Red-Nosed Zebra From Trader Sam’s Enchanted Tiki Bar at Disneyland Hotel

What do you get when you cross a thirsty zebra with a bottle of rum?

Yule find out! This is the sort of gleeful schtick found at Trader Sam’s Enchanted Tiki Bar at the Disneyland Hotel.

Trader Sam, head salesman of the Amazon Jungle, has an expertise in concocting head-shrinking potions soon and a head for mixology around the holidays. From the North Pole to the South Pole, his travels far and wide allowed him to amass intoxicating ambrosial ingredients for his heady brews.

Ingredients

1.5 ounces Bacardi 8 rum
1/2 ounce fresh lemon juice
1/2 ounce fresh lime juice
1 ounce agave nectar
1 ounce strawberry purée
Crushed ice, 3 cranberries, 2 mint sprigs, for garnish

Preparation

1. Add all ingredients in a Boston Shaker (except garnish), fill half full with ice, and shake vigorously for 10 seconds.
2. Strain into a margarita glass filled with ice. Garnish with a mound of crushed ice, cranberries, and mint sprigs to look like 2 green antlers, cranberries for eyes and nose.

Watch a New Trailer for Strange Magic

Strange Magic, a new animated film from Lucasfilm Ltd., is a madcap fairy tale musical inspired by A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Popular songs from the past six decades help tell the tale of a colorful cast of goblins, elves, fairies and imps, and their hilarious misadventures sparked by the battle over a powerful potion.

Lucasfilm Animation Singapore and Industrial Light & Magic bring to life the fanciful forest turned upside down with world-class animation and visual effects. Directed by Gary Rydstrom from a story by George Lucas, Strange Magic will be released by Touchstone Pictures on January 23, 2015.

Disney ¡Viva Navidad! Returns to Disneyland Resort

The fun, authentic and infectious entertainment of Disney ¡Viva Navidad! adds to the merriment of the Holiday season at the Disneyland Resort, returning this year after its exciting debut in 2013. Guests can enjoy Disney ¡Viva Navidad! now through January 6, 2015 in Disney California Adventure Park, as the Happiest Place on Earth Just Gets Merrier.

Disney ¡Viva Navidad!

This lively holiday experience is inspired by the richness, warmth and joyous spirit of the Latino culture, filled with holiday traditions, jubilant dancing and exciting music. Based in and around the Paradise Garden area of Disney California Adventure, the special activities include live Latino music, holiday foods and crafts, the Disney ¡Viva Navidad! Street Party and, of course, appearances by some popular Disney characters, including Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse and Goofy in their festive costumes along with the Three Caballeros: Donald Duck, Panchito from Mexico and José Carioca from Brazil.

Disney ¡Viva Navidad! Street Party

Paradise Garden is decorated with holly, banners and Latino cultural icons, including traditional “papel picado” hand-cut paper art decorations. At the Paradise Garden bandstand, guests may enjoy performances by traditional Mariachi, Norteño, and other regional music groups. Also at Paradise Garden, community music and folklorico troupes will perform on the weekends.

Chicken Mole in the Disneyland Paradise Garden

Dining locations in Paradise Garden add an array of popular Mexican food options. Menus will feature Mexican dishes that are often served for the holidays, such as fresh seafood ceviche with citrus vinaigrette, pozole (hearty stew), chicken mole, street-style tacos, sopes de Barbacoa (shredded beef), Champurrado (Mexican-style hot chocolate), sweet tamales, torta al pastor (pork sandwich), cinnamon-dusted buñuelos (deep-fried sweet treat) with caramel sauce.

The grand finale of “Disney ¡Viva Navidad!” will be the special five-day celebration of Three Kings Day (Dia de los Reyes) January 2 through 6, 2015 in Paradise Garden. Treats for this holiday will include traditional Rosca de Reyes bread.

Kick Off The Holidays With A Parade

“It all started with the Mickey Mouse balloon,” Bill muses.

“We’ve had a great relationship ever since. The magic between Disney and the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade has spanned the decades.”

“In the spirit of full disclosure,” Bill Schermerhorn, Macy’s Creative Director, starts, “I should tell you that I am a card-carrying member of D23.” So begins our discussion with Bill, who for more than three decades, has been responsible for bringing the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade to the streets of New York each Thanksgiving. “It’s the job you get once in a lifetime,” he says with a chuckle.

Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck celebrate the first anniversary of Walt Disney World at the parade in 1972
Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck celebrate the first anniversary of Walt Disney World at the parade in 1972.

More than 80 years after Macy’s first parade—originally called the Macy’s Christmas Parade and later the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Christmas Parade—the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade is known as the “official” kickoff to the holiday season. And with more than 50 million viewers across the country and the more than 3.5 million spectators who line up along the streets of New York City each year, the three-hour spectacle is nothing short of a national icon.

Mickey Mouse balloon used in the 1934 Macy's Santa Clause Parade
Disney’s tradition of participating in the parade began in 1934—when it was still known as the Macy’s Santa Clause Parade.

According to Bill, his Official Disney Fan Club membership makes perfect sense, as Disney and Macy’s can be considered somewhat of a match made in heaven. “Both Macy’s and Disney believe in high-quality family entertainment,” explains Bill. “It’s a dream come true that we can work together.”

Mickey Mouse balloon used in the Macy's Day Parade

Disney got in on the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Christmas Parade action 10 years after the first one hit the streets. “It all started with the Mickey Mouse balloon,” Bill muses about Disney’s entry. “We’ve had a great relationship ever since. The magic between Disney and the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade has spanned the ages.” Pluto, the Big Bad Wolf, and the Little Pig balloons also debuted that same year.

Bandleader Mickey balloon had the honor of leading the first parade in the new millennium, the year 2000.
Bandleader Mickey balloon had the honor of leading the first parade in the new millennium, the year 2000.

In the decades that followed, Disney continued to pop up in the annual parade with balloons, floats, and special guests entertaining parade attendees and at-home viewers across the country. Some of Disney’s most noteworthy Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade moments include the introduction of an updated Mickey balloon in 1973 and the inclusion of a Santa Goofy balloon in 1993.

Sailor Mickey in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade
Sailor Mickey debuted in the parade in 2009.

But Bill has his own favorite Disney parade moment. “My favorite was not that long ago when we had LeAnn Rimes perform on the showboat float, and we also had several Disney characters on that float with her,” Bill recalls. “What was also great about that moment is that we included children dressed up as their favorite Disney characters. For instance, we had Peter Pan with a little boy dressed as Peter Pan. It was a very special moment that only Disney could do in a Macy’s parade.”

You will have to tune in on Thanksgiving Day to see B.—and all of Disney’s parade participants—in action during this year’s annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. As Bill puts it, “You never know where you’ll find a Disney character.”

Happy Thanksgiving From D23

Thank you for being a D23 Member!

In celebration of this special time of year, we pulled this special treat from the Walt Disney Archives to share with all of you.

Snow White Thanksgiving

This charming Thanksgiving-themed evocation of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs appeared for the first time in November 1951 to help promote the 1952 re-release of the Disney masterpiece in theaters across the country. The classic film bowed late in 1937 and was released again during World War II to help raise revenue for the Studio, which had experienced a slowdown because of the global conflict. The decision to bring the “fairest one of all” back to the big screen was so popular that it began a tradition of re-releasing Disney animated features every seven to 10 years. In total, Snow White has been released in theaters nine times since making its debut.

We look forward to celebrating the holidays with you on D23.com and kicking off our D23 Days of Christmas campaign, starting December 1.

ABC Family’s #PopUpSanta Surprise Giveaways Sweeping the Nation


On ABC’s Good Morning America (GMA), ABC Family announced the network’s ownership of Pop Up Santa (#PopUpSanta), the giveaway craze that launched on November 11 that has been sweeping the nation with holiday cheer.

ABC Family also surprised GMA fans gathered in Times Square with special Pop Up Santa gifts to celebrate the network’s annual “25 Days of Christmas” programming event, which starts December 1. The massive Pop Up Santa initiative features more than 50 local giveaways, surprising lucky passersby with items such as gift cards, cozy accessories to fight the winter cold and even brand-new bicycles. Talent from several of ABC Family’s hit series will surprise fans with products and prizes in fun and festive ways.

Local Pop Up Santa events will continue through December 9 in cities across the United States. ABC Family also debuted today the official Pop Up Santa experience (PopUpSanta.tv), a digital companion to the on-air initiative that allows fans to win Pop Up Santa items even if they do not live in the selected cities. The social experience includes daily Pop Up Santa videos and exclusive content, Disney Store gift baskets, red bicycles, ugly Christmas sweaters, Disney On Ice prize packs and $500 gift cards. Fans are encouraged to spread the cheer and bring Pop Up Santa to life in their own towns by creating their own holiday surprises and submitting photos and videos through the Pop Up Santa social experience.

Pop Up Santa also includes special Disney synergy events with the Country Music Awards, Disney on Ice and the Disney Store that will be featured on-air throughout the “25 Days of Christmas” programming event. Earlier this month, Pretty Little Liars star Lucy Hale surprised one lucky fan and her family in Nashville with tickets to the CMA Country Christmas celebration and a chance to watch Lucy rehearse for the show. CMA Country Christmas airs on ABC Monday, December 1 (8–10 p.m. ET). Also this month, ABC Family fans were presented with a special after-hours surprise at a Disney Store in Montebello, California, where they were challenged with gathering as many toys as they could in an allotted time with the help of ABC Family stars Kym Whitley (Young & Hungry), Aisha Dee and Haley Ramm (Chasing Life). The network then donated a matching monetary gift to Toys for Tots based on all of the toys gathered at the event. The holiday joy continues when ABC Family brings some warmth to Disney On Ice presents Frozen, Presented by Stonyfield YoKids Organic Yogurt at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey. ABC Family is reuniting a special military family on the ice. The family will get the amazing opportunity to participate in a special private pre-show skating party with characters from Disney On Ice presents Frozen and front row seats for the show.

Now in its 17th year, “25 Days of Christmas” is the biggest seasonal programming event on cable and the network’s highest-rated period of the year, reaching nearly 100 million people in 2013. During the annual event, ABC Family airs 25 continuous days of holiday-themed entertainment for the whole family, adding up to over 300 hours of programming. The event includes traditional holiday film favorites and specials and holiday-themed episodes of ABC Family original series. “25 Days of Christmas” kicks off December 1 on ABC Family and runs through December 25.

ABC to Air Backstage with Disney on Broadway: Celebrating 20 Years Hosted by Jesse Tyler Ferguson

In celebration of Disney Theatrical Productions’ 20 years on Broadway, the ABC Television Network will air Backstage with Disney on Broadway: Celebrating 20 Years, airing Sunday, December 14 at 7 p.m. ET and hosted by Broadway veteran Jesse Tyler Ferguson, star of ABC’s Modern Family. This one-hour special, produced by Lincoln Square Productions, takes viewers on a journey through the creation of Disney’s eight Broadway musicals: Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King, AIDA, Tarzan, The Little Mermaid, Mary Poppins, Newsies and Aladdin. The special features new commentary and revealing anecdotes by the stars and theatre professionals about the creation and long runs of these beloved titles.

Backstage with Disney on Broadway: Celebrating 20 Years

Backstage with Disney on Broadway: Celebrating 20 Years also features music from the Disney on Broadway catalog, including special musical performances from Sir Elton John, Sam Palladio and Clare Bowen (ABC’s Nashville), Ashley Brown (Mary Poppins) and Adam Jacobs (Aladdin).

 Ashley Brown (Mary Poppins)

For the first time, viewers have unprecedented access to the fast pace and high stakes world of Broadway. Cameras are backstage during an actual performance of Aladdin during the show-stopping production number “Friend Like Me.” Composer Lebo M leads the ensemble of The Lion King in a special rehearsal, celebrating the show’s South African roots and themes that are the very heart of this landmark musical. The cast of the North American tour of Newsies takes viewers on the road as the tour prepares for its official opening night in Philadelphia, as they “carry the banner” of this unlikely Disney smash hit musical.

The Walt Disney Family Museum Presents All Aboard: A Celebration of Walt’s Trains

The Lilly Belle, as seen in the main galleries at The Walt Disney Family Museum.

The Walt Disney Family Museum is pleased to present All Aboard: A Celebration of Walt’s Trains, on view from November 13, 2014 through February 9, 2015. This comprehensive exhibition explores the influence that railroading had on Walt Disney’s life and work. It also tells the story of how his railroading legacy lives on to this day in Disney films and theme parks around the world. Including more than 200 artifacts, firsthand accounts, archival videos, images of Walt and his trains, and actual model trains running throughout the show, All Aboard highlights how Walt’s passion for trains developed long before manifesting itself in Disney short cartoons, feature films, and in Walt’s personal life at home.

Walt Disney with the Lilly Belle steam train in 1951
Walt Disney with the Lilly Belle steam train in 1951, located at his home in Holmby Hills, California.

Guest curator Michael Campbell, president of the Carolwood Pacific Historical Society, constructed the exhibition to reflect Walt’s railroad journey as told through multiple chapters: Lighting the Fire, Building Steam, Gaining Speed, Full Throttle, Switching Tracks, Branching Out, A Grand Circle Tour Around The World, and Coming Full Circle. The exhibition’s conclusion reminds us that, even over a century later, Walt’s railroading influence remains as a vibrant and relevant force.

Walt, Diane, and Sharon at his barn.
Walt, Diane, and Sharon at his barn.

In the early 1900s, trains weren’t just a means of transportation; they were a lifeline and critical to the development of the United States. Walt’s father Elias, along with his Uncle Mike, worked on the railroad. This instigated Walt’s fascination of railroading. One of Walt’s earliest jobs was as a news butcher for a few months in 1916, selling magazines and snacks on the Missouri Pacific, Kansas City Southern, and the Missouri-Kansas-Texas railroads. About this experience, Walt said: “My railroad career was brief, exciting, and unprofitable.” Little did he know that a number of his later successes would involve railroading, in both his personal and professional lives.

Walt Disney's Lilly Belle assembly drawing
Carolwood Pacific Railroad’s Lilly Belle assembly drawing.

During a cross-country rail trip to New York in early 1928, Walt not only lost his cartoon star Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, but also half of his animation staff to his film distributor. Before boarding the return train to California, Walt sent his brother Roy a telegram: “Don’t worry, everything OK.” On the train home, Walt contemplated a new character—a mouse, which he named Mortimer. His wife Lillian had a different idea, and, with their collaboration on a name, Mickey Mouse was born.

Mickey Mouse in a steam train cab from the 1929 short Mickey's Choo-Choo.
Mickey Mouse in a steam train cab from the 1929 short Mickey’s Choo-Choo.

After Mickey’s debut in Steamboat Willie on November 18, 1928, he would star with a train in the 1929 short Mickey’s Choo-Choo. Trains would also make appearances in future Disney shorts and films, either as plot devices or as characters of their own—with The Brave Engineer (1950) and Casey Jr. from the 1941 classic Dumbo. In the move to live-action films, it was inevitable that the Studios began featuring more trains, including the ones seen in So Dear to My Heart and The Great Locomotive Chase. Around this time, Walt also fulfilled a long-time desire: He bought and built a tabletop model train layout in his office suite, running it whenever he had a spare moment. He enjoyed showing it off to visitors, including some of his own animators who were train buffs themselves.

E.P. Ripley on the Disneyland Railroad in 1955.
Walt Disney riding the E.P. Ripley on the Disneyland Railroad in 1955.

In July of 1948, Walt boarded a train to attend the Chicago Railroad Fair. In addition to being invited to participate in the “Wheels-a-Rolling” pageant—where classic trains paraded by—Walt was deeply moved by the recreation of the funeral train for the president he most admired: Abraham Lincoln. Also, after visiting the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan on his way back to California, Walt was impressed and inspired by the attractions of this park, which included a 4-4-0 locomotive that pulled guests around the estate. When he returned home, Walt constructed his own steam engine—a 1/8th scale model, that he named the Lilly Belle in honor of his wife Lillian. This train circled on a half-mile track, looping around his home in Holmby Hills. Also at this time, he began documenting ideas for a “Mickey Mouse Park,” a family park he would build that would include a railroad station.

Casey Jr. story sketch from Dumbo.
Casey Jr. story sketch from Dumbo.

Walt was undeniably a great storyteller. So it came as no surprise when he used railroading as a tool to fully immerse his audience in stories planted throughout his Magic Kingdom: Disneyland. In all of the Park’s lands, locomotives served a greater purpose than just transportation. They were also essential elements to the story, responsible for helping guests imagine themselves part of an American train voyage at the turn of the 20th Century.

Walt Disney riding on his Carolwood Pacific train
Walt Disney riding on his Carolwood Pacific train around The Walt Disney Studios in 1951.

The journey of this exhibition doesn’t start and end with just Walt, though. All Aboard also explores the interest and passion for railroading of Walt’s friends and staff, including two of Walt’s “Nine Old Men,” animators Ward Kimball and Ollie Johnston. Notably, Kimball was the first private owner of a full-sized steam locomotive, and Johnston’s railroading hobby was latent until he stumbled upon the miniature train Walt was building in his office. Showcased alongside the animators are WED Enterprises’ Imagineers—”Imagination Engineers”—Roger Broggie and Bob Gurr, whose creative locomotives helped Walt transport his guests throughout Disneyland, and later, the Magic Kingdom Park in the Walt Disney World Resort.

Walt Disney on Kalamazoo handcar
Walt on Kalamazoo handcar.

Finally, All Aboard will reveal how Walt’s railroad legacy continues today. Guests will learn how Disney theme parks and films continue to honor trains and railroading, from recent creations to those that have yet to be imagined.

Five Celebrity Moments That Made D23 Fanniversary Celebration 2014 Extra Special

For the third year in a row, D23 will hit the road with D23 Disney Fanniversary Celebration presented by Walt Disney Records The Legacy Collection, visiting cities across the U.S. to commemorate dozens of magical Disney milestones celebrating landmark anniversaries this year. We’ve pulled together five of our favorite celebrity moments from this year’s show. Enjoy!

The 1964-65 New York World’s Fair attraction “it’s a small world” brought together the artistry of Disney’s most talented designers at the time. Mary Blair added a simple elegance to the attraction’s overall look and details, and Alice Davis created the ornate costumes for the dolls. Collaborating with Mary Blair, Alice researched, designed, and supervised the creation of more than 150 highly detailed costumes for the Audio-Animatronics children of the world.

Walt Disney Television Animation, which celebrates its 30th anniversary in November 2014, had its first big success with the Disney Afternoon. To tell you how it all came about we tracked down one of the first writers assigned to Disney’s Adventures of the Gummi Bears and The Wuzzles—the start of what would soon become Disney Afternoon television programming.

The year 2014 marks the 35th anniversary of The Muppet Movie. This was the first Muppet feature film and audiences learned how the Muppet family came together and moved to Hollywood. Here to tell you more about this storied life in Hollywood is none other than Kermit the Frog.

Disneyland’s Big Thunder Mountain Railroad celebrates its 35th anniversary this year. The inspiration for Big Thunder Mountain and the specific canyon that is based on has a pretty interesting back-story. To tell you all about it, we went to the home of a famous Disney Imagineering Legend to hear more.

We all know Marvel for its blockbuster movies like The Avengers, Iron Man, Captain America, and many others, but those characters have a deep history that started 75 years ago, when their business was comic books. And to take a look at the entire Marvel Universe, we talked to a man whose name has become synonymous with some of the most iconic superheroes that leapt off of comic book pages and onto the silver screens of Hollywood.