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One of the most iconic art styles to have emerged from the ranks of Disney Studio artists over the years is undoubtedly that of the incomparable Mary Blair. Instantly recognizable in color and composition, Mary’s whimsical artwork has enchanted generations of Disney fans. Where Mary has an immensely important place in the pantheon of Disney history, some may not know that so too does her husband, Lee.
Having lent his artistic talents to the productions of Pinocchio and Fantasia, Lee was an accomplished watercolor artist who helped add an impressionistic touch to the lush, exploratory and groundbreaking artwork that was coming out of the Disney Studio in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
Both Blairs would end up taking a trip “south of the border” with Walt Disney and a group of fellow studio artists in 1941 to experience several South American countries. The cultures, locales and people the group known as “El Grupo” experienced during this venture were ample inspiration to help guide artistic output—perhaps influencing the Blairs more than any of the others on the trip.
Lee and Mary’s effortless watercolor brush strokes convey a strong and immediately identifiable sense of location— exotic and colorful, their artwork from the trip (as well as that created after) came to represent the essence of the locales “El Grupo” visited. Later, much of this artwork was used as inspiration (and in some instances, as hand props!) for the productions of Saludos Amigos, The Three Caballeros and the featurette film, South of the Border with Disney.
This script shows an early attempt at the Enchanted Tiki Room, hosted by one José Carioca!
On June 23rd, Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room celebrated its 50th anniversary. Walt’s original Audio-Animatronics® spectacle, the tropical serenade has delighted guests for five decades–first at Disneyland, and then at Magic Kingdom Park at Walt Disney World Resort and Tokyo Disneyland.
These script pages, dated December 16, 1962, show an early version of the show’s four hosts—or “macaudios”, as they’re described here. Much of the show’s dialogue and gags were written by Disney Legend Wally Boag, who also contributed the voice of José the parrot. In fact, in this version of the script José introduces himself as José Carioca, a name shared with the Brazilian feathered star of Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros.
Enjoy this look back at the development of the “world of joyous songs and wondrous miracles” that has enchanted us all for 50 years.
Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971) is a thrilling film, featuring groundbreaking animation and special effects, as well as a lovable cast of characters. One of the film’s dashing thespians the Disney fan community has come to embrace over the years is David Tomlinson, perhaps known best for his performance as Mr. Banks in Mary Poppins. In Bedknobs, David plays the affable swindler, Emelius Brown—master “teacher” of magic and witchcraft, extraordinaire!
It’s an iconic performance, one many Disney fans warmly remember.
During David’s introduction in the film, he uses a small briefcase that pops up into a colorful magician’s cart to woo onlookers while peddling his wares on Portobello Road. It’s an iconic performance, one many Disney fans warmly remember. Thankfully, Emelius’ magician’s cart is safely stored in the Walt Disney Archives.
While inspecting the film-used magician’s cart for display, Becky Cline, director of the Walt Disney Archives, noticed a small, yellow, crumpled-up piece of paper in the bottom of the cart’s surprisingly cavernous opening. Upon further inspection, this piece was not garbage or misplaced production ephemera.
It was scrawled with dialogue: the blocking notes for one of Emelius’ ploys!
David Tomlinson’s actor’s notes had remained in the case many years after production wrapped—helping to clue our archivists into the intensely personal and creative mind of a Disney Legend. The find was a welcome surprise, one that helps us understand the actor’s motivations and thoughts while giving a memorable performance.
Imagineer John Hench sketched this salty seafarer for Epcot Center’s Living Seas pavilion.
Success can be a double-edged sword sometimes; your creation might be so popular that people demand you revisit it again and again.
This is a problem that Disney Imagineers faced after Epcot opened, when the Figment and Dreamfinder characters from Journey into Imagination proved to be instant stars. Suddenly, the sponsors of other pavilions wanted characters similar to the loveable duo.
When United Technologies signed on to sponsor a Seas pavilion for Epcot in 1983, one of their requests was for the pavilion to have a pair of host characters—just like Dreamfinder and Figment. Imagineer Hench, perhaps not keen on merely repeating past successes, scribbled in the margin of a meeting memo, “Here we go again!”
This request led to a bout of inspired silliness from the Imagineer—maybe it was a slow day at the office?—when he sketched these hilarious proposals for two new characters: Captain Saltyhinder and his mackerel sidekick. Saltyhinder is portrayed as a sea captain or deep-sea diver, greeting park guests and spraying children with water.
Needless to say, these ideas didn’t make it off the drawing board. The Living Seas opened in 1986 as a very serious trip to Seabase Alpha, with nary a “mackerel Figment” in sight.
When EPCOT Center opened in 1982, its most iconic denizens were the two whimsical hosts of the Imagination pavilion: Dreamfinder and Figment. Imagineer Tony Baxter and his team developed the beloved characters, but it took some time to figure out just how they would appear, act… and sound.
This rather remarkable casting call appeared in one of Disney’s own cast member newsletters in the fall of 1981. It’s an open request for employees to send in cassette tapes if they have “distinctive” voices, which would prove suitable for a “youthful, restless, mischievous, excitable, daydreaming purple dragon.”
While the role of Figment’s voice eventually went to stage-and-screen veteran Billy Barty, it must have been exciting at the time to have a shot at voicing this future Epcot legend!
Welcome to Our Tropical Hideaway, You Lucky People, You
For 50 years of pleasure and glee, Disneyland guests have been singing (and whistling) along with the fantastic flora and fabulous fauna of Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room. Starring 225 of some of the most singular Disney characters ever created in the form of trilling birds, warbling flowers, and chanting Tiki totems, this island-inspired musical revue premiered on June 23, 1963, as the world’s first Audio- Animatronics®show. While Disneyland had always featured dimensional animated figures—for example, the animals along the Jungle Cruise—Walt wanted a more sophisticated way to infuse three-dimensional characters with convincing life while also being able to sync the animation with other figures, audio, and visual effects.
Magic is happen-ing, all the birds and flowers sing.
The golden anniversary of the Enchanted Tiki Room celebrates not only the debut of the “musical luau,” but also the birth of Disney’s Audio-Animatronics technology itself. So drift along with the tuneful trade winds as we discover the romance and music of this magical thatched-roofed theater and its enchanting inhabitants. As the Barker Bird (Who? More about him later) used to squawk, “Magic is happen-ing, all the birds and flowers sing.”
Creating the Enchantment of the Tiki Room Walt must have had birds on the brain when he hatched the idea that was to ultimately take wing as the first Audio-Animatronics showcase. As Imagineer Wathel Rogers remembered, “It kind of started with Walt, and this little mechanical bird in a cage that he had. Walt gave it to me and asked me to look inside it.” Marveling at the movement achieved by an antiquated mechanism in the mechanical bird he found in a New Orleans curio shop, the ever inquisitive impresario asked his Imagineers if a signal could be put on magnetic tape that would make an animated bird’s mouth move. They said yes, and the Audio-Animatronics technology was on its way.
“Just as we had to learn to make our animated cartoons talk,” Walt later explained, “we had to find a way to make [the Tiki Room] characters talk, too. Now to accomplish this, we created a new type of animation, so new that we had to invent a new name for it—Audio-Animatronics. The same scientific equipment that guides rockets to the moon is used to make Jose [the macaw host] and his little friends in the Tiki Room sing, talk, move, and practically think for themselves. I guess you could call him a creature of the Space Age!” With the breakthrough of multi-channeled magnetic tape, movements like the blink of an eye or the turn of a head could be recorded alongside the soundtrack and other set cues. When the tape was played back, the “performers” gave a perfectly synchronized show every time.
Before the birds took flight as the animated Space Age pioneers, however, the attraction was originally intended to be something quite different than a swinging South Seas show. According to Disney Studio machinist Roger Broggie, Walt told his Imagineers, “I want to have a Chinese restaurant at the park. Out in the lobby will be an old Chinese fellow like Confucius—not an actor, but a figure. Now the customers will ask him questions, and he’ll reply with words of wisdom.” The restaurant was also to feature a dinner show, accompanied by an assortment of animals real and imagined, including birds and a fire-breathing, joke-telling dragon. The burgeoning Audio-Animatronics technology had a ways to go before a human figure could be convincingly portrayed—although amazingly, the ultra-sophisticated Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln was unveiled only a year after Tiki Room’s 1963 debut… so the Chinese philosopher (and the dragon) got the hook.
The birds however came home to roost. Tapping into America’s obsession with all things Tiki—interest in Polynesian culture was at an all-time high as Hawaii had just been admitted to the Union in 1959—the Imagineers morphed the Chinese dinner show into a tropical-themed “dessert” presentation starring a flock of feathered performers. On the momentous date of October 9, 1963, however, the decision was made to drop the dinner and keep the show as Walt realized diners, mesmerized by the avian entertainers, wouldn’t leave the restaurant in time for the next performance—and so the show intended to be seen during dessert became the main course.
In creating the colorful cast for this show that would now be an attraction in its own right, Walt said to his designers, “This show doesn’t have to be a natural history museum. Let’s have some fun!” Imagineer Rolly Crump’s first designs were stylized, but Walt thought they were a little “too crazy.” Sculptor Blaine Gibson then produced a more naturalistic bird shape in clay, adding a touch of Disney personality to the face. “Walt didn’t want an absolutely realistic parrot,” Blaine remembered, “but one with a little bit of cheek on it, something you could get some expression out of.” Legendary Disney artist Marc Davis (whose first Imagineering assignment this was) designed whimsical birds and flowers with human-like personalities. Not so coincidentally, Marc was a collector of authentic oceanic art, and he incorporated many genuine details and patterns into his drawings. “I knew what I was looking for.” Marc recalled, “I designed those ‘talking totems,’ and all those things that came to life there.”
Imagineer Harriet Burns designed and feathered many of the Enchanted Tiki Room birds, using real feathers. “I want these birds to be so real you can see them breathe,” Walt told her. A breathtaking assignment, but Harriet developed a way to add a stretch-and-recover aspect to the figures’ chest covering, an inspiration based on her observation of the way the blue wool sweater Walt liked to wear moved at the elbows.
A Song in the Key of Tiki
As a test, the “Legends of the Enchanted Tiki” (the working title of the attraction) was mocked up in Stage 2 at the Disney Studio. Walt invited his virtuoso tunesmiths, the Sherman Brothers, to view the show. (Richard speculated that the hit song “Pineapple Princess” that he and his brother Robert wrote for Annette in 1960 is probably what made Walt think of the Shermans when it came time for a Tiki song.) When he asked the songwriting siblings if they had any ideas, they recalled a calypso song they had composed for a Disney TV show about the production of Swiss Family Robinson (1960). “So,” recalled the Shermans, “we suggested that the song could be done in a calypso beat: ‘the Tiki, Tiki, Tiki, Tiki, Tiki Room.’ It had a sound you could remember. And Walt bought the idea, just like that. We wrote the lengthy, gag-filled calypso ‘Tiki Room’ song, which performs the all-important task of explaining to the audience what they are about to see and hear.”
Instead of one parrot emcee, we’ll have four, with French, Spanish, German. and Irish accents.
“The Tiki Tiki Tiki Room” not only gave the show a focus, it also gave it a name. Additionally, the four famous spokesbirds had yet to be designed. To add a sense of continuity to the show, Richard and Robert suggested that a colorful parrot with a personality serve as emcee. Walt liked the idea so much, he built on their inspiration. “Instead of one parrot emcee, we’ll have four, with French, Spanish, German. and Irish accents.” As the Shermans noted, “Walt always had a way of plussing a good idea.” With the cast firmly in place—and with more jokes and birdbrained fun contributed by writers Larry Clemmons and Marty Sklar, as well as Wally Boag and Fulton Burley—the Enchanted Tiki Room was ready to fly.
Meet the “MacAudios” The four parrot hosts evolved into everyone’s favorite flighty macaws, amusingly dubbed “the MacAudios.” First among the feathered equals is José, the Spanish-accented amigo, voiced by legendary Disneyland performer Wally Boag. Wally’s Golden Horseshoe Revue co-star Fulton Burley voices Michael, the Irish-brogued bird (his moniker was originally to be Paddy), while Fritz booms with a Bavarian baritone provided by legendary voice artist Thurl Ravenscroft, well-known as Uncle Theodore, the lead singing bust in the Haunted Mansion. Ernie Newton, the vocal artist behind the singing knight in the Haunted Mansion, voices the French-accented MacAudio, Pierre.
Originally, the plumage of the talkative Tiki Room headliners was colored to correspond with their national flags. Though the feathers’ hues were modified over the years, today each emcee has vivid, visually distinct colors that reflect that original design concept: Jose has a red crest and a green body; Michael is white with green head and wings; Fritz is burnt orange and white; and Pierre is red, white, and blue. Besides the four hovering hosts, the revue also features an additional four macaws, six cockatoos, nearly 30 tropical birds, 12 toucans, more than 50 orchids, seven bird-of-paradise flowers, 12 Tiki drummers, and singing Tiki war god totems.
Walt usually knew what he wanted, and these birdie beauties were no exception
The “Birdmobile,” which lowers from the room’s ceiling, is the revolving showcase for the six Folies Bergère-style showgirl cockatoos. As can be seen from their nameplates just below their personalized perches, each of these birdie beauties has a name: Collette, Suzette, Mimi, Gigi, Fifi, and Josephine. (“I wonder what happened to Rosita?”) Walt usually knew what he wanted, and these birdie beauties were no exception: He insisted that they sing not with bird-like tweets but with human voices—specifically in the style of Peruvian purveyor of exotica music, Yma Sumac. Rolly Crump sculpted the chandelier-like Birdmobile where it now hangs, sitting atop a ladder to carve the contraption in the middle of the Tiki room.
At The Gateway To Adventureland One of the most incredible aspects of Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room is that, once the show was written and recorded, the Imagineers had the show up and running in Adventureland in a mere three months. Surprisingly, the first public performance of José and his blossomed-and-beaked Tiki troupe was not at Disneyland but at the Disney Studio, where, on April 10, 1963, invited members of the press saw a preview on Stage 3. On June 19, Walt hosted an official press preview of his Audio-Animatronics aviary for reporters from more than 40 major newspapers, magazines, and TV and radio stations. Finally, the doors of the magical theatre-in-the-round—designed in the style of the assembly lodges and communal houses once found throughout the South Seas—opened to all Disneyland guests on June 23.
For a while after the groundbreaking attraction officially opened, Enchanted Tiki Room boasted an Audio-Animatronics Barker Bird outside the attraction’s entryway to attract guests like a carnival midway pitchman. Also known as the Tiki Room Ballyhoo Parrot, this big-beaked barker was Juan, the cousin of MacAudio José (although he was just as often referred to as José), as Walt did when he featured the barker on the “Disneyland 10th Anniversary” episode of Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color. The spectacle of this animated, talking bird caused traffic jams along the Adventureland walkway as guests gathered to enjoy this wisecracking macaw.
Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room . . . is Disney entertainment at its most exciting, best kind.
Eventually Juan was retired. Here’s a sampling of Juan’s appealing spiel: “Amigos, Romans, and Disneylanders! Stop walking while I’m squawking. Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room . . . is Disney entertainment at its most exciting, best kind.” And, he continued, since the show “is on the inside, not the outside—that would be silly,” and Juan invited guests to come in “and sit down on your feathered dusters. Those amazing birds sing. They chant. They whistle. They croon.” Then, after singing a few bars, the Barker Bird cracked, “What did you expect? The Vienna Boys Choir?”
“Where Fantasy and Legend Walk Hand in Hand with Tiki Talk”
One enchanting element of this Adventureland favorite enjoyed by “early birdies” waiting to see José and the rest of the colorful cast take wing is the Enchanted Tiki Garden. The idea of placing tiki figures in the restful outdoor landscaping to “set the mood for guests before the show begins” came from Imagineering legend John Hench. “In this Tropical Paradise Legendary Gods and Goddesses of the Islands Guard Portals to Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room,” reads a sign carved and painted in a style recalling the bold graphic designs of New Guinea.
The Tiki gods were designed by Imagineer Collin Campbell and sculpted by Rolly Crump — with the “tiki talk” written by Imagineering great Marty Sklar.
The Tiki gods were designed by Imagineer Collin Campbell and sculpted by Rolly Crump—who researched Pacific island mythology for the speaking statuary—with the “tiki talk” written by Imagineering great Marty Sklar. The garden’s gods and goddesses were vocalized by deep-voiced Thurl Ravenscroft who voiced Fritz and spoke for the “mighty tree” Tangaroa; Hina (goddess of rain) was Disney Studio veteran Anne Essex; Ginny Tyler, voice of the lovesick girl squirrel in The Sword in the Stone (1963) portrayed both Pele and Tangaroa-Ru (the east wind); and Hawaiian-born musician Ernie Tavares provided voices for the remaining four deities: clock-faced Maui, Koro (the midnight dancer), Ngendi (the earth balancer), and Rongo (the kite-flyer). In addition, Tavares chanted in Hawaiian for the tiki totems inside, and is the voice that invites waiting visitors to come inside as the doors to the Enchanted Tiki Room open.
More Tunes That Are Crooned
Under the direction of Disney’s veteran conductor and arranger George Bruns, the Tiki Room’s dialog and singing (to say nothing of the whistling) was recorded at the Disney Studios in February 1963. The eclectic cast that provided the exotic bird calls and whistling included Clarence “Ducky” Nash (the original voice of Donald Duck), band singer and orchestra leader (on Art Linkletter’s House Party TV show) Maurice “Muzzy” Marcelino, Marion Darlington (who had warbled for the birds in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs)—and best of all, novelty vocalist A. Purvis Pullen, also known as Dr. Horatio Q. Birdbath (yes, really), a real-life ornithologist and replicator of more than 900 bird sounds. Vocalists included George Bruns’ wife Jeanne Gayle and Betty Wand (who sang “Baby Mine” in Walt Disney’s Dumbo, 1941).
Let’s All Sing Like the Birdies Sing
In addition to the unforgettably catchy theme song by the Sherman Brothers, the Tiki Room show incorporates other tunes for the guests to warble like nightingales. José jokingly describes “Let’s All Sing Like the Birdies Sing” as “our national anthem.” During the performance of this singalong standard, Fritz imitates Louis Armstrong, José croons in the style of Bing Crosby (the Crosby-esque boo-boo-booing was performed by famed Hollywood voice-double Bill Lee, who sang “Cruella De Vil” in One Hundred and One Dalmatians, 1961) and Pierre musically mimics Maurice Chevalier. The famed “Hawaiian War Chant” is sung with the original Hawaiian lyrics, and the “Closing Bows/Drums” number is by Jimmie Dodd, the head Mouseketeer on Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse Club TV series.As the audience leaves—after José’s pointed suggestion that the audience give the Tiki Room performers a standing ovation—an unseen chorus sings an upbeat exit song to the melody of “Heigh-Ho” from Snow White and theSeven Dwarfs, withnew lyrics by Wally Boag (and a few gags suggested by other members of the team).
All of the songs—in fact, the soundtrack of the entire attraction—was included on the Enchanted Tiki Room record album released in 1968 on the Disneyland Records label. The specially commissioned album art was by veteran Disney artist Pete Alvarado, under the pseudonymof Bart Doe.
Care and Feeding of the Flowers and Feathers
For five decades, cast members entrusted with maintaining this classic Disneyland attraction have treated the avian actors and horticultural performers with TLC. According to a 1988 report, each of the birds is meticulously examined and dusted every week. About 40 hours is needed to replace just one feather, and the bird figures are re-feathered by professional taxidermists. The white-plumed Birdmobile Girls are exchanged with their doubles every six months to ensure the pristine color of their ever-fashionable feather ’dos.
50 years of flowers, feathers, and fun
In 2004, this beloved attraction received an extensive refurbishment. The feathered and flowered friends as well as all the remarkable residents of the Tiki Room were meticulously restored to their original pristine condition, including a mechanical makeover of the internal components for each of the Audio-Animatronics stars. In 2005, Imagineers discovered the original source tapes in the audio vault and painstakingly restored the Tiki Room soundtrack, while also installing new speakers and audio equipment, resulting in sound with greater clarity than the original. As it celebrates 50 years of flowers, feathers, and fun, Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room is, more than ever, “a world of joyous song and wondrous miracles.”
In the final months of his life, Walt went before studio cameras to unveil his greatest vision yet.
For any Disney fan, the scene is iconic—Walt Disney in a room decorated with models and artistic renderings, describing his concept for the futuristic city of EPCOT. This experimental community would prove to be his last and greatest dream, and the “EPCOT Film”, shot on October 27, 1966, would be one of his final on-screen appearances.
Production sheets show the small crew that was summoned to Stage 1 on the Disney lot that day to document Walt’s EPCOT pitch. Director Arthur Vitarelli was a Hollywood veteran and frequent second unit or assistant director at the Disney Studio, working on a long list of films including Mary Poppins and The Shaggy Dog.
In these rare photographs, you can see the filmmakers and Walt setting up for production. While based on the top-secret EPCOT planning rooms at the WED Enterprises campus in Glendale, the film’s sets were custom built on a Disney soundstage for the production.
Jerry Bruckheimer, whose blockbuster films include Pirates of the Caribbean, Prince of Persia, and the upcoming adventure The Lone Ranger, was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Hollywood, California. Stars Johnny Depp and Tom Cruise stopped by to join the festivities on Monday, June 24.
Years before Disneyland opened, Walt Disney and his staff considered building an amusement enterprise right across the street from their Burbank studio.
Long-time Disney fans will likely know the story about how, in 1951, Walt Disney approached artist Harper Goff to create some illustrations for a potential amusement enterprise (what we know today as a “theme park.”) While Walt’s notion eventually blossomed into the reality of Disneyland, this early concept was actually designed to be built on a parcel of land across the street from the Disney Studio. The lot, facing Burbank’s Riverside Drive, is now home to the Walt Disney Animation Studios and the West Coast headquarters of ABC.
This selection of artwork, along with the related piece above, was sourced by the staff of the Walt Disney Archives among other assorted Disneyland historical materials, under a cardboard divider labeled “Proposed Disneyland in Burbank Drawings.” Though not the original pieces of artwork, these small, hand-colored reproductions reveal details that help us understand how these early visions eventually became the Disneyland we know and love today.
One original idea for the park, as seen here, features a railroad (of course!) as well as a Mississippi Steamboat. Many highlights—a stagecoach, an Indian village, a castle, and Skull Rock—would make their way to Disneyland. Others, like Granny’s Farm, would not.
These sketches show concepts for a duck boat attraction, an experience that could have provided a relaxing excursion on the Old Mill Pond, which can be seen on the large map. The idea of a Ferris Wheel, likely based on 1937’s The Old Mill, would be revived decades later for Disneyland Paris.
This final sketch shows an exciting ride based on Pinocchio’s daring journey and fright-filled experience careening into the gaping jaws of the whale, Monstro. Where the 1951 park plan features a canal boat ride, eventually Monstro would appear in Disneyland’s very own Storybook Land Canal Boats. These early attraction designs may convince you that the future is truly in the past.
On April 8, 2013, the world lost one of its most beloved icons . . . Annette Funicello. She passed away at age 70 from complications due to Multiple Sclerosis, a disease she bravely battled for more than 25 years. While she accomplished much in her life, her fondest career memories were always tied to the Mickey Mouse Club where she got her start, and to Walt Disney, who gave her that opportunity. It is fitting that The Walt Disney Studios, where she was introduced to the world, would also be the place where at the end of her life, her legacy would be celebrated.
On Monday, June 24, 2013, friends and family will gather there to pay tribute to her. The Walt Disney Company pays tribute to her memory by rededicating Soundstage 1 as the “Annette Funicello Stage.”
Bobby Burgess as an original Mouseketeer in Mickey Mouse cap
Bobby Burgess, a fellow original Mouseketeer said of his lifelong friend, “Annette was one of those people who just had a natural charisma that came across the screen. Of course, she was the only Mouseketeer to be personally discovered by Walt Disney. I knew her for more than 50 years and as the song goes, ‘Through the years we’ll all be friends wherever we may be.’ And we were.”
I’m so appreciative of all those years of love and fun with such a wonderful friend.
Another Mouseketeer, Sharon Baird, was one of Annette’s closest friends throughout her life and was with her at the hospital in her final days. “I first met Annette when we both started working on the Mickey Mouse Club. We just sort of migrated to each other and started a friendship that would endure through childhood, teenage ups and downs, marriages, divorces; we shared everything. I’m so appreciative of all those years of love and fun with such a wonderful friend.”
Nine original Mouseketeers standing in two rows bending knees in a dance step with a cactus behind them
“I think my life would have been much different and certainly much lonelier and much less complete if I hadn’t had my friendship with Annette,” said actress Shelley Fabares, who also was one of Annette’s closest pals. “She was just an incredible sweet, kind woman and I will miss her for the rest of my life.”
She was one of the loveliest people I’ve ever known . . .
As many gather today at the Walt Disney Studios to celebrate and honor Annette, even Diane Disney, Walt’s daughter, made comment (via videotaped message) of how much Annette meant to her family. “Everyone who knew Annette loved and respected her. She was one of the loveliest people I’ve ever known, and was always so kind to everyone. She was also the consummate professional and had such great loyalty to my father. She will always be very special to me.”
Following her tenure at Disney, Annette headed to the beach to co-star with then teen idol Frankie Avalon in a string of iconic surf and sand musical adventures that led to a longtime camaraderie with the popular singer. “She was a very courageous gal that fought, fought, fought, her illness,“ he said. “I loved her; we worked together and we were family because I’m godfather to her daughter, Gina. I think she represented the pure innocence of a woman who was just the girl next door. Incredibly, she never really recognized that fact that she was so popular. After being on tour I’d tell Annette ‘people just love you, they adore you,’ and she would say ‘Really?’ She couldn’t believe the fact that she was so loved, but she certainly was.”
She showed the best side of herself by coming forward to discuss her MS with courage and candor.
But it was teen idol Paul Anka, the performer would grow up to write the anthem My Way, who was her first true love. He would be inspired to write Puppy Love, his 1960 hit, about Annette. Remembering his friend fondly, he said, “Annette was a star from the time she was 12 years old, and I met her shortly after. In addition to her talent, she was self-possessed, determined, had incredible integrity, and was loved by everyone. When life threw her a terrible curve, she showed the best side of herself by coming forward to discuss her MS with courage and candor. As much as she entertained us as a young woman, she gave so much more by sharing her experience and raising awareness of this disease. She was kind and intelligent and she will be missed by her family and her wide circle of friends, in which I was lucky to be included.”
Annette’s popularity went far beyond her close circle of friends. She touched millions around the world, including some of today’s most popular celebrities, even those such as Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake who followed in Annette’s footsteps when they appeared as Mouseketeers in later versions of the iconic show. Following are a selection of celebrity tweets from those who took to Twitter upon hearing of her passing:
Britney Spears – “I am DEVASTATED to hear about the passing of Annette Funicello. She was a role model for me during my days as a Mouseketeer. Heartbroken.”
Justin Timberlake – “Trading in the ears for a halo. You will be missed!”
Nancy Sinatra – “Annette was my buddy. I’ll miss you forever, Annie, and I wish you godspeed.”
William Shatner – “My thoughts are with the family of Annette Funicello. My best, Bill.”
Joey Fatone – Now it’s time to say goodbye….. 🙁 RIP
Dana Delany – “Annette. You were a dream girl in saddle shoes.”
Paula Abdul – “I’m truly saddened by Annette Funicello’s passing. She was an original Mouseketeer and an original talent all-around.”
Kathie Lee Gifford – “I just loved her. I always wondered what my life would have been like if ‘Mr. Disney’ liked me too. She was lovely and gracious and very sweet.”
Joan Rivers – “Annette Funicello’s death truly saddens me. She was such a bright and wonderful part of all of our history.”
Indeed she was.
In 1992, Annette created The Annette Funicello Research Fund for Neurological Diseases that continues to fund research into the cause, treatment and cure of Multiple Sclerosis. If you would like to donate to Annette’s Research Fund, please visit AnnetteConnection.com.