 4 cups of your favorite kind of milk
  • 1 tsp. vanilla extract
  • 1/2 cup white chocolate chips
  • Blue food coloring
  • Optional: whipped cream
  • Optional: blue candy sprinkles

Directions

  1. In a medium-sized saucepan, stir together milk, vanilla extract, and white chocolate chips. Add drops of blue food coloring one at a time until mixture is desired shade of bantha milk blue.
  2. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly until white chocolate chips have melted.
  3. Remove from heat and pour immediately into mugs. Optional: top with whipped cream and blue candy sprinkles.

Make a Death Star Ornament

Let the world know you’re a true-blue Star Wars fan—with this clever Death Star Ornament. The handy template makes it easy to bring a little “Dark Side” to your very own Christmas tree…

Supplies:
8.5 x 11-inch white printer paper
3.25-inch round clear glass ornament (same as recent Tinker Bell Ornament craft)
Scissors
Double-sided tape
Ribbon

  1. Download and print out your Death Star template (Page 1) onto white printer paper.
  1. Using scissors, cut along the image’s outline to eliminate any white “border.” Smaller scissors may help you cut into each inner corner.
  1. Place double-sided tape along the center of the image (horizontally), on the blank side. Then, align the center of the image to the center of your ornament and press down—all the way around.
  1. Next, place double-sided tape onto the back of each top flap and press down, surrounding the top half of the ornament.
  1. Place double-sided tape onto the back of each bottom flap and press down, surrounding the remaining bottom half of the ornament.
  1. Cut a piece of ribbon and pass it through the looped wire hanger on the ornament’s cap.
  1. Hang the ornament on your tree and imagine you’re spending Christmas on Kashyyyk… We hear it’s lovely this time of year!

NOTE: Cutting should be done by an adult.

Ink and Paint Artists Remember Tea Time at the Disney Studio

The holiday season offers the perfect time to sit back and reflect on favorite memories from days gone by. And for the generations of artists and staff members of the Disney Studio, there are many great tales to recall.

There was the especially busy December of 1939, when the Studio was hard at work finishing one of the most technically complicated animated films of all time—Pinocchio. That memorable Christmas Eve, Walt Disney, reportedly, burst through the doors of the Inking and Painting Department in a porkpie hat, pushing a cart filled with wrapped presents for the artists, sharing cheer and appreciation during an especially taxing season.

At D23’s Art of Disney Animation—Featuring Pinocchio event in September, D23 Members had the opportunity to meet four Ink and Paint artists who recalled other favorite memories from their time at the Disney Studio. Here’s an especially “warming” story about our favorite time of all—tea time!