You’re receiving limited access to D23.com. Remember to sign in or join D23 today to enjoy endless Disney magic!
Did you find what you were looking for? Remember to sign in or join D23 today to enjoy endless Disney magic! x
Disney Consumer Products (DCP) has rolled out a robust range of products that celebrate the comedy-adventure Big Hero 6, which debuts in theaters November 7, 2014. Best-in-class licensees, including Bandai, Freeze, GDC and Jay Franco, in addition to Disney Store and Disney Publishing Worldwide have developed an assortment of action figures, plush, role-play toys, apparel, home décor, books and more that take inspiration from the film’s action-filled adventures. The film’s breakout character Baymax is the star of the product collection with products ranging from interactive action figures with transformative battling capabilities, to plush and tech accessories that celebrate his compassionate and humorous personality.
Big Hero 6 products are available now at mass and specialty retailers nationwide, Disney Store locations and DisneyStore.com. Additionally, apparel licensee Threadless is hosting a contest through November 17 that invites participants to design an original T-shirt inspired by Hiro, Baymax and the rest of the Big Hero 6 team. The winner will receive a prize package that includes $2,000 cash, a $500 Threadless gift card and a hand-drawn, framed Big Hero 6 piece of artwork from a Disney character artist.
Two New Dining Experiences Coming to Disney Springs in 2015
Disney Springs will offer guests two new dining experiences in 2015, both opening at The Landing—formerly known as Pleasure Island. Morimoto Asia comes from Chef Masaharu Morimoto, known to many for his appearances on Iron Chef America.
. . . an immersive waterfront dining experience
The pan-Asian restaurant will include unique exhibition kitchens showcasing traditions like Peking duck carving and dim sum. Morimoto Asia is slated to open in Summer 2015. The second new restaurant, The BOATHOUSE, will be an immersive waterfront dining experience on both land and water. The upscale eatery will present live music, guided tours aboard a 40-foot Italian Water Taxi, and guided Amphicar rides that launch from land, enter the water, and take guests on a 20-minute tour of the Disney Springs landmarks.
The BOATHOUSE will feature steaks, chops, seafood, and a raw bar, and is scheduled to open in Spring 2015.
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 and Upcoming Events 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 September 1, 9, 12, 14, 16, 19, 21, 23, 26, and 28; and October 2, 3, 5, 9, 10, 13, 16, 17, 19, 21, 23, 24, 26, 28, 30, and 31 Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Parties at Magic Kingdom Park September 26, 30; October 3, 6, 8, 10, 14, 17, 20, 22, 24, 27, 29, and 31 Mickey’s Halloween Party at Disneyland Resort 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. 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).
Marvel-ous News About Upcoming Feature Films
Marvel Studios’ president Kevin Feige took the stage at Hollywood’s El Capitan Theatre with the complete Marvel Phase Three timeline, which begins with Captain America: Civil War on May 6, 2016 and continues through Marvel Avengers: Infinity War Part II in May 2019. Feige also introduced actor Chadwick Boseman as the star of Black Panther, scheduled for release November 3, 2017. To read all of the exciting news that was announced today, visit D23.com ►
Move It! Shake It! Dance & Play It! Street Party Now at Magic Kingdom Park
Magic Kingdom’s popular character street party now offers new music, new characters, and new ways to let guests be part of the fun. Besides moving and shaking along with their favorite characters, guests will be able to vote for the next song on the party playlist and they’re encouraged to take selfies that they tag with #MoveItShakeItPics—and they just might end up seeing their photos on a float during the grand finale!
Make A Frozen Holiday Wish Beginning November 5
Anna and Elsa, your favorite princesses from Frozen, will be joined by Kristoff and Olaf in A Frozen Holiday Wish, an all-new show on the Castle Forecourt Stage. Watch as Queen Elsa uses her powers to transform Cinderella Castle into a glimmering ice palace. The show will be presented nightly from November 5 through December 31, 2014.
Disney Cruise Line Announces New Itineraries for Early 2016
Disney Cruise Line has added two new Caribbean destinations to their lineup of tropical itineraries for early 2016. Beginning October 30, 2014, guests can book itineraries that will include stops in Tortola, capital of the British Virgin Islands, and Martinique. Disney Cruise Line will also return to the homeport of San Juan, Puerto Rico for 2016 as the Disney Wonder sails four seven-night cruises to the Southern Caribbean. For more details, visit the official Disney Cruise Line website.
Watch a New Teaser Trailer for Marvel’s Avengers: Age of Ultron
When Tony Stark jumpstarts a dormant peacekeeping program, things go awry and Earth’s Mightiest Heroes, including Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, The Incredible Hulk, Black Widow and Hawkeye, are put to the ultimate test as they battle to save the planet from destruction at the hands of the villainous Ultron. Check out the new teaser trailer, above, and look for Marvel’s Avengers: Age of Ultron at a theater near you beginning May 1, 2015.
Big Thunder Mountain Railroad Disney Kingdoms Series Debuts March 2015
Disney Kingdoms, the collaboration between Marvel and Walt Disney Imagineering, will present a new five-issue limited series, Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, inspired by the Disney Parks attraction. The creative team behind the series is writer Dennis Hopeless and artist Tigh Walker, who previously partnered on Avengers Undercover. Editor Bill Rosemann said, “If all goes well, one day readers will see how all of the stories are interconnected . . . That’s right, the adventures may be taking place during different time periods, but it’s our intention to create a cohesive ‘Disney Earth’ where all of these stories are taking place.” To read more, visit Marvel.com.
Rapunzel—aka Mandy Moore—Makes a Special Appearance on Sofia the First
Actress Mandy Moore reprises her role from Walt Disney Animation Studios’ Tangled in Sofia the First: The Curse of Princess Ivy, an upcoming primetime special of the Disney Junior series. The special premieres Sunday, November 23 (7 p.m. ET/PT) on Disney Channel, and also features actors Anna Camp, John Michael Higgins, and Oliver Platt as guest voices.
“Pranksgiving” Returns to Disney XD for Third-Consecutive Year
This November 1–30, Disney XD will once again present an assortment of prank-themed storylines on shows that include Lab Rats, Wander Over Yonder, and Phineas and Ferb as part of its popular “Pranksgiving” programming event, returning for its third consecutive year. This year’s “Pranksgiving” will also feature the premiere of an interstitial series created by acclaimed animation producers The Brothers McLeod (Pedro and Franksheep, BAFTA winners for their work with BBC Learning) and will introduce the comical adventures of one clever turkey outsmarting one unsuspecting pilgrim.
Marvel Studios’ president Kevin Feige took the stage at Hollywood’s El Capitan Theatre with the complete Marvel Phase 3 timeline, which begins with Captain America: Civil War on May 6, 2016 and continues through Marvel Avengers: Infinity War Part II in May 2019. Feige also introduced actor Chadwick Boseman as the star of Black Panther, scheduled for release November 3, 2017.
“I’m blessed to be a part of this Marvel Universe, and to work with you both, and I look forward to making magic together,” Boseman said after taking the stage with both Robert Downey, Jr. (Iron Man) and Chris Evans (Captain America).
“Black Panther and all of Wakanda is one of the most interesting characters in Marvel history,” remarked Feige. “Something I already showed you today contains an Easter egg that leads directly into Black Panther. He’s a bit of a prince, he may even become a bit of a king, but it’s all about how this isolationist country meets the world. Maybe it goes well, maybe it doesn’t.”
The Marvel event begins and Kevin Feige takes the stage to thunderous applause.Kevin Feige talks about Marvel’s Dr. Strange, coming to theaters on November 4, 2016.Thor: Ragnarok is coming July 28, 2017, starring Chris Hemsworth and Tom Hiddleston.A look at Marvel’s Phase 3 timeline before Captain America’s name change. At the end of the presentation, the film’s name was changed from Captain America: Serpent Society to Captain America: Civil War as a final reveal.Robert Downey Jr. and Chris Evans introduce Black Panther star Chadwick Boseman.
Into the Woods is a modern twist on the beloved Brothers Grimm fairy tales, intertwining the plots of a few choice stories and exploring the consequences of the characters’ wishes and quests. This humorous and heartfelt musical follows the classic tales of Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, Jack and the Beanstalk and Rapunzel—all tied together by an original story involving a baker and his wife, their wish to begin a family and their interaction with the witch who has put a curse on them.
Ludwig Von Drake, one of the scores of classic Disney characters brought to life over the past 30 years, welcomes visitors to the TVA facility.
Danville. Gravity Falls. Jollywood.
These locales, the settings for some of your favorite Disney animated TV series, are pretty unique. Disney Television Animation (TVA) has a long history—30 years, to be exact—of colorful characters and wonderfully wacky worlds, from the (literally) rainbow-hued Gummi Bears to the eclectic septet of dwarfs on The 7D; and from the bustling metropolis of DuckTales‘ Duckburg to the mysterious Oregon town of Gravity Falls.
colorful characters and wonderfully wacky worlds
D23 has spent a lot of time wondering about the people behind our favorite animated series and their own unique world—their home away from home—the TVA headquarters here in Glendale, California. We were able to spend an entire day at TVA as a fly on their walls—and oh, what walls they are! Come with us on a behind-the-scenes tour of one of the most creative workplaces you’re going to find.
Lisa Salamone oversees production at TVA.
Our first order of business was to meet with the dynamic duo that oversees the goings-on at TVA on a daily basis. Lisa Salamone, senior vice president of production, is a 20-year veteran of TVA—she started here as a producer on Gargoyles, and now oversees production, handling budgets, schedules, staffing, and working with the creative team to “facilitate their vision.” Eric Coleman is her counterpart on the creative side, charged with developing new projects, supervising current shows, and working with other departments, like music and casting. Coleman, also a senior vice president, joined TVA six and a half years ago. His first TVA shows were Kick Buttowski: Suburban Daredevil and Fish Hooks.
Eric Coleman says the TVA mantra is, “Great art comes from great artists.”
Coleman is almost a newbie at TVA. If you talk to folks who work here, you’ll find people who have been around for stints well into the double digits. Some members of the team, like Jake and the Never Land Pirates‘ executive producer Rob LaDuca, have been at TVA since its beginning in 1984. Salamone and Coleman don’t just have a knack for attracting really good people to come and work at TVA—they hang on to them.
the TVA mantra is, “Great art comes from great artists.”
Do they have a secret? “Our mantra is ‘great art comes from great artists,'” Coleman explains. “We really focus on getting the best people and creating an environment where they can flourish and they can succeed.”
“A lot of it, too, comes from the fact that we all genuinely like each other a lot,” Salamone says enthusiastically before sharing, “I have this test that I do when I’m staffing: If I were stuck on a bus somewhere and it broke down and I was with these people, how would I feel? And I would love to be stuck on a bus with these people! I just love working with all of them.”
A glance around Coleman’s office, filled, as are most TVA offices, with really cool Disney art and collectibles, is proof of his statement that, “We are advocates and we love art. It’s not just management.” It’s important, Coleman explains, that TVA staffers see their workplace as a home, not just as a job.
Cereal bars are always well-stocked at TVA.
It’s easy to believe that when you wander the halls and see all of the comforts of home that are in place. You can find cereal bars on each floor, for a late breakfast or an afternoon snack, and there may be no better place to take a break than TVA’s upstairs patio, which offers a view of the nearby mountains—and lets TVA staffers spy on their next-door neighbors, the animators at Disneytoon Studios (DTS).
. . . there are a lot of Disney fans who might be even more excited than we are
But D23 couldn’t relax for long. We followed Salamone to a production meeting for one of TVA’s upcoming shows, Star Vs. The Forces of Evil. We’re super-excited about this show, which will make its debut this January. And there are a lot of Disney fans who might be even more excited than we are. The show’s creator, Daron Nefcy, previewed a clip at this year’s Comic-Con, and an iPhone video of the presentation made it on to the internet—and fan art has been pouring in to TVA ever since.
Star Vs. the Forces of Evil Production Meeting
Nefcy and Salamone sat down with other members of the Star production team for their weekly status meeting. This is where Salamone and her team, production executive Mary Kramer, creative executive Edward Mejia, and the show’s line producer Niki Kopp—another 20-year TVA veteran—check in with Nefcy about all of the elements that go into launching a new show. When you watch the end credits of any Disney animated series next time, take a close look at the font that has been chosen—that’s one of the many small details that are worked out with a tremendous amount of thought and care.
Juggling the creative elements of a new show along with the moving parts of production is a fun challenge for Nefcy, who feels so fortunate to have ended up at TVA, where she’s also worked on Wander Over Yonder. “I feel like I’ve already gotten to work with a lot of people that I just looked up to and didn’t think I’d ever meet,” she enthuses. “It’s really awesome.”
Daron Nefcy, in the Star Vs. the Forces of Evil offices, which are accented heavily with unicorns and rainbows.
While most of the other show’s writers are out at lunch, we sneak into some of the writers’ rooms. The Wander Over Yonder room, like most writers’ rooms, is lined with bulletin boards filled with index cards that can be moved around and replaced, still the industry standard for plotting an episode or a series. But unlike most writers’ rooms, this room features a real-life incarnation of Wander’s floppy hat.
The Gravity Falls writers’ room.
The Gravity Falls room is even more, shall we say, unique. It’s the kind of place you’d like to sit a spell and, perhaps, enjoy your favorite beverage. It’s comfy. But it’s what’s just outside the Gravity Falls room that’s probably the most unusual thing you’re going to see at TVA: a full-size buffalo. We tracked down Gravity Falls‘ creator, Alex Hirsch, to get the scoop. Hirsch tells us that he believes that the freedom he gets to make his office his own encapsulates “the TVA spirit.”
TVA’s weekly Production Status Meeting.
We get to see more of that “TVA spirit” in action at our next stop, the weekly Production Status Meeting. Lisa Salamone and Eric Coleman receive updates from their staff on all the shows currently in production—and we even get a few hints about new shows and top-secret developments on some of our favorites. It doesn’t take long to realize that there’s so much going on with shows from Sofia the First to the upcoming live-action/animation combo Pickle & Peanut, that one meeting barely scratches the surface. When the meeting ends, everyone quickly breaks off to cover more of the smaller-but-no-less-important details that make TVA shows stand out from the crowd.
Alyson Stoner records lines for her character, Isabella, for an upcoming episode of Phineas and Ferb.
It wouldn’t feel like a visit to an animation studio if we didn’t get to see some of the animation in action, and lucky for us, Alyson Stoner has come to record her lines for an upcoming episode of Phineas and Ferb, for which she provides the voice of Isabella. Jeff “Swampy” Marsh handles the voice direction, and we get to see that there’s a lot of nuance that goes into the delivery of a line like, “Wait, what?” Phineas and Ferb’s co-creator Dan Povenmire is also on hand, sketching on a tablet computer while listening to Stoner as she acts behind the mic. He demonstrates how the computer turns his series of sketches into the early stages of animation—and even slips into Dr. Doofenshmirtz’ voice, making our day even more memorable. It’s pretty amazing how quickly Stoner finishes, but as Marsh explains, “We’ve been doing this for eight years. We’ve got it down.”
Dan Povenmire brings Dr. Doofenshmirtz to life for D23, vocally and artistically.
Povenmire also echoes what we’ve been hearing all day, about what a creative place TVA is to work. “When they were turning this building into this studio, they actually came and showed us the plans and said, ‘What do you guys need? How can we arrange it so it makes your production flow better?'” One of the things Povenmire told TVA they needed—and received—was a ping pong table, regulation size. But it’s just one of the many examples the animators provide about how TVA fosters their creativity.
Haunted Mansion Executive Producer and Art Director Gris Grimly shows early concept art to Vice President, Creative Mike Moon and his staff.
Our next stop is to check in on another of the exciting shows TVA is developing—Haunted Mansion. The special is in the very early stages of development, so we can’t tell you much about it—yet. But we can tell you that the character art that creator Gris Grimly and Vice President, Creative Mike Moon showed us looks amazing, and the attention to detail, down to small elements of a character’s piece of clothing, is something to behold. We can’t wait for this one!
Jay Stutler, Paul Rudish, and Christopher Willis during a music session for the Mickey Mouse shorts.
It’s hard to top a sneak peek at Haunted Mansion. But our last stop at TVA doesn’t disappoint. Our day behind the scenes ends, quite fittingly, where it all began—with a mouse. We join Executive Producer and Supervising Director Paul Rudish, Vice President of Music Jay Stutler, and composer Christopher Willis as they review the music for an upcoming Mickey Mouse short. As Rudish tells us, “Chris will take my musical riddle and figure it out in musical terms.” “The music enhances the storytelling and the emotional content of a scene,” Stutler explains.
Both Salamone and Coleman point to Mickey Mouse as delivering some of their proudest moments at TVA. “The journey to make new content with Mickey Mouse, it was a daunting challenge,” Coleman admits, adding that “The first moment of success [for Mickey Mouse] was when we saw what we were doing and we were really happy with it.” Both Coleman and Salamone were thrilled by Mickey Mouse‘s now six Emmy® wins, and also by how critics and audiences alike have embraced the show.
“I feel so fortunate to work at a company that has the kind of legacy that Disney has, and to continue to add to that is just a remarkable feeling,” Salamone professes. Coleman concurs that, “We feel lucky to be part of this and appreciate how passionate the fans of Disney programming are. It’s a wonderful experience for us to make things that we’re excited about, and then to see how happy they make other people.”
Art drawn for the Mickey Mouse Club in 1955 is the first—and last—thing TVA guests see when they visit.
And as we reluctantly end our day at Disney Television Animation, we pause to view concept art that was drawn in 1955 for the Mickey Mouse Club opening sequence, and we realize that TVA has made us very happy—today, and for the last 30 years.
D23 has spent a lot of time at Disney Television Animation (TVA).
We were impressed by the vast amount of creativity they manage to fit under one roof,
. . . but that creativity was on display in rare form—and not in animated form but in “re-animated” form—at TVA’s in-house event, “Re-Animated: The Zombie Art Show.”
This gallery event took place at the TVA studio and was coordinated by Kimberley Mooney, a manager in TVA’s development department; Alexandra Rosenberg, assistant to Vice President, Creative, Mike Moon; and Director, Current Series, Jermaine Turner; who served as curators of the more than 70 works on display. Artists were told to “Zombify your favorite TVA character,” according to Mooney, who observes, “Monsters seem to really resonate with artists in general.” Mooney adds that this particular show saw a very high participation rate. Past TVA shows have included a food theme, a robot show, and one that invited “self-portraits.”
Zombify your favorite TVA character . . .
Senior Vice President Eric Coleman, who heads up TVA’s creative side, explained that art shows were intended to be a part of the TVA culture from the time the building was designed. He tells D23, “Two things always strike me every time we have our art show: the depth and variety of the talent of artists who are on specific shows, and also the creativity of folks who, day-to-day, have less creative positions.” Artists whose work has graced the TVA gallery walls have ranged from animators to business affairs and finance folk—everyone is encouraged to participate.
The show isn’t open to the public, but D23 was in attendance. Enjoy this collection of photos of these “re-animated” animated favorites, and the artists who brought them (back to) life!
Eric Coleman leads by example. “My piece is a photograph of Mickey, Donald, and Goofy as zombies. I almost got killed taking the photo, since I was lying on my stomach in the middle of a dark street at midnight, but it was all worth it,” the studio’s creative leader assures us.
Phineas and Ferb‘s co-creator Dan Povenmire explains, “We had just been working on a big zombie-themed one-hour special in which all the zombies looked like Doofenshmirtz and they all say, ‘Lots of me.'” After the initial spark of inspiration for his illustration, Povenmire realized, “There weren’t enough Doofs in it, so I put more Doofenshmirtzes down at the bottom and I had them all coming to get me while I’m recording the voice.”
Tom Warburton, co-executive producer of The 7D, on his piece: “The first one I did was Doc—he was really fun. And then I started doing Happy, and as I was sketching them, my kids would come in and ask, ‘Hey, can I color this in?’ And I was like, ‘I don’t know if I want you guys coloring entrails and stuff.’ But they were really excited!”
Actor Dana Synder, who has provided voices on Fish Hooks, was inspired by the Happiest Place on Earth. “My piece is a zombified Monstro from the Storybook Land Canal Boats at Disneyland.”
Gravity Falls creator Alex Hirsch’s illustration of his characters as “zombies rising from the dead,” was originally shown at Comic-Con, but, Hirsch tells us, “This art gallery was the perfect opportunity to dust off this piece and bring it back to life.”
The creator of TVA’s new series Star Vs. the Forces of Evil, Daron Nefcy, poses alongside a “Zombie Star” piece from one of her art directors, Josh Parpan. “I did Ghost Zombie Star, to be different,” she explained. “I had a lot of fun doing it.”
“Scrooge McZombie” was created by Jasmine Bocz, who works on the Mickey Mouse shorts.
The 7D art director, Frank Montagna, and directors Alfred Gimeno and Charles Visser bring to life a septet of hitchhiking dwarfs in “The 7Z.”
Jake and the Never Land Pirates‘ Rob LaDuca honors his first TVA series—which was also TVA’s first series—Disney’s Adventures of the Gummi Bears, with his artistic rendering. He tells D23, “I thought that since the Gummi Bears basically started Disney Television Animation, I figured we should “dig up” Gruffy one last time for the 30th anniversary.
Try singing that without throwing your voice an octave higher on the word “bears.” Or say “DuckTales” and don’t think, “Woo-Hoo” after “Tales.” It’s just about impossible. And of course you know the answer to the questions “Who put the ‘glad’ in gladiator?” and “Who’s too cool for seventh grade?” Those questions were answered—musically—in the opening-credit songs for the animated series Hercules and Pepper Ann.
How about Kim Possible‘s “beep… beep… beep, beep”? Pretty catchy. You know how to start the Mickey Mouse Clubhouse theme song playing—just say the magic words, “Meeska, Mooska Mickey Mouse!” And that’s not all you’ve learned: The Phineas and Ferb intro taught you exactly how many days are in summer vacation (104) and the theme song for The7D—the most recent show we’ve talked about so far—teaches a new generation the names of the Seven Dwarfs.
We’re happy to admit that Disney Television Animation’s (TVA’s) theme songs are stuck in our heads, and with more than 70 shows throughout their 30-year history, they have tried just about everything. The series TheProud Family even has an intro sung by Destiny’s Child—featuring the world-renowned pop-star Beyonce. Yes, Beyonce. Who else could pull off getting Beyonce to sing a theme song for a kids show, but TVA?
It’s true, kids have it better these days; and to think that there are now several channels where kids can watch this kind of programming seven days a week is pretty amazing. With Disney Junior, Disney Channel, and Disney XD bringing it to them all day, every day, no longer do they have to wait for syndicated afternoons or one Disney morning a week—just one!—Saturday.
. . . kids have it better these days
Whether it was “Disney Afternoons,” “One Saturday Morning,” or the programming on Disney’s cable channels that got you hooked on these shows and their theme songs, it’s certainly worth noting how much they have become part of pop culture and our collective childhood nostalgia.
D23 is spending the week with the TVA staff and one of our stops included a visit to Jay Stutler’s office. Jay is vice president, Music, for TVA, and he’s worked with Disney since 2000 when he started out on the House of Mouse series and worked with Brian Setzer on that show’s memorable theme song. We pared down our hour-long conversation into this Q&A about what goes into creating the theme songs that will, no doubt, keep running through your head for years to come.
D23:What was your first big musical hit, working at TVA? Jay Stutler: Kim Possible was the game changer. Radio Disney used to play Top 40 songs and things like “The Hamster Dance” and songs intended for kids. The Kim Possible theme song not only served the energy of the series but it was huge to get Christina Milian. She was an up-and-coming rising star and I think we just caught lightning in a bottle. What was great was that the song aired on Radio Disney for weeks prior to the show’s launch, so there was this internal buzz about the show and the connection to the song, so it was a huge success.
D23:How do you choose the artists who compose the music for the series theme songs? JS: When we present these [song] ideas there is never a name attached, for a very specific reason. For example, if by any chance P!nk ever decides that she wants to write a theme song for a television cartoon, I would want her to do it but I would also need to show other ideas [to the TVA creative team]. So when we present ideas, we show “Song No. 1,” “Song No. 2,” “Song No. 3″… It’s all done anonymously until we collectively agree that, say, “Song No. 6” is the one we’re going to use. It’s a level playing field for everyone. Music managers respect that all of their clients have an equal opportunity here.
We have changed many lives
D23:Has your anonymous audition process led to a brand-new composer’s big break? JS: We have changed many lives. Kevin Hendrickson and Loren Hoskins, who write all the music for Jake and the Never Land Pirates and who are Sharky and Bones on the series, always wrote music as a hobby but now that they are attached to this worldwide hit animated show, it has changed their lives. We are not looking for names. We are looking for the best idea, and the best idea will always win out. We are finding the next generation of talent.
D23: At what point in a show’s development do you start working on its music? JS: We start working on the music the minute that a show is greenlit. We start on the main title first because the main title is so important to a series. It is a 30-to-60-second brand identifier. It captures the spirit, the tone, and the color of the show. We usually have that scoped out really early on, and it’s fun to see how you can build that up from there.
D23: You almost can’t think of Phineas and Ferb without hearing the theme song in your head. How did that song evolve? JS: When Dan and Swampy originally pitched their theme song idea, it was this old vaudevillian song that skewed much younger but told the exact same story. It wasn’t of “today” and it felt like 1930, so all we did was take their exact same song and do a cover of it in the style of Bowling for Soup. We said, “What if Bowling for Soup did their own version of this?” and it immediately matched the show. Then we got Bowling for Soup to record it and once we put all those pieces into place, it just steamrolled into close to 400 songs for that series.
D23:How do you approach creating music for the shows that are based around Disney’s heritage characters, like The 7D? JS: One of the things we wanted to do with The 7D was a roll call of the Seven Dwarfs so a new audience could learn their names. We also worked on character songs to roll out during the series that introduces each character with a new song. Kids can then associate a song with a character type and associate the different personality traits with the Dwarfs. We now have seven character songs, and each has its own vibe.
D23:Is it easier to create music for a show like Sofia the First, when there’s such a rich history of songs sung by and for Disney Princesses? JS: We have to live side by side with the classic Disney Princess catalog, but we also have to blaze our own path because we are going to tell 150 stories, which means we are going to write 150 songs. We can’t just write the same type of songs. We have to write songs that can live side by side with those songs, but we can’t get boxed into a creative corner.
I grew up on The Brady Bunch and The Flintstones
D23:What television theme songs did you grow up listening to and how did they inspire you? JS: The big one was probably The Brady Bunch. I grew up on The Brady Bunch and The Flintstones. Gosh, I guess you could go back to Land of the Lost, The Jetsons, and, even though it wasn’t much of a main title, Bugs Bunny. That short little 15-second musical interlude, when it came on TV on Saturday mornings, was very impactful. But the ones I remember singing with my friends on the bus were The Brady Bunch and The Flintstones.
With so many shows currently in development—some so exciting and top-secret we can’t even tell you about them yet!—and so many in production, we’re thoroughly impressed by how this guy keeps all his tracks synced up. As The Lion Guard‘s 2016 premiere draws closer, we’ll share more of our interview with Jay and tell you what goes into creating a theme song and score that will remind you exactly how you felt when you first saw The Lion King when it was released in theaters back in 1994. Stay tuned!
When Tony Stark jumpstarts a dormant peacekeeping program, things go awry and Earth’s Mightiest Heroes, including Iron Man, Captain America, Thor, The Incredible Hulk, Black Widow and Hawkeye, are put to the ultimate test as they battle to save the planet from destruction at the hands of the villainous Ultron.
Marvel’s Avengers: Age of Ultron hits U.S. theaters May 1, 2015.
Open your mind and get ready to let your imagination soar to new heights!
Disney Interactive just released the highly anticipated musical motion game Disney Fantasia: Music Evolved. Many D23 Members recently got a chance to test out the interactive experience, and we thought it’d be fun to list some of the coolest features of the brand-new game that made us instant fans.
Fantasia Inspiration
In the game, players link up with legendary and mystical sorcerer Yen Sid from the film to hone their musical and magical prowess as his new apprentice.
Conduct your favorite songs from world-renowned artists and classical masters . . .
Music to Everyone’s Ears
More than 30 hit artist selections are featured in Disney Fantasia: Music Evolved. Conduct your favorite songs from Bruno Mars, Queen, Mussorgsky, Fun., Kimbra, AVICII, as well as other world-renowned artists and classical masters, and use natural, gesture-based movements that’ll put you in complete command of your own musical journey. Using Kinect motion-controlled technology and natural, controller-free gameplay, you can direct the musical flow of these hits and the power to transform the music and living world.
Remix Power Transform music via magical manipulators in real-time like never before, changing your favorite songs in intuitive and surprising new ways. The melodic possibilities are infinite!
Go Inside the Fantasia World
Explore breathtaking environments in the mythical realm of Fantasia with your motion–controlled “muse.” You can immerse yourself in environments like “The Haven” and you can interact with an enchanted printing press and more. Get ready to discover worlds filled with hidden musical interactions designed to engage and encourage you to unleash your creativity.
Share Your Brilliance
Once you’ve recorded your creation and are ready to release it to the universe, you can show your friends and family your re-imagined work on YouTube via Xbox One’s sharing technology.
Download Digitally for Bonus Features
By doing so, you’ll receive pop, rock, and dance mix packs for $3.99 each, which allow apprentices (aka you!) to create more remixes and further customize songs from the game’s core soundtrack. The Deluxe Digital Xbox One version of the game includes all of the mix packs, as well as 18 additional songs from popular artists like Demi Lovato, Coldplay, The Cure, OneRepublic, and more!
you’ll be transported to a breathtaking world where music and magic combine for an interactive, motion-controlled journey . . .
With Disney Fantasia: Music Evolved, you’ll be transported to a breathtaking world where music and magic combine for an interactive, motion-controlled journey through worlds of music and magic. The game is now available at retailers worldwide for Xbox One and Kinect for Xbox 360.
Cast your eyes on the photo above and the bright happy faces of brand-new Disney employees—circa 1985. When this photo was taken for Disney’s employee newsletter, Newsreel, Disney Television Animation (TVA) was also brand new, having formed in 1984 to bring high-quality Disney animation to the small screen. The two charming gentlemen in the picture’s front row, Ed Wexler and Rob LaDuca, were there at TVA’s beginning for its first show, Disney’s Adventures of the Gummi Bears, and are both still an integral part of the TVA family with their work on the current Disney Junior hits Mickey Mouse Clubhouse and Jake and the Never Land Pirates. D23 is thrilled that they took time out of their busy production schedules to talk with us about the early days at TVA and help kick off our celebration of TVA’s 30th Anniversary this November.
“We were in the first handful of TVA employees,” LaDuca says, remembering that Gummi Bears producer Art Vitello brought in a small group of people to work on the show, most of whom were old friends. Wexler was hired first, as key layout stylist, while LaDuca was soon brought on as a storyboard director. The staff was lean and mean, and Wexler remembers that, “We all just did whatever was needed. If we needed a new location, it would be a case of ‘Who’s not doing anything right now?’ We’d change hats.”
The TVA staff at the time was so small that, Wexler notes, “We all had a cup of coffee in the same room together every day.” When he had car trouble on the way to work, Wexler had to look no further for a ride than his then-boss, Senior Vice President of Production Tom Ruzicka.
Disney’s Adventures of the Gummi Bears, which premiered in 1985, introduced new characters, but the animation and character art was influenced by classic Disney films. “The background design was [inspired by] Pinocchio,” LaDuca points out, “and Snow White. That kind of Bavarian, thick, old wood.” In the days before the Internet, research more often than not involved frequent visits to the Walt Disney Archives. “I always thought that was the coolest thing,” Wexler says, and LaDuca is quick to concur.
The quick success of Gummi Bears would lead LaDuca and Wexler also to go on to work on DuckTales, The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, and Chip ‘n’ Dale Rescue Rangers. Both were excited to work with so many beloved, classic Disney characters. “Working on DuckTales was great,” LaDuca explains, because everybody loved Carl Barks’ comics. This was all stuff that we loved growing up.” Wexler concurs, “There was a look and something to emulate, something to shoot for.” And Wexler is quick to point out that they reached the high bar that was set at TVA, proudly stating, “What was cool about what we were doing was that the animation was better than what other studios were doing at the time.”
Both animators always considered it an honor to be entrusted with classic characters like Huey, Dewey, and Louie, and Chip ‘n’ Dale. “I would never stray from how they were established,” LaDuca says emphatically. “We push them to be a little more modern, but it brings up so many treasured memories of watching them as a kid and digesting the Art of Disney book.”
In their 30 years with TVA, Wexler and LaDuca have amassed countless stories, but each holds one memory closest to his heart. Wexler fondly recalls working with Disney Legend Robin Williams (Aladdin‘s Genie) on a series of interstitials for ABC, Great Minds Think 4 Themselves. “He would stray away from the script and do unusable material, and the more that he would do that, the more I would laugh and the less we would get done for a while,” Wexler remembers, adding, “It was great fun to work with him, to record with him for three days, and his involvement brought a shining bright light on these spots.”
LaDuca, who served as executive producer and director of Mickey Mouse Clubhouse, treasures working with the late Wayne Allwine (who originally voiced Mickey Mouse for the series) and Russi Taylor (who is still the voice of Minnie Mouse), who were married. “Russi and Wayne were just so great to work with and they were just so cute, leaving and holding hands—Mickey and Minnie,” he says with a smile.
And like parents talking about their children, LaDuca and Wexler love all of the shows they’ve been involved with for different reasons, but both agree that they consider Tron to have been the most sophisticated. LaDuca explains, “It was a very complex show. I’m hoping it finds its audience one day because it really was beautiful.”
The commitment to high-quality animation and storytelling is still the goal at TVA, 30 years later, but there has been one significant change, according to LaDuca. “Production is faster. It used to be slower because it wasn’t as digital. It used to involve putting this box together of reference tapes and drawings and storyboards and copies of paper that would be shipped [overseas for animation].” He jokes, “There would be 10 people running around going crazy, Xerox machines burning out. People crying, ‘Oh my God, the machine died! We have to go to Kinko’s!’ Now I can just sit at my desk and watch the reels that were just made down the hall, and listen to the track of the actors that were just recorded.”
Wexler and LaDuca are both ecstatic to be working on Disney Junior’s Jake and the Never Land Pirates. “I always wanted to work with Captain Hook,” LaDuca confesses. Though they’ve worked with characters that run the gamut from Pooh and Piglet to Lilo and Stitch, each can name one that they’d still like to work with. For Wexler, it’s Dumbo. LaDuca’s wish list has Ranger J. Audubon Woodlore at the top. LaDuca points out that when TVA began, animation was generally relegated to a few hours on network television on Saturday mornings. “Currently there’s a lot of brand-new product because we now have multiple channels,” LaDuca notes, referring to Disney Channel, Disney Junior, and Disney XD.
We’ll be sure to keep our TVs tuned in to see what the next 30 years have in store for TVA!