When Mickey’s Career Turned a Page

It’s hard to imagine a world without an international icon as widely adored as Mickey Mouse. While the first series of Mickey cartoons brought instant fame to the cheerful personality in the late 1920s, it would take even more to elevate the new character on the block to his status as an enduring cultural symbol.

Enter the 1930s, when more than 100 Mickey shorts hit theaters, licensed Mickey products become the newest sensation in character merchandising, and upward of a million children gathered at local Mickey Mouse Clubs across the U.S. But just as important was Mickey’s first entry into families’ homes on a day-to-day basis via the Mickey Mouse comic strip, which made its debut 85 years ago today.

The popular Mickey cartoons piqued the interest of J.V. Connelly of King Features Syndicate, who proposed the release of a Mickey Mouse comic strip as early as June 1929. The Disney Studio soon went to work on extending Mickey’s adventures onto the pages of newspapers, with Walt Disney writing the stories and Ub Iwerks creating the drawings.

Mickey becomes inspired to build an airplane in the first Mickey Mouse comic strip, first distributed Monday, January 13, 1930.

The first comic strip arrived on January 13, 1930 and, incidentally, followed a similar storyline to the first Mickey cartoon produced—Plane Crazy (1928), which Ub had animated all by himself. In the strip, our ambitious hero is again inspired by Charles Lindbergh to pursue the building of his own airplane. (How could anything go wrong with that idea?)

After drawing the first 24 strips, Ub’s responsibilities were given to inker Win Smith. By May, aspiring in-between artist Floyd Gottfredson had taken over the comic strip, and he would continue the series until his retirement 45 years later!

“Floyd played a major role in getting Disney’s new character, Mickey Mouse, known throughout the world by producing Mickey’s daily comic strip,” recalls Walt Disney Archives founder and Disney Legend Dave Smith. “Of the early Disney employees I met, Floyd was probably the greatest gentleman of them all.”

By the summer of 1930, the comic strip appeared in up to 40 newspapers across nearly two-dozen countries, helping to usher in Mickey’s golden age and establish the mouse as the foundation and universally recognized symbol of the Disney organization.

Browse the rest of the first week of the Mickey Mouse comic strip below:

Part 1 of Mickey Mouse's first comic strip, distributed Monday, January 13, 1930.

Part 1 of Mickey Mouse's first comic strip, distributed Monday, January 13, 1930.

Part 2 of Mickey Mouse's first comic strip, distributed Monday, January 13, 1930.

Part 3 of Mickey Mouse's first comic strip, distributed Monday, January 13, 1930.

Part 4 of Mickey Mouse's first comic strip, distributed Monday, January 13, 1930.

Part 5 of Mickey Mouse's first comic strip, distributed Monday, January 13, 1930.

Make Your Disney Fan Resolutions for 2015

This week we asked D23 Members what Disney resolutions they have for the New Year, and found out that a lot of you have big goals!

Disneyland Club 33

Amber wants to dine at Club 33 at Disneyland.


 

Disney Marvel Avengers Infinity
Dennis from Boras, Sweden wants to finish eight Disney books, buy Disney Infinity (2.0 Edition), and save up for a trip to Disneyland.


 

Halloween at Walt Disney World Resort
Ruud from Rotterdam, Netherlands is excited to celebrate Halloween at Walt Disney World Resort!


 

Finding Nemo Illustration
Jakob from Tampa, Florida wants to improve his art skills so that he can be a Disney animator someday!


 

Walt Disney World Marathon
Miriah from Easton, Pennsylvania set the goal of finishing the Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend 5K and 10K runs, and still be standing on her own two feet!


 

Disneyland Resort
Kristin from Long Beach, California is going to visit Disneyland Resort at least 100 times!


 

Star Wars the Force Awakens
Matthew is going to watch the entire Star Wars saga in one week before The Force Awakens comes out.


 

Rollercoaster ride in Magic Kingdom Park
Sarah from Brookhaven, Mississippi is going to try to ride every attraction at Magic Kingdom Park in one day in March.


 

D23 EXPO 2015
Derek from Seattle, Washington can’t wait to go to D23 Expo 2015, his first D23 Expo! We’re excited to see you there, Derek!


Walt Disney Family Museum in San Francisco
Denise from Denver, CO plans to visit The Walt Disney Family Museum in San Francisco.

Good luck with all of your resolutions, and make sure to share them with us as you achieve your Disney goals! We love seeing your photos on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. Happy New Year!

Resolutions Disney Characters Might Consider Making for 2016

Happy New Year from D23!

We’ve enjoyed learning about D23 Members’ New Year’s Resolutions, some of which are pretty ambitious and inspiring! That got us thinking about some of our favorite Disney characters, and we couldn’t help but ponder some resolutions they might consider making in 2016.

Donald Duck

Donald Duck—Take anger management classes. Donald can always be depended on to say what’s on his mind, but he’s been known to cause some mayhem with his quick temper from time to time. Maybe Timon and Pumba could teach him a little Hakuna Matata?


 

Cruella De Vil (101 Dalmatians)
Cruella De Vil (101 Dalmatians)—Switch to faux fur. Faux is all the rage this season, and let’s face it, if there’s one thing you know about, it’s rage.


 

Gaston (Beauty and the Beast)
Gaston (Beauty and the Beast)—Consider a little less excess. Instead of eating five dozen eggs, maybe think about a three-egg omelet with some veggies? How about one set of antlers for decorating, tastefully placed? It must be exhausting to love yourself that much. You’ve got that swell cleft in your chin—work with that, and forget about the rest.


 

Elsa (Frozen)
Elsa (Frozen)—Take Olaf to the tropics. We already know she has a warm heart, but after so much work defending her kingdom and learning to control her powers, we feel it’s time for a nice Caribbean vacation. May we suggest a Disney Cruise? And please take Olaf—we’re sure he’d like to see a place where it’s summer year-round!


 

Dory from Finding Nemo
Dory (Finding Nemo)—Keep a journal. We’ve all made resolutions to start a blog or keep a diary, but Dory is a Disney character that could really benefit from it. Imagine how much easier her life would be if she could look back at what she did yesterday! We can see it now: “January 9, 2016—Just kept swimming, just kept swimming…”


 

Charlotte (The Princess and the Frog)
Charlotte (The Princess and the Frog)—Learn to cook. Charlotte won’t be able to depend on Tiana for “man-catching beignets” forever! And besides, a girl can only survive for so long on PB&J and frozen dinners (trust us, we’ve tried).


 

Sebastian (The Little Mermaid)
Sebastian (The Little Mermaid)—Take it easy once in a while! It’s obviously a huge responsibility to be an advisor to King Triton, but Sebastian needs to learn to relax before he turns into a steamed crab! Maybe a few days of pampering in Prince Eric’s castle would do him some good (as long as the chef’s not around).


 

Statler and Waldorf (Muppets)
Statler and Waldorf (Muppets)—Try to look on the bright side! You guys may not think Fozzie’s comedy routines are funny, but we’re sure you can find something to like about them. Hey, at least it’s not Miss Piggy up there, right? And if his jokes put you to sleep, be grateful you got a good nap out of it.


 

Oogie Boogie (The Nightmare Before Christmas)
Oogie Boogie (The Nightmare Before Christmas)—Give Valentine’s Day a try. Based on the Sandy Claws kidnapping incident, it’s clear that Oogie Boogie needs to visit a holiday that’s more focused on love and less focused on being scary. We suggest Valentine’s Day, and maybe a quick stop at Christmastown to apologize on the way back home.

Disney’s Other “Practically Perfect” Nanny Returns for a Fourth Season of Jessie

Disney Channel’s hit series Jessie stars Debby Ryan as a young girl who’s left Texas to pursue big dreams in New York City, while working as a nanny to the Ross family and their four kids, Emma, Ravi, Luke, and Zuri.

The show returns for its fourth season this Friday, January 9 (8:30 p.m. ET/PT) with an episode that has the Ross kids convinced that Jessie is headed to Africa to rekindle her relationship with her ex-fiancé, Brooks. In an effort to stop her, the kids make the trip to Africa and quickly find themselves on a wild adventure.

D23 sat down with the cast in the Ross family’s screening room soon after their special appearance on an episode of Marvel’s Ultimate Spider-Man: Web Warrior—as animated versions of themselves. We talked to them about what other animated Disney movies or TV shows they’d like to appear in, as well as about what a certain other iconic Disney nanny might make of their characters.

D23: You recently had the seemingly once-in-a-lifetime experience of being animated for an episode of Marvel’s Ultimate Spider-Man: Web Warrior. If you could be animated again for any other Disney movie or TV show, which one would it be, and why?
Karan Brar (Ravi): You know what I think is cool? They have the little Mickey Mouse shorts. I think those are hilarious—I think I’d stick myself in there. Who doesn’t want to hang out with Mickey Mouse?

Cameron Boyce (Luke): The Jungle Book. Mowgli and I would be besties!

Skai Jackson (Zuri): I would like to be in Snow White. Or even Cinderella, to maybe be one of Cinderella’s friends and be a princess. That would be pretty cool!

Peyton List (Emma): I just learned recently that Snow White was one of the first Disney movies to be nominated for an Academy Award® and that would be so cool, to be a part of that as something—as any one of the voices. But my favorite Disney movie will always be The Little Mermaid, just because that was my favorite when I was little. I grew up with that one.

Debby Ryan (Jessie): I would love to work background in The Lion King. I’d just love to be wandering the savanna; like maybe holding a map and wearing a fanny pack. Just in the back of some scene. I think that would be epic. And no one talks about it. It would be great. It would be like, “Well, she wandered away…”

Cast from Disney Channel's Jessie television show

D23: Jessie and Mary Poppins are probably the two most famous nannies in the world of Disney. What do you think Mary Poppins would make of your character?
Cameron Boyce: Julie Andrews was really pretty. Luke would probably crush on Mary Poppins just as hard as he does Jessie! Mary Poppins is probably a lot more strict than Jessie… Luke might actually learn some manners or bathe every once in a while.

Karan Brar: I think Mary Poppins might be very intimidating when you first meet her. But Ravi gets geeky, and I think sometimes he gets a little bit insecure about that. But I think Mary Poppins would encourage him to go out there and be himself, because he’s already a respectful kid and he’s also very curious. I think Mary Poppins would just encourage that!

Skai Jackson: I think Mary Poppins actually would have a hard time with Zuri, because Zuri can be really sassy. But I think that she would eventually get used to Zuri and have fun taking her on adventures, which would be pretty cool.

Peyton List: All of the kids kind of give a little sass to Jessie. We always joke about it, but I think that Mary Poppins would be like, “Uh-uh—not going to happen!” I feel like she’s a little bit more proper. I think she would definitely make us eat more vegetables. Although she did say that just a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down…

D23: What might Jessie learn from Mary Poppins?
Debby Ryan: Jessie could use one of those bags, for sure! I feel like I never have enough hands for all of the things that I need to carry. I think that there’s a certain no-nonsense quality about Mary Poppins, that people trust that she has their best interests in mind. So even if she says to do something like “Take this medicine,” or whatever it is that people wouldn’t necessarily want to do, people know that she has such conviction in wanting the best for them.

Watch a Teaser for Ant-Man During Tonight’s Marvel’s Agent Carter Premiere


Watch the Debut of Marvel’s Agent Carter Tonight—
And Get a First Look at Ant-Man

Tonight is the night we’ve been waiting for—the two-hour series premiere of Marvel’s Agent Carter. But leave it to our friends at Marvel to take a special event and make it even more special! After literally teasing us last week with an ant-sized version of the first teaser for Ant-Man, they’ve announced that we can put down our magnifying glass (Oh, yes we did!) and watch a human-sized teaser for the film tonight. Marvel’s Agent Carter airs at 8 p.m. ET/PT (and 7 p.m. CT) on ABC, and Ant-Man opens in theaters July 17. And in the meantime, enjoy the teaser preview above!


Save the Date!

Be sure to mark these upcoming Disney events on your calendar:

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
Fall 2014-2015
D23 Member Nights and Upcoming Events
August 14-16, 2015
D23 Expo 2015 returns to Anaheim, California

Television
January 6
Marvel’sAgent Carter premieres on ABC at 9 p.m. ET
January 18
K.C. Undercover premieres on Disney Channel at 9:00 a.m. ET/PT
February 6
Miles from Tomorrowland premieres on Disney Channel at 8:30 p.m. ET/PT
Parks
January 7
Frozen Fun celebrates its official launch at Disneyland Resort.
March 4–May 17
22nd Epcot International Flower & Garden Festival.
May 15–June 14
Star Wars Weekends Returns to Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
Studios
February 20
MacFarland, USA opens in theaters.
March 13
Cinderella opens in theaters.
April 17
Disneynature’s Monkey Kingdom opens in theaters.
May 1
Avengers: Age of Ultron opens in theaters.
May 22
Tomorrowland opens in theaters.
June 19
Inside Out opens in theaters (along with the short Lava).
July 7
Ant Man opens in theaters.

 

Midnight Changes Everything!

The most iconic midnight of the year—New Year’s Eve—featured a glimpse at one of the most iconic midnights ever with the official sneak peek at the teaser for Disney’s Cinderella. But you can see even more of the stunningly beautiful film and its stunningly beautiful cast, which includes Lily James, Richard Madden, and Cate Blanchett, in this new featurette. The film opens in theaters March 13, 2015.


 

Go Deeper Into the Woods with This New Featurette

Have you seen Into the Woods yet? Are you singing the title song over and over again in your heads, like we are? In this new featurette, you can hear the cast sing the song again—and also hear director Rob Marshall, author James Lapine, composer Stephen Sondheim, and actors James Corden, Emily Blunt, Johnny Depp, and Meryl Streep talk about expanding the world created in the original stage production into an even bigger, thoroughly cinematic experience.


 

Buzz Lightyear and Tim Allen
To Infinity and… Walt Disney World!

Actor and comedian Tim Allen paid a visit to Walt Disney World on December 31, 2014 and, of course, he couldn’t help but stop by the Pizza Planet restaurant at Disney’s Hollywood Studios theme park, where he was photographed alongside the character he’s voiced in all of the Toy Story films, Buzz Lightyear.


 

Zendaya goes undercover
Zendaya Goes Undercover and Miles Blasts Off in New Series Coming to Disney Channel

The new year is starting with two new series premiering on Disney Channel. First up is K.C. Undercover, which first airs Sunday, January 18 (8:30 p.m. ET/PT) and stars Zendaya in a live-action, spy-comedy series for kids, tweens, and families. Zendaya plays K.C. Cooper, a high school math whiz and karate black-belt who learns that her parents (played by Kadeem Hardison and Tammy Townsend) are spies when they recruit her to join them in the secret government agency, The Organization. Using the latest spy gadgets, K.C. and her parents try to balance everyday family life while on undercover missions, near and far, to save the world.


 

Miles from Tomorrowland
Miles from Tomorrowland follows a family on a different kind of mission.

The animated Disney Junior series, debuting on Disney Channel Friday, February 6 (9 a.m. ET/PT), incorporates real space and science facts into storylines that chart the outer space missions of young adventurer Miles Callisto and his family as they help connect the galaxy on behalf of the Tomorrowland Transit Authority. Experts from NASA, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and Google serve as consultants; and the stellar voice cast includes Olivia Munn, Adrian Grenier, and Mark Hamill.

Happy New Year From Pleasure Island

At Pleasure Island, every night was New Year’s Eve,

… and we brought it back for a special performance at Destination D: Attraction Rewind. To celebrate New Year’s Eve 2015, we’re taking you back to The Adventurers Club and Comedy Warehouse to dance, sing, and laugh the night away one more time.

14 FAN-tastic Moments of 2014

This year was huge for Disney fans!

We’ve watched as Frozen took the world by storm, dogs took over the Magic Kingdom, and Jack Skellington crept back into theaters around the country. Need a recap? We looked back at the entire year and figured out which stories D23 Members geeked out about the most. Here’s the top 14 FAN-tastic Disney moments of 2014, in the order that they happened.

1. The Hunchback of Notre Dame comes to the American stage

We found out it was debuting at La Jolla Playhouse in January, and in November D23 Members were among the first to see the show at a VIP event!


 

2. Frozen wins big at the Oscars

Robert Lopez Frozen Songwriter wins an Oscar
No one was more excited than Disney fans when Frozen took home the Oscars for Best Animated Feature Film and Best Original Song for “Let It Go,” which made songwriter Robert Lopez an EGOT.


 

3. New Cars and The Incredibles films are in the works

The Incredibles
Ka-chow! Lightning McQueen and Mater will return in another Cars film, and soon we’ll find out what the Parr Family, aka The Incredibles are up to.


 

4. First look at a new Cinderella

A slipper is worth a thousand words! The first teaser for Cinderella, out March 13, 2015, took our breath away.


 

5. 101 lucky dogs visit Magic Kingdom Park

101 dogs visit Magic Kingdom Park
Pluto and Goofy weren’t the only canines in the kingdom on August 30, when pups took over the park!


 

6. The Nightmare Before Christmas returns to theaters

Nightmare Before Christmas
Jack and Sally came back for Halloween, with a limited theatrical engagement in theaters across the country.


 

7. D23 Member creates Disney-inspired bento boxes

Disney inspired Bento box
Mike, a D23 Member we met in Philadelphia, makes incredible edible creations as a part of his quest to eat healthier!


 

8. New Disney Fairy Tale Wedding gowns hit the runway

Disney fairy tale wedding gowns
Something blue has never looked better! From Ariel to Elsa, these stunning gowns made our jaws drop.


 

9. Walt Disney Animation Studios sets sail for Moana

Walt Disney Studios Moana
Disney’s next animated journey will take fans to Oceania to for a nautical adventure in search of a fabled island.


 

10. D23 Celebrates 25 years of The Little Mermaid

Directors Ron Clements and John Musker joined D23 Members for “an afternoon under the sea.”


 

11. The Marvel Cinematic Universe expands with nine new films

Marvel Universe New Films
Doctor Strange!? Captain Marvel!? Our heads are still spinning from the super excitement of this huge announcement.


 

12. The gang is coming back for Toy Story 4

Toy Story 4
Woody, Buzz, and the rest of the crew from Andy’s room are returning for another film directed by John Lasseter.


 

13. Star Wars Episode VI gets a title

Star Wars Episode VI The Force Awakens
The Force Awakens. ‘Nuff said.


 

14. Anna and Elsa back in theaters in 2015

Disney Frozen Fever
We’ll never be able to let it go. Frozen Fever, a new animated short, will debut with Cinderella.

Galavant’s Music Maker

There’s a new hero riding into town, and his name is Galavant.

But like all great heroes, there’s a power behind the throne. And in the case of ABC’s new comedy, it’s a musical powerhouse—Disney Legend and Grammy and Academy Award-winner Alan Menken. The series—starring Joshua Sasse as the titular character who is on a quest to reclaim his lost love Madalena (Mallory Jansen) from the evil King Richard (Timothy Omundson)—features more than 30 songs by the team of Menken and his Tangled co-writer Glenn Slater. Menken took the time to talk with D23 about the new show—which premieres Sunday, January 4—some of his Disney favorites, and the legacy of his collaboration with the late Howard Ashman.

Q: How did you come to Galavant?

A: It started with Tangled where Dan Fogelman was the writer. I didn’t really know Dan at all when I started working with him. I got to know him. I learned he’s really smart, he’s really funny… and I learned he really didn’t know a lot about musicals. We had a great collaboration. I sort of assumed having put him through the mill for two years the last thing he’d want to do was another musical. A few years later, he was doing The Neighbors [for ABC] and he wanted to do a musical episode and asked if I would want to write the songs. I said, “Yeah!” The next thing you know, Glenn Slater and I were writing these song for The Neighbors and while it was going on, people were saying, “You guys ought to find a musical series to do at ABC.” Then Dan sent me and Glenn an idea he had called Galavant. We liked the idea. From there it went!

Q: How fast were you writing songs?

A: We were doing them about two a week on average. Some weeks, more. Like anything else, it started slower and moved faster as we all became used to the process. By the end we were jetting them out, one a day.

Q: The songs in Galavant are almost a throwback to your show Little Shop [of Horrors] in that they are a lot more cheeky than some of your work for Disney which has been — often times —more earnest.

A: Absolutely. This is much more of a comic premise. The medium of sitcoms is definitely edgier than the medium of animated musicals. Not to say that Hunchback of Notre Dame didn’t push that—on the darker side, not on the funny side. Galavant has a little more Little Shop/Sister Act sensibility… a little of the Aladdin sensibility that we had for the Broadway show.

Q: Is it more challenging or more freeing when you get to do that?

A: I found it freeing. I loved it. It’s almost immediate gratification. You write a song and you have to go right into production.

Alan Menken, Tangled Composer, singing at a piano

Q: You’ve been to many D23 events at this point, can you talk a little bit about your experience with the fans at some of the events such as the Expo or Destination D?

A: I always have a wonderful experience in a theater—or wherever I am—and people express how much my work has meant to them. D23 is kind of that on steroids. There’s an overwhelming sense of passion in people who celebrate the Disney oeuvre, the Disney work. They appreciate all of it. They elevate you to a status that you may not even consider that you’ve earned. You have to leave those things and readjust your head and bring it back to normal size.

Q: Why do you feel like Disney fans will love Galavant?

A: It’s really tuneful and eclectic. There are so many different styles. There’s swashbuckling hero style to Broadway kickline, to ’80s rock ‘n’ roll to tongue-in-cheek ballads to klezmer to swing music to English music hall to a wink at the Beatles and Queen… you name it! And there’s emotion in it, too. And the emotion comes through along with the humor.

Joshua Sasse

Q: Are there some songs you’ve written for Galavant that you feel have that “Disney song” resonance, that Disney fans will immediately gravitate to?

A: There’s a song called “Goodnight, My Friend” sung by the character of King Richard. People may think it’s sweet in a way I think Disney fans may love.

Q: I am sure it’s like picking a favorite child, but do you have a favorite Disney song that you wrote?

A: No. I could say “Under the Sea” because that kind of broke the mold and won the Oscar. Then there’s “Beauty and the Beast,” which is so iconic. And “A Whole New World,” which is the most successful of any of them. There’s “Colors of the Wind,” which on an adult level has such importance to people. “Friend Like Me…” I can’t! There’s a lot of them. The earliest ones made, I suppose have the most impact. But when I look at “That’s How You Know” or “I See the Light” I feel as proud of those as I do of the early ones.”

Q: What’s your favorite Disney song that you didn’t write?

A: I love the score for Song of the South. There’s wonderful joy in that score. The songs from Peter Pan. There’s all kinds of levels that people enjoy songs. Some are the songs themselves. Some are where you were in your life when you heard the song. Or the memories it brings back to you. It’s hard to pinpoint just one.

Q: What was it like getting to see Hunchback [of Notre Dame] come to life at La Jolla Playhouse?

A: It was fantastic. It’s not the Disney animated film at all. It has some of the basic songs and storyline, but it is a more adult experience. And it was fantastic. I’m looking forward to seeing it at the Paper Mill Playhouse, and hopefully there will be a future for it… it has a lot of emotional power to it. I was working on Hunchback at the same time I was working on [the Broadway production of] Aladdin. Oh my God! If these aren’t polar opposites, I don’t know what is. Aladdin is so much a funny pastiche with some emotion to it. Hunchback is so much a really adult story and musical with really deep undertones.”

Joshua Sasse in Galavant

Q: You’ve pretty much created about 50% of the Disney songbook. Is there a key to writing a “Disney song”?

A: I think it’s, number one, being really true to the story, being very specific in style, and being specific to the character. Definitely wearing your heart on your sleeve when it’s appropriate. Being clever and fun. One part of the Disney animated musicals is that they’re smart. People think, “Aw, they’re sweet.” But a lot of smarts go into making these animated musicals. I may be the common denominator in those, but it’s not about me. It’s about those characters, that story. Maybe it was fortuitous that Howard Ashman and I were the first and so we got to put our stamp on this new era. Whatever it is, it’s hard to distinguish what is Menken in terms of my style of writing, and what is “Disney.”

Q: You mention Howard. He was a tremendous partner in your work. Can you talk a little about what made your collaboration so special?

A: First of all, most of my collaborators have elements of Howard in them in terms of what we do together. It’s just simply that Howard was the best of the bunch. There was an intelligence, an emotional intensity, a 1,000 percent belief in the form and storytelling. A hipness—Howard was very, very smart about using specific stylistic choices. Be they doo-wop and Motown, calypso, French music hall… You have a very, very adult sensibility channeling a child within him. That’s what the best artists do. Howard had this amazing duality, of smart/cynical/hip/funny adult and a child full of wonder. He was able to combine those in a very unique way.”

Q: It must be satisfying, if a little melancholy, more than two decades after his passing to see your work still being appreciated as Mermaid celebrates its 25th anniversary and Aladdin a hit on Broadway this year.

A: Yes, it always is. It obviously get a little easier with time because we’re all getting older and further from that moment in time. There’s been a lot of work with a lot of collaborators since. Whatever awareness Howard’s spirit has, I have to think there’s a great sense of peace in that he’s accomplished so much after his passing. I like to think that.

Alan Menken Becomes a Disney Legend

D23 Reveals 2015 Membership Gift

As 2014 comes to an end, D23 is excited to announce its 2015 Annual Member Gift: a reproduction of a rarely seen Disneyland pitch portfolio.

The gift, created in honor of the 60th anniversary of Disneyland, is based on an original piece of artwork from the Walt Disney Archives collection that features more than 20 pieces of stunning concept artwork used to sell the park to prospective licensees on the East Coast.

Uniquely colored photographic reproductions of artwork that was originally designed by such artists as Bruce Bushman, Peter Ellenshaw, Harper Goff, and Herb Ryman have been recreated in the gift. “These beautiful and detailed works of art served to convince organizations to bring their businesses and products to the park,” writes Disney Legend and Walt Disney Archives founder Dave Smith on a notecard included with each gift, “forging relationships that helped bring Walt’s dream for Disneyland to reality.”

The gift will be available to all members who join—or renew their 2014 membership—at the Gold level in 2015.

For more information about the benefits of D23 Membership, click here.