EPCOT Center's The American Adventure Documentary (1984)
The American Adventure is an attraction at EPCOT Center. It has been revised in recent years, but this is a documentary about this attraction when it open and was constructed by Walt Disney's family. It opened October 1, 1982 along with the rest of the park. This promotional video was created to advertise what an achievement this production was at the time. It's a shame the show has been altered to become PC then Woke.
Release date 1984
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Making of EPCOT Center's The American Adventure (1987)
Actor Lloyd Bridges hosts this behind the scenes documentary for The American Adventure was created for The Disney Channel in 1987 and only ever aired a handful of times never to be seen again. The source for this video is from a master copy so you'll see some bars on the sides of the footage as this is the full magnetic tape image. At the time, The Disney Channel sometimes created documentaries about different aspects of the Disney Parks. by the 1990's this was dropped in favor of the occasional TV Magazine format. What's great about these longform documentaries is they chronicle the history of an attraction and celebrate it as it was built and not what it's been degraded into.
Original air date July 4, 1987
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Captain Eeyore (1987) (Disney Parks Cast Member Captain EO Parody)
Captain Eeyore is a legendary cast member parody of the Captain EO attraction film. Cast member films had become a tradition starting in the late 70's and would be shown at employee events for amusement. It was filmed off hours in the tunnels beneath Walt Disney World using the Walt Disney characters in the place of characters in the original film. This was also a satire of what was felt was the dehumanizing conditions of Eisner's era Disney vs Walt Disney's Disney. Amazingly, Disney management was totally unaware this was going on and it became a form of resistance to the policies of the time. For example, Eisner banned the Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum characters from the parks claiming he thought they looked like down-syndrome children. (This is even referenced in the dialog.) They feature prominently in the film.
When this was produced, it was a time of transition between when Disney was run as a family company vs the global conglomerate it was becoming. It's filled with inside references galore and an important part of Eisner era Disney history. Evidently when Eisner found out about Captain Eeyore, cast member videos ceased being allowed.
Release Date 1987
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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The Making of Walt Disney Pictures' The Rocketeer (1991)
The Rocketeer was meant to be Disney's own Indiana Jones style franchise. It was based on the cult favorite comic book by Dave Stevens and featured an all star cast and used many of the top behind the scenes people of the day. The result wasn't bad but it was believed that because this was marketed as a Walt Disney Pictures release the film bombed. In truth, the summer of 1991 was a very competitive summer with the surprise hit being Robing Hood: Prince of Thieves.
The film is much better than the comic book that inspired it and became more than the source material. Director Joe Johnson was later given the job to direct Captain America: The First Avenger because of his success with the end result of this film.
This making of special aired in the summer of 1991 tying in with the film's release.
Original air date June 19, 1991
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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The Making of Disneyland's Indiana Jones Adventure (1995)
John Rhyes Davies and Karen Allen star in this behind the scenes TV special celebrating the opening of the Disneyland attraction Indiana Jones & the Temple of the Forbidden Eye. Although they don't revive their characters from Raiders of the Lost Ark, it's a glimpse at what they may have looked like if a 1990's installment of the franchise had happened. This special features the showmanship backstory of the ride, interviews with the creators, and culminates with Davies and Allen riding the ride themselves. These sort of specials celebrating the release of a new attraction had become commonplace at the time.
Original air date July 18, 1995
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Disneyland & Lucusfilms' Star Tours Video Press Kit (1987)
Star Tours was the first ever Star Wars theme park attraction ever built. In the 1970’s there has been discussions to build a Star Wars themed roller coaster featuring audio animatronics of the characters. Riders would decide if they would choose the light side or the dark side of the force. In the mock up most chose the dark side three to one to see the villains so the idea was scrapped and eventually evolved into Star Tours.
Star Tours was rooted in a concept for an unrealized attraction based on the Walt Disney Productions’ film The Black Hole. When the film bombed plans ceased. The technology was later adapted for the theme park attraction Captain EO. Star Wars creator George Lucas collaborated on that attraction and allowed for a Star Wars version to proceed.
The ride opened January 9, 1987 and since then there have been several editions of Star Tours.
This Press Kit video was produced to announce the ride’s release and was distributed to the media. It features interviews from the main players.
Original release 1987
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Disney Parks' & Lucusfilms' Captain EO (1986)
This is the full Captain EO film that no longer exists at any Disney Park. We present it here for historical purposes.
Captain EO was the first theme park 4D experience using motion a control film ride simulator with real effects in the theater. The more famous attraction to use this technology, Star Tours, came the following year. Captain EO was the most expensive film ever made at that time. Starring Michael Jackson, produced by George Lucas, and directed by Francis Ford Coppola this was a major production at the time. The film ran from 1986-1997.
Starring
Michael Jackson as Captain EO
Anjelica Huston as The Supreme Leader
Dick Shawn as Commander Bog
Tony Cox as Hooter
Debbie Lee Carrington as Geek (Idy)
Cindy Sorensen as Geek (Ody)
Gary DePew as Major Domo
Percy Rodriguez as Narrator
Release date September 12, 1986
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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The Making of Disney Parks' & Lucusfilms' Captain EO (1986)
This TV special aired as a tie in for the then brand new Disney theme park attraction. This was the first for the time. Hosted by Whoopi Goldberg, the documentary delves into how this attraction was created and finally realized.
Captain EO was the first theme park 4D experience using motion a control film ride simulator with real effects in the theater. The more famous attraction to use this technology, Star Tours, came the following year. Captain EO was the most expensive film ever made at that time. Starring Michael Jackson, produced by George Lucas, and directed by Francis Ford Coppola this was a major production at the time. The film ran from 1986-1997.
Original air date December 6, 1986
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Disney Parks' & Lucusfilms' Captain EO Grand Opening (1986)
Captain EO was such a unique production that it was the first theme park attraction to have a televised premiere. It aired on NBC and was hosted by 80's TV stars Patrick Duffy and Justine Bateman. Duffy was known at the time for prime time soap operas like Dallas and Knotts Landing. Bateman was a co-star on the sitcom Family Ties. This special features interviews and musical performances.
Captain EO was the first theme park 4D experience using motion a control film ride simulator with real effects in the theater. The more famous attraction to use this technology, Star Tours, came the following year. Captain EO was the most expensive film ever made at that time. Starring Michael Jackson, produced by George Lucas, and directed by Francis Ford Coppola this was a major production at the time. The film ran from 1986-1997.
Original air date September 20, 1986
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Walt Disney Radio Interview on Bambi (1965)
In 1965 Walt Disney was interviewed on Bambi for the 1965 rerelease.
Posted for historical purposes. Walt Disney's voice is recreated with AI. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Disneyland 10th Anniversary Company Party Speeches (1965)
In 1965 a party was held for Disneyland employees that was emceed by Wally Boag. He was the star of the Golden Horseshoe Revue and a favorite of Walt's. Walt's brother Roy and Walt gave speeches and that's what we present for you here. This rare clip was sent into us and contains some audio artifacts but we've done the best we can do with it. Photos have been used to illustrate the audio.
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Admiral Joe Fowler Interview (1988)
On January 13, 1988 Admiral Joe Fowler was filmed for an in house Walt Disney Company interview. This is an excerpt from that interview.
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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The Making of Touchstone Pictures' Dick Tracy (1990)
Dick Tracy is an innovative film that was a spectacular box office bomb because the film had cost so much to make. Based on the long running Chester Gould comic strip, Disney was hoping to capitalize on the popularity of the previous year’s summer blockbuster Batman. They used state of the art special effects, elaborate makeup, over the top art direction, big stars, and the same composer. The film was a disappointment.
For years afterward Disney was in a dispute with the films actor/director Warren Beatty who wanted to make sequels. The film also marked the last time Walt Disney legend Peter Ellenshaw worked on a matte painting in a film.
This making of special aired that summer.
Original air date June 13, 1990
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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The Making of Touchstone Pictures' Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988)
Who Framed Roger Rabbit is credited as the film that made cartoons fun again. It was an ambitious production mixing live action with animation and the only time characters from competing studios appeared together in the same film. Building upon this films release suddenly animation was cool again with Disney launching successful animated features and other studios getting into the game.
This making of special aired on CBS and is a celebration of golden age cartoons just like the film is a love letter to that period in animation.
Original air date September 13, 1988
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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The Making of Walt Disney Pictures' Honey I Shrunk the Kids (1989)
Honey I Shrunk the Kids was a surprise hit in 1989. the film was in the tradition of the family films Walt Disney used to make updated to the 1980’s. This making of special aired frequently on the Disney Channel advertising the film and hasn’t been seen in over thirty years. The production was filmed in Mexico City because the world’s largest blue screen on earth was there. There had never been this type of film produced on this scale before. The heart of the story, however, is about the broken family coming together.
Honey I Shrunk the Kids launched a franchise that included two sequels, a TV series and theme park attractions. Rumor has it another sequel is in the works but on hold.
Original air date June 14, 1989
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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EPCOT Center Opening Celebration with Danny Kaye (1982)
This TV special hosted by Danny Kaye marked the world's introduction to EPCOT Center. Walt had envisioned EPCOT as the Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow. He'd planned to have American industry showcase their innovations here so that they would become practical reality for all people everywhere. It was to be a World's Fair style city where people could actually live, work, and play and was the entire reason for the Florida Project. He'd only agreed to built Walt Disney World in exchange for the Florida government to give him the privileges he required to build EPCOT as planned.
When Walt Disney died in 1966, his brother Roy moved ahead with building Walt Disney World. Originally, it was to be a much smaller scaled version of Disneyland with different attractions but became a theme park that dwarfed the original. When the time came to built EPCOT, the studio board nixed Walt's plans and transformed it into an educational theme park. The World Showcase was adapted from an idea Walt had for an International Street in Disneyland that never got built. Future World became a World's Fair of consumer products. Everyone's surprise favorite character was Figment the baby dragon. He and Dreamfinder had originally been created for a proposed new land at Disneyland called Discovery Bay. Figment was the breakout star and became the mascot of EPCOT Center.
Walt Disney's right-hand songwriters, the Sherman Bros, were brought in to write several songs for the new park and give it that Walt Disney feel.
Although, not the experimental prototype community of tomorrow Walt had intended, this is the EPCOT we got and what the world came to know. In recent years the majority of the version of EPCOT Center we see at its opening has been demolished and replaced with attraction including Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, Muppet, and other characters. Initially there was an embargo on the traditional Disney characters except for Mickey, Donald, Goofy, Pluto, Daisy, Minnie, Chip & Dale, etc to keep EPCOT Center separate from the fantasy park. Even then, these characters were dressed in costumes to reflect different areas of World Showcase. A few years after opening, McDonalds released a Happy Meal campaign of these characters in their EPCOT Center attire.
Beloved actor and comedian Danny Kaye was brought in to host this TV special. He'd already hosted Disneyland's 25 Anniversary Special in 1980 Kaye was chosen to host this special for a variety of reasons. Not only was he a beloved entertainer but a world-renowned chef, a musical conductor, and had been affiliated with the United Nations UNICEF program since 1954. All of these qualities would tie in with what EPCOT Center became. He also knew Walt Disney personally and had heard his plans for EPCOT many times. In short, he knew all the things that EPCOT Center wasn't.
Some accounts claim Danny Kaye wasn't easy to work with on this special. They say he was annoyed with the entire ordeal, snapping at guests and Disney CEO had him thrown off the property. Another tale claims Danny Kaye mooned the head of operations who didn't like Kaye either. Regardless, these tensions are nowhere apparent in the special itself.
This special originally aired on CBS in 1982. This version of the TV special is a version that aired on Vault Disney in the late 1990's and hasn't been seen since.
So, let's enjoy how EPCOT Center was when it originally opened in 1982.
Original airdate October 23, 1982
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Disneyland 25th Anniversary Special with Danny Kaye (1980)
Danny Kaye was brought in to host the 25th anniversary special of Disneyland for CBS in 1980. The shtick for this special is Kaye plays multiple characters throughout the special, something he was known for in a lot of his projects.
Musical stars throughout include the Osmonds and Michael Jackson.
It's a great snapshot of what Walt's park looked like 25 years after its construction. This is a Vault Disney airing from the late 90's.
Original airdate March 6, 1980
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Disney/MGM Studios Magic of Animation Tour Montage Film (1992)
When the Disney/MGM Studios opened there was an animation studio that tourists could visit and see how the animated features were made. Initially, the studio only did commercials but eventually picked up the slack on the animated features before making a few of their own. The Walt Disney Company loved the Florida Studio because they didn't have to pay union rates to their artists.
At the end of the tour was this film that featured this celebration of the greatest moments in Walt Disney animation from Mickey Mouse through Aladdin. The film would be updated with each new film release. This is a love letter to what Walt Disney Feature Animation used to be.
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Walt Disney World Very Merry Christmas Parade (1988)
This is the sixth Walt Disney World Very Merry Christmas Parade to be aired on network television since 1984 and the first two hour version. This parade would become a staple for decades and something important in growing up Disney in the 80's and 90's, although the "Christmas" name would be dropped near the end of the Eisner age. The Christmas parade telecast really became a 2 hour infomercial for what the Walt Disney Company had in the works for the upcoming year. Eventually annual Easter and Independence Day Parade telecasts would join the Christmas Parade and the Christmas Parade itself would expand to a 2 hour Christmas morning broadcast tradition. Regis Philbin became the figure most associated with these parades. (The Easter and Independence Day Parade broadcasts were dropped near the end of the Eisner years as well.) The Christmas and Easter parades always aired on the ABC Network. The second parade broadcast had been ta 90 minute broadcast and proved so successful that this year it was a 90 minute one as well and expanded to include Disneyland and Tokyo Disneyland. We get to see many coming updates to Walt Disney World. This Walt Disney World Very Merry Christmas Parade features a Christmas Day Presidential message from Ronald Reagan and newly elected George Bush. The Presidential message would be a staple of these parades for decades.
This is a time capsule into Walt Disney history past. This is where the Eisner regime really hit their stride with the company and you can start to see their influence coming through. Here, we get a glimpse of Disney easing into the age of their animation renaissance. We get a behind the scenes segment on the newly released Oliver & Company. You can see this once small family company is transforming into the global conglomerate people think of today. Many of these characters you don't see any more either and they STILL cared about the legacy of Walt Disney. What a tremendous time capsule this is. There’s segments on the construction of Splash Mountain and the soon to be open Disney/MGM Studios.
Joan Lunden and Alan Thicke co-host this parade with Regis Philbin. Sarah Purcell hosts the Disneyland segments with Scott Valentine on the street.
Lunden was then the current co-host of Good Morning America and Thicke was one of the stars from the sitcom Growing Pains. Regis was a well known talk show host vet even then. This archetype of hosts for the parade broadcasts would continue with the parade for decades even though the hosts would change. Purcell was a famed talks how host of the time and Valentine was a star on the sitcom Family Ties.
Joan Lunden is the longest-running host of the Disney parade broadcasts.
Original air date December 25, 1988
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Walt Disney World 10th Anniversary Special with Dean Jones & Michelle Lee (1982)
For the 10th anniversary of Walt Disney World Dean Jones and Michelle Lee from The Love Bug were cast as new characters taking their family on vacation to Walt Disney World for this CBS special. (It would have been great if they'd reprised their Love Bug characters.) Along the way they bump into several stars of the day including a very young Michael Keaton. This only aired once and technically the 10th anniversary was 1981, not 1982.
Original airdate January 21st, 1982
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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The Best of Disney - 50 Years of Magic with Dick van Dyke & Shelly Long (1991)
This excellent Disney retrospective special commemorates the 50th anniversary of the studio lot Walt and Roy built with the profits from Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs. This 2 hour special is hosted by Disney favorite Dick van Dyke and features a parade of celebrities sharing their favorite Disney memories as well as take turns hosting segments covering virtually every Walt Disney film genre there is. This special also marked the first time audiences got a glimpse of the then upcoming animated feature Beauty & the Beast. This special is a high point demonstrating how in these early years of the Eisner era there was still a lot of respect for the Walt Disney Company's foundations in this celebration of the past. It seemed like every year they were doing multiple specials honor Walt's past and they were! This special only aired once on CBS.
Original air date May 20, 1991
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Walt Disney World Very Merry Christmas Parade (1989)
This is the seventh Walt Disney World Very Merry Christmas Parade to be aired on network television since 1984 and the second two hour version. This parade would become a staple for decades and something important in growing up Disney in the 80's and 90's, although the "Christmas" name would be dropped near the end of the Eisner age. The Christmas parade telecast really became a 2 hour infomercial for what the Walt Disney Company had in the works for the upcoming year. Eventually annual Easter and Independence Day Parade telecasts would join the Christmas Parade and the Christmas Parade itself would expand to a 2 hour Christmas morning broadcast tradition. Regis Philbin became the figure most associated with these parades. (The Easter and Independence Day Parade broadcasts were dropped near the end of the Eisner years as well.) The Christmas and Easter parades always aired on the ABC Network. The second parade broadcast had been ta 90 minute broadcast and proved so successful that this year it was a 90 minute one as well and expanded to include Disneyland and Tokyo Disneyland. We get to see many coming updates to Walt Disney World. This Walt Disney World Very Merry Christmas Parade features a Christmas Day Presidential message from George Bush. The Presidential message would be a staple of these parades for decades. A few other world leaders send their Christmas greetings as well.
This is a time capsule into Walt Disney history past. This is where the Eisner regime really hit their stride with the company and you can start to see their influence coming through. Here, we get a glimpse of Disney easing into the age of their animation renaissance. We get a behind the scenes segment on the newly released The Little Mermaid. You can see this once small family company is transforming into the global conglomerate people think of today. Many of these characters you don't see any more either and they STILL cared about the legacy of Walt Disney. What a tremendous time capsule this is. There’s segments on the recently opened Disney/MGM Studios, Star Tours, Splash Mountain, and other attractions. We also get to see Kermit the Frog in one of his final appearances. The Henson Company was in the process of a merger in which Jim Henson was to be installed as the Walt Disney figure of the company. Henson would die only months later.
Michael Eisner also announces the campaign to nominate the person of the century. This campaign would quietly vanish when imagineers kept voting for one of their co-workers and there was no way to correct the results so the kiosks were silently removed and it was never mentioned when the results were to be announced.
Joan Lunden and Alan Thicke co-host this parade with Regis Philbin. Joanna Kerns hosts the Disneyland segments with Mark Price on the street.
Lunden was then the current co-host of Good Morning America and Thicke was one of the stars from the sitcom Growing Pains. Regis was a well known talk show host vet even then. This archetype of hosts for the parade broadcasts would continue with the parade for decades even though the hosts would change. Kerns was a star of the sitcom Growing Pains and Price was a star on the sitcom Family Ties.
Joan Lunden is the longest-running host of the Disney parade broadcasts.
Original air date December 25, 1989
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Walt Disney World Independence Day Spectacular (1989)
This is the 1989 Walt Disney World Independence Day Spectacular hosted by Willard Scott and Gretchen Carlson (the current Miss America of the time.) This is the second time the parade aired and the first on Fox networks. Disney already had a Christmas and Easter broadcast but unlike those other parades, this broadcast celebrated America.
The date this parade aired varied from year to year and even by network. This second Independence Day Parade broadcast aired on July 3 on Fox stations and varied by market. It was the shortest lived parade broadcast, only running 6 years. The final parade aired in 1992. The broadcast contains several song performances by popular stars of the time as well including New Kids on the Block and the Temptations.
Unlike the other parades, the Independence Day Parade didn't have a regular host, but usually concluded with Sandi Patty singing the Star-Spangled Banner during the fireworks display for the finale.
Original air date varied
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Totally Minnie - Minnie's 60th Anniversary Special (1988)
This companion special to Mickey Mouse's Birthday was released near the same time. Many forget that when it's Mickey Mouse's birthday, it's also Minnie's birthday too. This was the first time Minnie was showcased in a starring role ever. It's based on the 1986 album of the same name. Updating the animated shorts characters with contemporary music was nothing new. It had happened in the late 1970's with Disco. That album brought voice actress Russi Taylor to the role of Minnie Mouse. She was the first long term actress in the role. Prior to this, Minnie was voiced by whoever was available.
The special included several popular stars of the era including Suzanne Somers and Elton John.
This special demonstrates just how important Disney and Mickey Mouse was to American pop culture in 1988. It also shows how the past and Walt Disney's legacy was still very much revered and trying to be updated to the current times. This special only aired once and was never released to VHS or DVD but it should be. In hopes of generating interest in it again, we present it here for your rediscovery.
Starring
Russi Taylor as Minnie Mouse
Robert Carradine as Maxwell Dweeb
Suzanne Somers as Director
Wayne Allwine as Mickey Mouse
Elton John as Himself
Don Pardo as Announcer
Vanna White as Herself
Philip Michael Thomas as Himself
Tony Anselmo as Donald Duck
Will Ryan as Goofy, Pete
Bill Farmer as Pluto
Dancers: Tina Caspary, Mavis Vegas Davis, Peggy Holmes, Lise Lang, Thelma Smith, Andrea Paige Wilson, Cheryl Yamaguchi
Original air date February 25, 1988
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Disney/MGM Studios Theme Park Grand Opening Gala (1989)
The Disney/MGM Studios began as a proposed pavilion for EPCOT Center. It was expanded into a park that would be a working movie studio to avoid paying Hollywood union rates. Originally film and TV productions would be made there, the originally being Ernest Saves Christmas, as well as animated features. The animation studio was originally intended for commercial work but eventually expanded into helping to complete the animated features before producing their own such as Mulan and Lilo & Stitch.
The MGM name and Leo the Lion logo was licensed by Disney from Sony to add prestige to the brand of the park. When the license ran out 20 years later, the park was re-dubbed the Disney Hollywood Studios. By then the working studio aspect had petered out and it became just a theme park about movies. The Great Movie Ride had been the park’s signature attraction and intended for the EPCOT pavilion. The rights to the MGM scenes and characters was negotiated with Ted Turner, who owned the MGM library at the time. Other scenes and characters came from Paramount Pictures (Eisner’s old stomping ground) 20th Century Fox, and others. Although, unaffected by the name license running out, the Great Movie Ride was demolished in 2017.
The Disney/MGM Studios opened on May 1, 1989. The night before this special aired. It was a 2 hour affair full of reminiscing stars from the golden age and current celebrities. John Ritter tied it all together but there were other segments hosted by other celebrities such as Harry Anderson, Dick van Dyke, and the Pointer Sisters. Here’s a glimpse at what the park was like at the beginning and it no longer exists as founded. This special only aired once on NBC.
Original air date April 30, 1989
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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