Director Patrick Osborne Talks About the Latest Disney Dog in Feast

As Winston joins the dogs of Disney past (and future), director Patrick Osborne reflects on the influences of what’s come before. “There’s this idea of a story that can be told through pantomime, that doesn’t need the words at all,” he continues. “It’s all part of a Disney tradition: You can show it to people and they can connect to it in any language.”

Q&A with the Creators of Big Hero 6 ►

“There’s something special dinner.” According to Patrick, that’s the simple inspiration for the charming new Walt Disney Animation Studios short Feast that debuts in front of Big Hero 6.

Director Patrick Osborne
With its graphic shapes and bright colors, Feast, as the title suggests, is a tale about food. But it’s also a love story and a life story experienced through canine eyes, as peppy pup Winston accompanies his human on a relationship roller coaster.

Winston from animated film "Feast"
The concept for the short was simple, but the planning was complex. Everything had to be boiled down to its most essential form. “The first couple iterations ended up being more conventional, camera-wise.” Patrick adds. “It wasn’t until we came back to the focus of the pitch, that we realized food should be the center of every shot.” The menu included everyday favorites like pepperoni pizza versus a barbeque chicken pizza, for instance. “You want to tell as much story as you can in as little time as possible,” production designer Jeff Turley explains.

Feast‘s epicurean storyline aptly transcends language. After all, what’s more universal than food?

How Science Influenced the Creators of Big Hero 6

The visionaries behind Walt Disney Animation Studios’ Big Hero 6, directors Don Hall and Chris Williams and producer Roy Conli, immersed themselves inside a brand-new world…

. . . one that sounds somewhat familiar, yet slightly off—San Fransokyo. This Friday, November 7, audiences around the world will travel to the high-tech locale, and meet Hiro, Baymax, and the rest of the Big Hero 6 cast.

Director Patrick Osborne Talks About the Latest Disney Dog in Feast ►

But before the film hits the big screen, the trio talks to D23 about their experience (they went to Tokyo and San Francisco for their research trips!) and other stories from production.

Big Hero 6 San Fransokyo

Live-action superhero films often make audiences feel like their movies’ powerful figures exist in our world, but you don’t quite have those constraints with animation. How does that affect the direction you take with this kind of story?
RC:
I wouldn’t say we don’t have those constraints because one of the big tenets that we work under is we want to make our story logical. We did an amazing amount of research, from the medical aspects of Baymax to the powers of what superhero suits can do; it’s all kind of based on actual science. And early on, we spent a fair amount of time at Carnegie Mellon and MIT. I think it’s really important to base your story in the truth.

How were you able to find a perfect balance between Eastern and Western styles?
Don Hall (DH):
It was actually kind of a fun challenge. John [Lasseter, chief creative officer, Walt Disney and Pixar Animation Studios] is always encouraging us to create new worlds, and we could’ve set the story in San Francisco or Tokyo, but the idea of kind of making up our own world was far too enticing. We feel that it’s creatively more fun to set this story in a world that’s more of a mash-up. And once we went on our research trips to Tokyo and San Francisco, things would just start popping up. It gave us nice guidelines to follow.

Big Hero 6 Baymax and Hiro

How did your team work together with Marvel to bring this story to life?
DH:
Marvel really encouraged us to take Big Hero 6 and just do our thing with it. And from the beginning, they were very, very gracious with their property to let us do that.
Roy Conli (RC): It’s been great because Joe Quesada and Jeph Loeb, who are two major creative players at Marvel, would come to all of our screenings and share notes with us. It’s just been an amazing relationship.

Chris Williams and Roy Conli

What was so special about the journey of making Big Hero 6?
Chris Williams (CW):
I’ve been here 20 years, and every movie is exciting because each presents us with its own set of challenges. And a lot of this journey involved finding the personality of this movie that would be all encompassing, that would make everything play nicely together. We challenged each other a lot, and there was a lot of wiggling, changing, and adjusting. Then we got to this place where it’s like, “Hallelujah, it works, all these things work!” It’s like a meal. You can have all these wonderful ingredients, but you can’t just pour them in the same amount in the meal and expect it to taste good. You have to kind of balance it out and figure out what’s there!

Big Hero 6 Baymax and Hiro

What did you find that you could do with a superhero story through animation that makes it unique and different from live action?
DH:
It was really important early on that nobody’s really super powerful. Nobody can fly; nobody got bombarded with gamma rays or, you know, cosmic rays or anything else. The characters are all normal people who are really smart and have access to technology. And so I thought that was important because I wanted to ground it in a certain reality and put limitations on the characters. Go Go, for instance, racing around on these sort of magnetic wheels at supersonic speeds, gave animators a lot of freedom to come up with really cool ways to make her move. And even Baymax—making him so simple and elegant, and not having a mouth. This challenged our team and enabled them to express things with very few of the sort of bells and whistles that they normally do with that. These are things that wouldn’t have been pulled off in live-action that we could pull off better in animation.
CW: We were able to caricature a little bit more as well. We pare things down to a more simple truth, and sometimes that can just mean that the particular action scene or an action moment is really crystallized down to its most awesome form.

Big Hero 6 Baymax

Could you maybe give us an example from a Story Trust meeting of an “Aha!” moment that helped shape what you were doing with Big Hero 6?
RC:
I could relate one incident where there was a spark that actually drove everyone to start thinking in a different way, and that was when we had an off-site—a day after a screening when we put ourselves in a room and just start brainstorming. For this day in particular, we brought in several social workers to talk about loss amongst teenagers [spoiler alert!]. At the end of those three hours, we were buzzing and the Story Trust was there at the time, and we just started throwing out ideas. I think it really helped focus the film in terms of the thematic [elements]. And certain things evolved or devolved. It was just a really exciting time though, because we found the root of who Hiro was and what Hiro was going through, and how Baymax could help him.

Watch a Trailer for McFarland, USA


Inspired by the 1987 true story, McFarland, USA follows novice runners from McFarland, an economically challenged town in California, as they give their all to build a cross-country team under the direction of Coach Jim White (Kevin Costner), a newcomer to their predominantly Latino high school, with whom they ultimately bond to build not only a championship cross-country team but an enduring legacy as well.

Disney Interactive Releases Big Hero 6 Bot Fight for Mobile Devices

Disney Interactive has released Big Hero 6 Bot Fight,

. . . a new game for Apple iPhone, iPad and iPod touch, Android and Windows Phone Devices.

With an original storyline that expands upon the film, in theaters November 7, Big Hero 6 Bot Fight continues the journey of Baymax, Hiro and the rest of the Big Hero 6 team in an epic match-3 puzzle adventure. This new free-to-play game was co-developed with Gumi, one of the top mobile RPG developers in the world.

Countdown to Christmas at Disney Parks and Resorts, Plus Much More in News Briefs for November 4, 2014

It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas at Disney Parks!

November is here and that means one thing—at least for Disney fans—the holiday season is about to get underway at Disney Parks and Resorts!

Frozen's Queen Elsa "lets it go" and transforms Cinderella Castle into a glistening ice palace for the holidays

Guests at Walt Disney World Resort get to kick off their holidays starting tomorrow, November 5, at the Magic Kingdom, when Frozen‘s Queen Elsa “lets it go” and transforms Cinderella Castle into a glistening ice palace for the holidays. “Jingle Cruises” set sail in Adventureland beginning November 7, which is also the first night for the separate-ticket event, Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party. We’re also looking forward to grabbing a cup of hot cocoa at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, singing along to Frozen songs with our favorite Arendelle royal family members, and checking out The Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights (from November 7, 2014–January 4, 2015). And it just isn’t Christmas at Walt Disney World without Candlelight Processional. The Little Mermaid herself, Jodi Benson, is the first celebrity narrator when the event makes its seasonal debut on November 28.


 

World of Color—Winter Dreams returns to Disney California Adventure

Over at Disneyland Resort, World of Color—Winter Dreams returns to Disney California Adventure on November 13, 2014 (and concludes January 6, 2015). Our favorite snowman, Olaf, serves as narrator—and we’re hoping he brings along some of his Frozen friends! And just across the Esplanade, at the Merriest Place on Earth, Disneyland, we’re excited for the return of it’s a small world Holiday, Haunted Mansion Holiday, and, of course, A Christmas Fantasy Parade. We’re already dreaming of gingerbread Mickey cookies.


 

Disney News and Events
Save the Date!

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

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
November 5
ASIFA and D23 Celebrate 30 Years of Disney Television Animation
November 8
Walt Disney Studios and Archives Tour
November 11
The Hunchback of Notre Dame VIP Experience
November 15
An Afternoon Under the Sea: Celebrating 25 Years of The Little Mermaid
November 22-23
Destination D: Attraction Rewind at Disney’s Contemporary Resort in Walt Disney World
Fall 2014-2015
D23 Member Nights at Newsies—On Tour
Through January 4, 2015
Treasures of the Walt Disney Archives, presented by D23: The Official Disney Fan Club at the Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago
August 14-16, 2015
D23 Expo 2015 returns to Anaheim, California

Television
November 9
Pants on Fire premieres on Disney XD (7 p.m. ET/PT)
December 1–25
ABC Family’s “25 Days of Christmas”
Parks
November 7, 10, 13, 14, 16, 20, 21, and 30; and December 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, 12, 14, 16, 18, and 19
Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Parties at Magic Kingdom Park
Studios
November 7
Big Hero 6 opens in theaters.
December 25
Into the Woods opens in theaters.
February 20, 2015
MacFarland, USA opens in theaters.
March 13, 2015
Cinderella opens in theaters.
May 22, 2015
Tomorrowland opens in theaters.
June 19, 2015
Inside Out opens in theaters (along with the short Lava).

Baymax Sipper Comes to Disneyland Resort

Baymax Sipper Comes to Disneyland Resort

If you love Baymax, get your drink in the Baymax souvenir sipper at Tangaroa Terrace, Tomorrowland Terrace, Tomorrowland Lemonade Cart, and Award Wieners at the Disneyland Resort. The sipper and other tasty items will only be around for a limited time, starting on Friday, November 7, when Disney’s Big Hero 6 hits theaters. Inspired by the streets of San Fransokyo, try the teriyaki street dog at Award Wieners in Disney California Adventure park. This teriyaki-glazed all-beef hot dog is served on a garlic chive roll, topped with wasabi mayonnaise, and ginger, carrot and cucumber slaw. There’s also a deliciously refreshing coconut milk tea, served cold with coconut and lychee flavors. These limited-time offerings are as unique as they are tasty.


 

New Trailer for McFarland, USA, Disney’s Latest Sports Film

Walt Disney Studios has released a trailer for McFarland, USA, which, like all our favorite Disney movies, looks like it’s going to have us laughing and crying from start to finish. Inspired by the 1987 true story, McFarland, USA follows novice runners from McFarland, an economically challenged town in California, as they give their all to build a cross-country team under the direction of Coach Jim White (Kevin Costner), a newcomer to their predominantly Latino high school, with whom they ultimately bond to build not only a championship cross-country team but an enduring legacy as well. The trailer above will have you running to your nearest theater when the film opens February 20, 2015.


 

Clip of Marvel’s Avengers: Age of Ultron Cast Just Hanging Out

Ever wonder what the Avengers do when they’re off-duty and just hanging out? We love seeing that even super heroes can get competitive with one another, but we’re pretty sure that Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, The Incredible Hulk, Black Widow, and Hawkeye will come together and battle to save the planet from destruction at the hands of the villainous Ultron.Catch Marvel’s Avengers: Age of Ultron in theaters on May 1, 2015. We can’t wait!


 

Hayley Atwell as Agent Carter
Peggy Carter Returns to Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

We’re beyond excited about the 2015 premiere of Marvel’s Agent Carter. Lucky for us, the November 18 episode of Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. will feature a return guest appearance from Peggy Carter (Hayley Atwell), to tide us over. In the episode, titled “The Things We Bury,” Coulson and his team find themselves in an epic face-off against Hydra to uncover an ancient secret, while Ward kidnaps his brother, Senator Christian Ward, for a violent trip down memory lane. Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. airs Tuesdays at 9 p.m. ET on the ABC Television Network.


 

Big Hero 6 Nintendo Game
New Big Hero 6 Games Let You Fight Bots and Explore San Fransokyo

Big Hero 6 opens on the big screen this Friday, November 7, but we’ve already started exploring the world of San Fransokyo on our small screens with Disney Big Hero 6: Battle in the Bay, a side-scrolling action and platforming experience for Nintendo 3DS and Nintendo DS handheld systems. The game, which comes from Disney Interactive and GameMill Entertainment, features four playable characters—robotics whiz kid Hiro Hamada and his friends, GoGo Tomago, Wasabi, and Fred—with fellow squad mates Baymax and Honey Lemon appearing along the way for support. And on our smartphones and other mobile devices, we’ve been playing Disney Interactive’s other new release, Big Hero 6 Bot Fight. The game, which was co-developed with Gumi, continues the journey of Baymax, Hiro, and the rest of the Big Hero 6 team in an epic match-three puzzle adventure.


 

The Stories Behind the Costumes From a Galaxy Far, Far Away

The original Star Wars Trilogy features so many iconic characters, moments, and of course, costumes. Princess Leia’s white dress… Han Solo’s vest… Darth Vader’s cape. These costumes have spawned many a Disney fan’s Halloween attire, but now they’ve also inspired a book. Brandon Alinger’s Star Wars Costumes: The Original Trilogy takes you behind the scenes of the original Star Wars Trilogy and gives you an insider’s look at some of the most famous outfits of all time.

Star Wars Costumes: The Original Trilogy


PANDORA Makes the Holiday Season Magical with Launch of Disney Jewelry Collection

Looking for a special holiday gift for your favorite fellow Disney fan? We’re going to be checking our stockings for one of the new sterling silver and 14K gold charms from PANDORA Jewelry, which has unveiled a beautifully designed assortment inspired by some of Disney’s most beloved characters. Many of the new pieces are inspired by iconic images of Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse, including Mickey and Minnie dangles, sterling silver character clips, and an openwork charm featuring Mickey Mouse’s unmistakable silhouette. To discover the new Disney collection from PANDORA, visit PANDORA.net. Items will be available at PANDORA concept stores starting in November 2014, as well as select Walt Disney Parks and Resorts merchandise locations.


 

Star Wars Tie Fighter Game
Classic Lucasfilm Games Re-Released

Some of our favorite classic Star Wars and Indiana Jones-themed games are finally available in a new way! Disney Interactive has partnered with DRM-free digital distributor GOG.com to make more than 20 classic Lucasfilm titles available digitally. The six games kicking off the collaboration are Star Wars: X-Wing Special Edition, Star Wars: TIE Fighter Special Edition, Sam & Max Hit the Road, The Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition, Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, and Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic. Visit GOG.com to see the entire collection.


 

Disney Movies Anywhere
Disney Movies Anywhere Now Available on Google Play

We love being able to take Disney movies along, wherever we go, thanks to Disney Movies Anywhere. And now, thanks to Disney’s partnership with Google Play, it’s even easier for us to watch our favorite movies on the go. Just download the Disney Movies Anywhere app, connect it to your Google account, and you’re able to access your entire collection of Disney, Pixar, and Marvel movies. Best of all, for a limited time, DMA users who connect a new participating retailer account will receive a free digital copy of Wreck-It Ralph. And we’d be remiss if we didn’t mention that Maleficent and Planes: Fire & Rescue have just become available on digital and Blu-ray. Happy Movie Night!

Disney and Google Play Team Up to Bring Disney Movies Anywhere to Android Devices

The Walt Disney Studios and Google Play today announced a partnership enabling millions of U.S. Android users to enjoy their Disney, Pixar and Marvel digital movie collection across their devices through Disney Movies Anywhere.

Disney Movies Anywhere is an engaging and family-friendly digital destination that makes it simple for consumers to manage and enjoy their digital collection of Disney, Pixar and Marvel movies in one place, at home and on the go. The integration with Google Play means that it’s easier than ever for consumers to buy the films they love, and then enjoy them through the free Disney Movies Anywhere app and website, as well as everywhere Google Play Movies is available. Just download the Disney Movies Anywhere app and connect to your Google account.

“We are very excited to announce Google Play as our newest partner for Disney Movies Anywhere,” Janice Marinelli, president, Disney Studio In-Home and Digital Distribution and Disney/ABC Content Distribution, said. “We set out to create an exceptional Disney experience that made owning digital movies easy and fun, and with Google Play now on board following our successful launch in February, we are able to deliver unprecedented availability and ease for consumers across a broad range of mobile devices.”

“We want to make it easy for movie fans to enjoy all of their past and future digital purchases across all of their devices. Our partnership with Disney now gives Google Play users the ability to conveniently watch all of their Disney, Marvel and Pixar digital movies that have been purchased from any Disney Movies Anywhere participating retailer,” Jonathan Zepp, head of Google Play Movies Partnerships, said.

In Disney Movies Anywhere, consumers can explore Disney’s library of more than 400 active digital titles from Disney, Pixar and Marvel; preview upcoming offerings and enjoy hours of free new and exclusive short-form content; and discover curated content based on their individual preferences. In addition to browsing titles available for purchase, consumers can redeem digital copy codes found in Disney, Pixar and Marvel Blu-rays and DVDs directly in Disney Movies Anywhere, as well as earn Disney Movie Rewards points for digital purchases.

For a limited time, Disney Movies Anywhere users who connect a new participating retailer account will receive a free digital copy of Disney’s hit animated film Wreck-It Ralph. The launch of Disney Movies Anywhere on Google Play also coincides with the release of Maleficent, one of the year’s biggest hits, and Disney’s animated Planes: Fire & Rescue, both out on digital and Blu-ray today.

The Disney Movies Anywhere app is available in the U.S. for free from the Google Play Store and the iTunes App Store. Sign up is also available through the Disney Movies Anywhere website.

A Marvel Comic Inspires Disney Animation

Fighting an evil villain and saving the day are probably not very high on an average teenager’s bucket list. But for Hiro Hamada, star of Walt Disney Animation Studios’ upcoming animated feature Big Hero 6, those tasks just happen to pop up on a typical weekday.On November 7, you can join the mini mastermind and his inflatable robot sidekick, Baymax, on an action-packed adventure as they get entangled in a dangerous plot unfolding in the bustling, East-meets-West city of San Franskoyo.

Big Hero 6‘s Ryan Potter Talks About Why He Loves Working in Disney Animation’s World ►

And although its headquarters are thousands of miles away from Silicon Valley, the Disney Animation team didn’t hesitate to set up its very own start-up atmosphere in Burbank to dream up the high-tech story.

Disney Animation Big Hero 6 First Look Art

This time around, Marvel’s vault of epic Super Hero tales was opened to explore new ideas. “They [Marvel] encouraged us to take Big Hero 6 and do our thing with it,” director Don Hall reveals. “From the get-go, they were very gracious with their property and are incredibly supportive.” Producer Roy Conli added that Joe Quesada, chief creative officer, Marvel, and Jeph Loeb, executive vice president and head of Television, Marvel, were a part of the development process at the film’s early stage. “It’s been an amazing relationship,” he says.

Drawings of Hiro Hamada, star of Walt Disney Animation Studios' Big Hero 6

They may have been inspired by the comic book’s title and characters, but there’s no question that Walt Disney Animation Studios created its own unique world with Big Hero 6. For Don and his counterpart, director Chris Williams, creating the film has been an unforgettable experience. “It’s kind of a dream come true,” Don admits. “The action part of the story appeals to my 8-year-old self. But the core emotional relationship between Hiro and Baymax appeals not only to my 8-year-old self but to my 45-year-old self, as well.”

Characters from Big Hero 6

Defining that connection between the leading pair was an especially exciting challenge for Chris. “Finding the personality of this movie was a journey on its own,” he mentions. “That idea inspired us to challenge each other a lot.” To find those characteristics, filmmakers relied on multiple sources of inspiration, which included landmarks from San Francisco and Tokyo. They even went back to school and visited Carnegie Mellon University and MIT to research and learn more about the science behind robotics.

Characters from Big Hero 6

Technology may be a predominant focus in Big Hero 6 but it was just as big of a priority behind the scenes. To bring the largest cast of main characters in a Disney animated film to life, John Kahwaty, character technical director, and his team invented a proprietary software called Denizen. “On our average animated Disney films, we have two to three main characters,” Zach Parrish, head of animation, points out. “Frozen had six main characters. On this show we have about 15 main characters.” This system helped animators create more than 700 unique characters and set up their motions so each of them could walk, talk, and more.

Baymax from Big Hero 6

Another milestone for the film was its action sequences—the most for any Disney animated movie. To meet the creative and technical demands of each production, Walt Disney Animation Studios has continued to expand its Visual Effects team over the years. “As a department we’ve actually grown significantly over the past few films,” Nathan Curtis, effects production supervisor, observes. “In Tangled we had 13 effects animators, and in Big Hero 6 we’ve actually grown to 40.” By bringing more of these visionaries to the table, the Studio can push animation boundaries and make each film more and more lifelike.

East-meets-West city of San Franskoyo

With a little less than a week left until Big Hero 6 hits theaters, Don, Chris, Roy, and the team are closer than ever as they patiently wait for audiences to see the fruits of their labor. They mentioned that one theme—collaboration—continues to drive them to produce another Disney classic, one that has to stand alongside films like Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and Frozen. “We’ve got this legacy of movies here,” Don adds as he glances around and admires the interior of the Roy E. Disney Animation Building. “Ours has to sit on the shelf with these other fantastic films that have come out of this studio. That’s why we continue to push and encourage each other so much.”

Morimoto Asia, BOATHOUSE Dining Experiences Coming to Disney Springs in 2015

Chef Masaharu Morimoto is teaming up with Patina Restaurant Group to open Morimoto Asia as Walt Disney World Resort brings to life Disney Springs, an entertainment-dining-retail district re-imagined from Downtown Disney. To open in summer 2015 at The Landing, in the heart of Disney Springs, Morimoto Asia is the Japanese master chef’s first pan-Asian dining experience.

Morimoto Asia’s extraordinary, 36-foot-tall, two-story layout includes a vast range of areas to explore, including open terraces, grand hall, private rooms, long bar, cocktail lounge, waterside seating and more. The restaurant is being designed by STUDIO V Architecture.

Another new concept dining experience, The BOATHOUSE, was announced for The Landing in Disney Springs. The BOATHOUSE will be an upscale, waterfront dining experience that’ll immerse guests both on land and on water with live music, guided tours aboard the Captain’s piloted 40-foot Italian Water Taxi with champagne and chocolate-covered strawberries and guided Amphicar rides that launch from land, enter the water, and take guests on a 20-minute tour of the landmarks of Disney Springs.

For more on this story, visit the Disney Parks Blog.

Disney Interactive and GOG.com Join Forces to Release Classic Lucasfilm Games

Disney Interactive is teaming up with the DRM-free digital distributor to bring more than 20 classic Lucasfilm titles to GOG.com. To kick off the collaboration, six titles from the Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Monkey Island and Sam & Max franchises are now available on the site, including:

By joining forces with GOG.com, Disney Interactive is making numerous Lucasfilm titles available digitally, including three games from the launch lineup for the first time: Star Wars: X-Wing Special Edition, Star Wars: TIE Fighter Special Edition, Sam & Max Hit the Road. Gamers can also look forward to more Lucasfilm titles coming to GOG.com in the future.

From the Jaws of Hell: The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh

By Jim Fanning

For Halloween, let our thoughts turn to a mysterious hero who stalks the night with a frightening visage, striking fear into those who unjustly took advantage of the oppressed. This fearful avenger wore a mask, a cape, and rode with a young sidekick to aid him in his crime-fighting quest. Thinking Batman? Think again—it’s actually Walt Disney’s The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh. As the film’s theme song goes…

Through the black of night he’d ride
From the marsh to the coast
Like a demon ghost
He’d show his face then hide.

This phantom vindicator rode out of the pages of British literature in the tale of an 18th century night-riding smuggler who was actually on the side of justice. The elusive Scarecrow (actually, a vicar with the ironic name of Dr. Syn in disguise) led a smuggling band that gave the profits of their exploits to the poor and heavily taxed peasants of the marsh area.

Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color

One of the strangest and most fascinating Disney productions ever to gallop across the screen, this elaborate action-adventure was first presented on Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color in 1964. A Disney TV favorite in its day, this timeless tale of eerie escapades, moonlit shadowy thrills, and a ghostlike champion today has an avid cult following. The Scarecrow’s alarming mask and costume, plus his trademark, blood-curdling laugh—echoing over Romney Marsh each time this demonic defender of the poor challenges the militia of King George III (of American Revolution fame)—offers a supernatural quality perfect for Halloween. So on this dark October night, let’s gather around the flickering hearth (color television, that is) and listen to some haunting tales of the uncanny Scarecrow as we celebrate this spooky swashbuckler’s 50th anniversary.

Walt Disney's The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh

“Books of adventure, suspense, and mystery always have a special appeal for me when they’re about real people or based on the life of a real person, like [the Dr. Syn books] by the English author Russell Thorndike,” Walt Disney told his television audiences as he introduced The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh in 1964. “The hero of all the Thorndike stories is one of the strangest characters who ever lived, a real-life Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. He lived in England nearly 200 years ago. By day he was a respected member of his community, and by night he was the greatest smuggler in the whole country. But, like Robin Hood, although he was a thorn in the side of law and order, he was a hero to the ordinary folk of his time. Because whatever he made as a smuggler, he gave away to the poor and the needy.”

In this three-part saga, set circa 1775, the Scarecrow—assisted by the demonically disguised Curlew (young John Banks, son of the local squire, masked as a bird) and Hellspite (Dr. Syn’s sexton, Mr. Mipps, wearing a skull mask), the Scarecrow is determined to thwart the soldiers of the unjust King.

the Scarecrow—assisted by the demonically disguised Curlew (young John Banks, son of the local squire, masked as a bird)

The original Dr. Syn novels, written from 1915 to 1945, were loosely based on the exploits of actual 18th century smugglers known as the Hawkhurst Gang. Author Thorndike was born in Kent in 1884 and grew up with tales of these smugglers who haunted the murky marshes. The writer was also an actor and, in fact, portrayed Dr. Syn in a 1925 London stage adaptation. The eighth book, Christopher Syn, was published in 1960 (with American scribe William Buchanan as co-author), and was the volume on which Disney based his 1964 screen version of the story. Thorndike visited the Scarecrow set during filming. The author happily reported, “I’m absolutely delighted with the treatment in the Disney production.” Part of the cleverness of the Thorndike creation—brilliantly realized in the Disney production—was that, unlike Robin Hood or Zorro, this seemingly creepy crusader was made a fearful figure, conceived to horrify the corrupt officials he battles.

Walt Disney's The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh

Into this very British story, Walt shrewdly incorporated an American character sought by the King’s soldiers as a traitor for advancing the American colonies’ defiance of the crown. In the character of John Banks, Walt also showcased a boy sidekick for the Scarecrow, riding in the darkness with his own disguise, the bird-like hellion known as Curlew; young John Banks was an identification figure for Walt’s audience members, especially the youngsters. John is played by Sean Scully, a Disney discovery who had scored in his own dual role in the 1962 Wonderful World of Color production of “The Prince and the Pauper.”

Dr. Syn

As for the main character, Dr. Syn has an intriguing dual nature. “Dr. Syn was a kindly sort of fellow,” noted Patrick McGoohan, who portrays the vicar-turned-vigilante, “but with a will of steel, and I always saw the Scarecrow as his other persona. So neither one was dominant, they each were compatible with the other.” McGoohan won international fame as the star of the 1960s television series Secret Agent (originally called Danger Man when it was first telecast in England in 1960), and later was renowned for the cult TV classic, The Prisoner, which debuted in the United Kingdom in 1967). With his piercing blue eyes (visible even from within the Scarecrow mask) and his intense personality, Patrick McGoohan is perfectly cast as Dr. Syn and his otherworldly alter ego.

Veteran English makeup expert Harry Frampton

To disguise the mysterious man of the cloth, veteran English makeup expert Harry Frampton used a very special cloth. In fact, it was, as Disney publicity put it, “a housewife’s ordinary dishcloth.” The unearthly mask had to be loosely stitched to mimic a scarecrow’s head, and lightweight enough to allow McGoohan to both emote and breathe. “I struck upon using a dishcloth because it was readily accessible,” recalled Frampton with typical British understatement. “After some stitching and painting, it took on an eerie quality. Then I gave McGoohan a shapeless slouch hat, with straw sticking out from under it. But after putting it together, the real straw looked too fine. It didn’t photograph right. We replaced it with thicker, manufactured champagne straws, imported from France.”

“The makeup people took a cast of my head,” added McGoohan, “and then they molded the mask to the cast so that wearing it was completely comfortable—nothing was glued to [my skin] so it was very comfortable.” To compliment the macabre mask, Frampton placed a three-foot board across McGoohan’s shoulders under a dark and tattered coat. The ragged cloak then formed a shroud-like cape that dramatically flowed behind the ghoulish Scarecrow as he rode across the midnight marshes.

Patrick McGoohan and John Banks

Interiors were filmed at England’s famed Pinewood Studios, where such classics as David Lean’s Oliver Twist (1948), and the James Bond adventure Dr. No (1962), had been shot. The exteriors were shot on location in many of the actual sites of the Dr. Syn stories, for as Walt said of the Scarecrow, some locals “still talk about him at some of the old inns there today, and you can see rooms he hid or slept in and the parish church where he preached as vicar.” Walt loved the authenticity achieved by shooting on location and the marshes, villages, and ruins create a picturesque backdrop. The Romney Marsh area is on the Kent-Sussex coast approximately 70 miles from London. The action-packed beach scenes were filmed around the Camber Sands area. The street scenes are part of Church Square in the nearby city of Rye.

A historical abbey in Kent Suxxex, UK

The suitably spooky abbey ruins seen in the shows were a protected historical site nearby, meaning that special precautions had to be taken during filming, including putting boards down on the grass for the horses to stand on. Most of the night scenes were actually shot during the day with a special filter—”day for night”—giving the after-dark scenes an extra layer of eeriness.

On set of the Scarecrow of Romney Marsh

For the church where Dr. Syn serves as vicar, St. Clement’s, a 12th century church at Old Romney was utilized. The aged structure, still in use as a parish church, was in the midst of a structural restoration that had been stopped for lack of money. Dr. David Pope, then-rector of the Romney Marsh group of parishes, was elated when Disney carried on the restoration before filming began. A new west door was installed, a stairway was replaced, the 200-year-old gallery was repaired, and the ancient pews were renovated. Following production, Disney donated the funds needed to complete the church restoration. St. Clement’s parishioners still refer to this as the “miracle” that saved their church.

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As with many a memorable Disney production, one of the most unforgettable aspects of this specter-centered show is the haunting theme song. Punctuated by the Scarecrow’s hair-raising laugh, his theme song serves as a ballad—both setting the tone for the taut story of suspense and helping to establish for the viewer the colorful legend of this midnight righter-of-wrongs.

The "Scarecrow of Romney March" song was composed by Terry Gilkyson

The “Scarecrow of Romney March” song was composed by Terry Gilkyson, who also wrote “My Heart Was an Island” for Swiss Family Island (1960), the theme for Disney’s The Three Lives of Thomasina (1963, also starring Patrick McGoohan), and the Academy Award®-nominated “The Bare Necessities” for The Jungle Book (1967). The “Scarecrow” song was released as a single and on the Disneyland Records Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color LP album. Other merchandise included comic books, a novelization and a very appropriate Halloween costume.

Co-producer Bill Anderson was so impressed with the quality of the TV triumvirate of episodes that he tried to convince Walt to release them theatrically instead of airing them on television. But Walt was dedicated to showcasing superior programming on his TV show and broadcast the episodes as planned. However, the three “Scarecrow” installments were stitched together as a movie released in England to box office success.

Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow

Eventually, in 1975, Disney did release a movie, known as Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow, to U.S. theaters. In 2008, the classic Scarecrow TV episodes were released on DVD as part of the Walt Disney Treasures series. The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh was one of the most requested Disney titles ever; this limited edition was an immediate sell-out and is now highly sought after by collectors and Dr. Syn fans.

Scarecrow of Romney Marsh

So this Halloween night, if you spy a scarecrow in a darkened field, in a neighbor’s moonlit yard or even on your own front porch, listen carefully…for if you suddenly hear fiendish laughter it just might be the Scarecrow of Romney Marsh—as Walt Disney said, “one of the strangest characters who ever lived”…and one of the spookiest!