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Disneyland

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This article is about Disneyland, a theme park in Anaheim, California USA. For other Disney parks and attractions, see Walt Disney Parks and Resorts or Category:Disney parks and attractions. For the television series originally titled Disneyland, see Walt Disney anthology series.
Disneyland Park
File:Disneyland Park.jpg

Sleeping Beauty Castle is decorated for the park's fiftieth birthday
LocationDisneyland Resort, Anaheim, California, U.S.
Operated byThe Walt Disney Company
ThemeMagic Kingdom

Template:DLR

Disneyland is the world's first "theme park" and is located at Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, California, USA (28 miles from Downtown Los Angeles). Owned and operated by The Walt Disney Company, The Magic Kingdom of Disneyland has also become one of the most famous and most visited places on Earth.

More than 515 million people, among them presidents, royalty, and other heads of state, have travelled to the park from around the world since the attraction first opened to guests on July 17, 1955. A worldwide celebration in commemoration of Disneyland's 50th anniversary began on May 5, 2005 and concluded on September 30, 2006.

Dedication

"To all who come to this happy place: welcome. Disneyland is your land. Here age relives fond memories of the past, and here youth may savor the challenge and promise of the future. Disneyland is dedicated to the ideals, the dreams, and the hard facts that have created America… with the hope that it will be a source of joy and inspiration to all the world."

-Walter E. Disney, July 17, 1955

Concept and construction

Walt Disney, along with his older brother Roy, already headed one of Hollywood's most successful studios, founded in 1924, long before the idea of a park even began to form in the imagination of the younger Disney. He first was compelled to think of the attraction during his many outings with his two daughters, Diane and Sharon, when he realized that few places with activities that adults and children could enjoy together existed at the time. Every week, he would set aside a day to spend with his daughters, but, more often than not, he would find himself on a bench watching them have fun by themselves. This constructive dissatisfaction provided impetus for Disney to conceive of a place that would, in his words, "provide meaning to the pleasure of children", as well as "pleasure to the experience of adults".

While many people had written letters to Walt Disney about visiting the Disney studio lot and meeting Disney characters, Mr. Disney realized that a functional movie studio had little to offer to his audiences. He then began to entertain ideas about building at a site at or near his Burbank studios for the public to visit and, perhaps, take pictures with Disney characters set in statue form. His ideas then evolved to a "magical little park" with a boat ride and other theatrically-designed areas. Walt's initial concept, his "Mickey Mouse Park," grew bigger and bigger into a concept for a larger institution, which was to become Disneyland.

Disney's original modest plans called for the park to be built on eight acres (32,000 m²) on Riverside Drive next to the Disney Studios in Burbank, California as a place where his employees and families could go to relax.

Early in development, during the early 1950's, it became clear that more area would be needed. Difficulties in obtaining funding caused Disney to investigate new ways of raising money. He decided to use television to get the ideas into people's homes, and so he created a show named Disneyland which was broadcast on the fledgling American Broadcasting Company (ABC) television network. In return, the network agreed to help finance the new park. On the suggestion of researchers at Stanford Research Institute who correctly envisioned the area's potential growth, Disney acquired 160 acres (730,000 m²) of orange groves and walnut trees in Anaheim, south of Los Angeles in neighboring Orange County. [1] [2] Construction began on July 18, 1954 and would cost USD$17 million to complete. U.S. Route 101 (later Interstate 5) was under construction at the same time just to the north of the site; in preparation for the traffic which Disneyland was expected to bring, two more lanes were added to the freeway even before the park was finished.

Because of financial considerations, Walt Disney was forced to turn to outside financing for his theme park. He first turned to long-time licensee Western Publishing which invested in the park. ABC as part of the deal to broadcast the Disneyland television show also became an investor. For the first five years of its operation, Disneyland was owned by Disneyland, Inc., of which Walt Disney Productions, Western Publishing and ABC each owned shares. After the park was a clear success Western acceeded to a request to sell its share in the enterprise back to Disney. But ABC refused the same request initially, feeling the profit potential of the park was too lucrative to sell. It wasn't until 1960 that Walt Disney Productions acquired ABC's share of the theme park. Disney's displeasure at ABC's actions partly motivated the Walt Disney anthology series moving to NBC in 1961.

1955: Opening day

File:Disneyland aerial view in 1956.jpg
An aerial view of Disneyland in 1956. The entire route of the Disneyland Railroad is clearly visible as it encircles the park.

Disneyland Park was opened to the public on Monday, July 18, 1955. However, a special "International Press Preview" event was held on Sunday, July 17, 1955 which was only open to invited guests and the media. The Special Sunday events, including the dedication were televised nationwide and anchored by three of Walt Disney's friends from Hollywood: Art Linkletter, Bob Cummings, and Ronald Reagan.

The event did not go smoothly. The park was overcrowded as the by-invitation-only affair was plagued with counterfeit tickets. All major roads nearby were congested. The summer temperature was over 110 degrees Fahrenheit, and a plumbers' strike left many of the park's drinking fountains dry. The asphalt that had been poured just the night before was so soft that ladies' high-heeled shoes sank in. Vendors ran out of food. A gas leak in Fantasyland caused Adventureland, Frontierland, and Fantasyland to close for the afternoon. Parents were throwing their children over the shoulders of crowds to get them onto rides such as the Dumbo Flying Elephants.

The park got such bad press for the event day that Walt Disney invited members of the press back for a private "second day" to experience the true Disneyland, after which Walt held a party in the Disneyland Hotel for them. Walt and his 1955 executives forever referred to the first day as "Black Sunday," although July 17 is currently acknowledged by Disney as the official opening day. On July 17 every year, cast members wear pin badges stating how many years it has been since July 17, 1955. For example, in 2004 they wore the slogan "The magic began 49 years ago today." But for the first ten years or so, Disney did officially state that opening day was on July 18th, including in the park's own publications.

On Monday, July 18 crowds started to gather in line as early as 2 a.m., and the first person to buy a ticket and enter the park was David MacPherson. Walt Disney decided to have a photo taken with two children, Michael Schwartner and Christine Vess instead, and the photo of the three always carries a caption along the lines of "Walt Disney with the first two guests of Disneyland." MacPherson, Schwartner and Vess all received lifetime passes to Disneyland, which was later expanded to every single Disney-owned park in the world.

The Lay of the Land

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Famous statue of Walt and Mickey, called "Partners", stands at the end of Main Street.

The park is divided into realms, which radiate like the four cardinal points of the compass from Central Plaza. The public areas occupy approximately 85 acres (344,000 m²).

At the center of The Magic Kingdom and immediately North of Central Plaza stands Sleeping Beauty Castle, which provides entrance to Fantasyland by way of a drawbridge across a moat. Adventureland, Frontierland, and Tomorrowland are arrayed on both sides of the castle.

To reach Central Plaza, guests first progress through Main Street, U.S.A., "everyone's hometown".

Born in Chicago, Illinois in 1901, Walt Disney conveyed impressions of his formative years at the turn of the 19th Century in middle America, in Marceline and Kansas City, Missouri, specifically, through the idealized and universalized form of the archetypal Main Street.

It is here, also, where the duality of Disneyland is first experienced. Main Street, Disneyland, U.S.A. gives way to a magic kingdom where timeless and imaginary characters, settings, and stories come to life in fully-immersive and permanent physicality.


Walt Disney's "Lilly Belle" miniature live steam locomotive on display at Disneyland Main Station in 1993.

Walt Disney said, "For those of us who remember the carefree time it recreates, Main Street will bring back happy memories. For younger visitors, it is an adventure in turning back the calendar to the days of grandfather's youth."

Here, guests come home by arriving at Main Street Station, the main depot of the Disneyland Railroad, to find themselves in Town Square where Disneyland City Hall stands opposite the Disneyland Opera House and where other features are open for business, including: a bank; an emporium; a bakery; a general store; a fire house; an ice cream parlor; a cinema; and, a penny arcade.

The Four Cardinal Realms of the Imagination

The original park layout included four distinct realms, in addition to Main Street, U.S.A. Three more areas have been added since the park's opening, including New Orleans Square and Critter Country in Frontierland and Mickey's Toontown as an annex to Fantasyland. Once entering a realm, a guest is unable to see the outside world or any of the adjacent areas.

Adventureland invites guests to explore everything that is foreign and exotic. "To create a land that would make this dream reality," said Walt Disney, "we pictured ourselves far from civilization, in the remote jungles of Asia and Africa." Attractions include: Indiana Jones Adventure; the Jungle Cruise; Walt Disney's Enchanted Tiki Room; and, "Tarzan's Treehouse." (The Tarzan Treehouse is an adaptation of the earlier Swiss Family Treehouse from the Walt Disney film, Swiss Family Robinson).

Rustic and rugged, Frontierland embodies both tall tales and true. According to Walt Disney, "All of us have cause to be proud of our country's history, shaped by the pioneering spirit of our forefathers. Our adventures are designed to give you the feeling of having lived, even for a short while, during our country's pioneer days." Frontierland is home to the Pinewood Indians band of Native Americans, who live on the banks of the Rivers of America. Attractions include: Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, the Mark Twain Riverboat, and the Sailing Ship Columbia. Frontierland is also home to the Golden Horseshoe Saloon, a show palace straight out of the Old West.

Fantasyland, at once both charming and enchanted, is the realm of dreamers. Here, the wishes of both Disneylanders and guests alike are granted with what can only be described as magic.

Walt Disney said, "What youngster has not dreamed of flying with Peter Pan over moonlit London, or tumbling into Alice's nonsensical Wonderland? In Fantasyland, these classic stories of everyone's youth have become realities for youngsters of all ages to participate in." Fantasyland was originally depicted as a medieval fairground, but its 1983 re-imagining transformed the realm into more of an Old World village blending Bavarian, French, and English styles among several others.

Conceived as a futuristic metropolis, Tomorrowland embraces all that is visionary.

View of the "new" Tomorrowland last refreshed in 1998

In Walt Disney's words, "Tomorrow can be a wonderful age. Our scientists, today, are opening the doors of the Space Age to achievements that will benefit our children, and generations to come."

"The Tomorrowland attractions have been designed to give you an opportunity to participate in adventures that are a living blueprint of our future."

Disneyland producer Ward Kimball had Rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, Willy Ley, and Heinz Haber as technical consultants during the original design of Tomorrowland[3], and initial attractions included the a simulated rocket flight to the Moon. The area underwent a major transformation in 1967 to become "New Tomorrowland," and then again in 1998 when its focus was changed to present a more timeless interpretation of the theme. This most recent vision was inspired by the science-fiction writings of authors like Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, as well as the illustrations of Leonardo da Vinci. Current attractions include the popular Space Mountain, plus the ultimate Star Wars experience, Star Tours.


The Haunted Mansion is patterned after a Southern plantation home.

New Orleans Square was among the last additions to Disneyland overseen by Walt Disney himself. Opened in 1966, the area depicts the port city in the 1700's and 1800's when she was "the gay Paris of the American frontier", as Walt Disney put it. New Orleans Square contains two of the most beloved Disneyland attractions: The Haunted Mansion and Pirates of the Caribbean.

Critter Country opened in 1972 as "Bear Country," and was renamed in 1988. Formerly the area was home to Indian Village where actual indigenous tribespeople demonstrated their dances and other customs. Today, the main draw of the area is Splash Mountain, a log-flume journey inspired by the Uncle Remus stories of Joel Chandler Harris and the animated segments of Disney's Academy Award-winning 1946 film, Song of the South.

Mickey's Toontown opened in 1993 and was partly inspired by the fictional Los Angeles suburb of Toontown in The Walt Disney Studios' 1988 release Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Mickey's Toontown is a 1930's cartoon come to life and features Mickey's bungalow, Minnie's cottage, and the homes of several of the other principal Disney characters.

Backstage

Since guests step onto a stage to interact with the cast members and sets of an elaborate outdoor theatre, areas closed to park guests are considered backstage. There are several points of entry from the outside world to the backstage areas: Ball Gate (at the terminus of Cast Place off Ball Road), T.D.A. Gate (adjacent to the Team Disney, Anaheim building), Harbor Gate (off Harbor Boulevard, behind Tomorrowland), and Winston Gate (off Disneyland Drive, behind the Mickey and Friends parking garage).

Berm Road encircles the park from Firehouse Gate (behind the Main Street Fire Station) to Egghouse Gate (adjacent to the Disneyland Opera House). The road is so called because it generally follows outside the path of Disneyland's earthen berm, although with the addition of Mickey's Toontown, the road now strays as much as 100 yards from onstage areas at some points. A stretch of the road, wedged between Tomorrowland and Harbor Boulevard, is called Schumaker Road. It has two narrow lanes divided by a double yellow line, runs underneath the Monorail track. There are also two railroad bridges that cross Berm Road: one behind City Hall and the other behind Tomorrowland near Harbor Gate. The speed limit for most parts of Berm Road is 15 miles per hour, although a section cutting through Disneyland's maintenance shops behind the park's northwestern corner has a speed limit of 5 miles per hour.

Major buildings backstage include the Frank Gehry-designed "Team Disney, Anaheim", where most of the division's administration currently works, as well as the old Administration Building, behind Tomorrowland and Main Street, U.S.A.. The old Admin. Building additionally houses the "Grand Canyon" and "Primeval World" dioramas of the Disneyland Railroad.

"Backstage" also refers to parts of show buildings that are normally not seen by guests. Every attraction contains hidden walkways, service areas, control rooms, and other behind-the-scenes operations. The only way for a guest to see these areas is to have the fortune (or misfortune) to be evacuated from the attraction in the event of a break-down. While these rare break-downs can be tedious, they can also offer illuminating views of the attractions.

By definition, backstage areas are generally off-limits to park guests. This prevents guests from seeing the industrial areas that violate the "magic" of onstage and allows cast members some solace while they work or rest. Cameras are explicitly forbidden in these parts of the park, although a scattering of poor-quality photos has inevitably found its way to a variety of web sites.

Nevertheless, there are a few ways to catch glimpses of backstage areas for those who are so inclined. One example is either on The Sailing Ship Columbia or The Mark Twain Steamboat. A short glimpse of the crocodile used in Fantasmic is fenced off behind some trees during the tour. Musical groups such as marching bands can participate in Magic Music Days, a program that allows musicians to participate in clinics and perform in parades and sit-down concerts. The general backstage areas just north of Toontown are home to locker rooms and two music studios that are frequently used by these groups. If the group will be performing at the Carnation Plaza Gardens venue, they are escorted through backstage areas between Fantasyland and Frontierland. In addition, guests who are simply visiting the resort can see bits of backstage by riding the monorail, riding the Disneyland railroad, being evacuated from broken-down attractions, or being re-routed through the area between Tomorrowland and Main Street during a crowded closing time. Guests who attempt to see backstage in more invasive ways will face consequences from the management.

Various amenities exist for Cast Members backstage when they are on breaks, or before and after their scheduled shifts. A number of cafeterias, collectively called Star Dinerz locations, offer discounted meals throughout the day. Star Dinerz locations include the Inn Between (behind the Plaza Inn), Eat Ticket (near the Team Disney Anaheim building behind Mickey's Toontown), Westside Diner (located in a lower level beneath New Orleans Square), and the DCA Cafe (behind "a bug's land" in Disney's California Adventure). Partners Federal Credit Union, the credit union for employees of The Walt Disney Company, provides nearly 20 ATMs backstage for cast member use and maintains a branch at the Team Disney Anaheim building.

Tours and Transportation

Walt Disney had a longtime interest in transportation, and trains, in particular. He even built a miniature live steam backyard railroad, the "Carolwood Pacific Railroad", on the grounds of his Holmby Hills estate. Throughout all the iterations of Disneyland during the seventeen or so years when Mr. Disney was conceiving it, one element remained constant: a train encircling the park.

Disneyland Railroad

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Disneyland Railroad engine #2.

Encircling Disneyland and providing a grand circle tour is the Disneyland Railroad, a short-line railway consisting of five oil-fired and steam-powered locomotives, in addition to three passenger trains and one passenger-carrying freight train. Originally known as the Disneyland and Santa Fe Railroad, the D.R.R. was presented by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway until 1974. From 1955 to 1974, the Santa Fe Rail Pass was able to be used in lieu of a D Ticket. Laid to three-foot gauge, the most common narrow gauge measurement used in North America, the track runs in a continuous loop around The Magic Kingdom and through each of its realms. Each turn-of-the-19th-Century train departs Main Street Station on an excursion that includes scheduled station-stops at: Frontierland Station; Toontown Depot, the gateway to Fantasyland; and, Tomorrowland Station. The Grand Circle Tour then concludes with a visit to the Grand Canyon and Primeval World dioramas before returning passengers to Main Street, U.S.A.

Disneyland Monorail System

Monorail Blue travels over the currently closed Submarine Voyage lagoon in Tomorrowland.

One of Disneyland's signature attractions is its monorail service, which opened in Tomorrowland in 1959 as the first daily-operating monorail train system in the Western Hemisphere. The monorail guideway has remained almost exactly the same since 1961, aside from small alterations while Indiana Jones Adventure was being built. Four generations of monorail trains have been used in the park, since their lightweight construction means they wear out quickly. The most recent generation, the Mark V, was installed in 1987 when more modern trains built by Ride & Show Engineering eliminated the old ALWEG Buck Rogers-style trains. The next update will be in 2007, when the Mark VII trains are slated to be installed. The monorail shuttles visitors between two stations, one inside the park in Tomorrowland and one in Downtown Disney. It follows a 2.5 mile (4 km) long route designed to show off the park from above.

Currently, the Monorails are out of service as major modifications to the Tomorrowland Station are being performed (related to the new Finding Nemo attraction opening Summer of 2007). As of 2004, three monorail trains, Monorail Red, Monorail Blue, and Monorail Purple, were in regular service. A fourth train, Monorail Orange, was removed from service and shipped to Disney's engineering department in Glendale for disassembly and study so that new blueprints can be created from it, because ALWEG, the company which built the original monorail trains, has gone out of business, and the current trains, built by Ride & Show Engineering in 1987, use some of the same parts as the ALWEG trains. Monorail Blue has been sent to Canada for major rebuilding in late August of 2006. Monorail Red and Purple remain at the Monorail Barn at the Disneyland Resort.

Disneyland had a contract with Alweg which required the Alweg name to be displayed on the monorail. This conflicted with the contract with the Santa Fe that only their name could be associated with railroad attractions at the park. This caused a rift between Disneyland and the Santa Fe railroad, and eventually caused the breakdown in their relationship and the removal of Santa Fe sponsorship from the Disneyland Railroad.

Main Street Vehicles

A number of vehicles, including a double-decker bus, a horse-drawn streetcar, an old-fashioned fire engine, and an old-fashioned automobile, are available for rides along Main Street, U.S.A.

The fire engine was built for Walt Disney, who used it to drive around the park and host celebrity guests. The horseless carriages are modeled after cars built in 1903. They (as well as the fire truck) have two cylinder, four horsepower (3 kW) engines and manual transmission and steering.

Skyway

The Disneyland Skyway, "the first aerial tramway of its kind in the United States"1, was one of the signature attractions at the park. Opened in 1956 by Walt Disney himself, it shuttled passengers between Fantasyland and Tomorrowland 100 feet (30 m) above the ground, giving passengers fantastic views of Sleeping Beauty Castle, the Matterhorn Bobsleds (which was built around the Skyway in 1959), and the Autopia. A distinctive feature was that Disneyland maintained the 'on-stage/backstage' illusion to Skyway guests, covering any sites that would be unsuitable to guests that were also hidden to guests on foot.

Due to the enormous impending cost to retrofit the Skyway for earthquake safety and handicap accessibility, the attraction closed permanently on November 10, 1994. Four years later, Tokyo Disneyland Park removed their Skyway; finally, in 1999, Walt Disney World Resort's Magic Kingdom Park removed theirs on the exact date that Disneyland removed theirs. No Skyways are left at any Disney park (Disneyland Park in Paris never had a Skyway attraction).

The Tomorrowland station in Disneyland remained and was used as a maintenance bay for Rocket Rods beginning in 1998. It was removed shortly after the Rocket Rods closed in spring 2001.

The Fantasyland station in Disneyland remains but is closed to the public.

Autopia

The Disneyland Autopia opened with the park in 1955, and represented a future look at what would become America's multilane limited-access highways that were still being developed (President Eisenhower had yet to sign the Interstate Highway legislation at the time Disneyland opened).

Robert Gurr designed the original Autopia cars to be reminiscent of Ferraris. In 1967, the cars were redesigned to resemble the popular Chevrolet Corvette. This car design was used through 2000, when the entire ride was rethemed and modernized. The new cars resemble those used in television commercials for Chevron and are in one of these three styles:

  • Suzy the zippy compact
  • Sparky the sports car
  • Dusty, an S.U.V.

Live Events, Shows, and Other Performances

The Parade of the Stars in Disneyland from 2004 (closed in early 2005).
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Remember...Dreams Come True fireworks show at night.

In addition to the attractions, Disneyland provides live entertainment throughout the park. Through the years, this has included:

  • Throughout the park
    • Disney characters, who greet visitors, talk with children, and pose for photos. Besides greeting visitors in regular places, they often participate in Disneyland parades.
  • Main Street
    • Daytime and nighttime parades that celebrate Disney films or seasonal holidays with characters, music, and large floats. Beginning May 2005, "Walt Disney's Parade of Dreams" is presented, celebrating several of the classic Disney stories including The Lion King, Alice in Wonderland, and Pinocchio.
    • Elaborate fireworks shows featuring Disney songs and an appearance by "Peter Pan" character Tinker Bell. The Fantasy in the Sky fireworks premiered in the summer of 1956 and lasted through the summer of 1999. 2000 and beyond introduced fireworks presentations that have become more elaborate, featuring new pyrotechnics, launch locations, and storylines, such as the show Believe... There's Magic in the Stars and the current 50th anniversary celebration fireworks presentation Remember... Dreams Come True.
    • The Disneyland Band, which has been part of the park since its opening. They play the role of the Town Band on Main Street, U.S.A. but also break out into smaller groups like the Main Street Merchants Band, the Firehouse Sax Quartet, and a variety of groups in New Orleans Square. The Disneyland Band was traditionally all male.
    • The Dapper Dans barbershop quartet, which often sings on Main Street.
    • Main Street Piano Player playing at Corner Cafe on Main Street. Until his retirement in 2005, Rod Miller had played piano at Disneyland since October 1969.
  • New Orleans Square
    • Fantasmic!, a popular nighttime show with Mickey Mouse, special effects, floating barges, fountains, lasers, a pirate ship, a forty-five foot fire-breathing dragon, fireworks, and thirty-foot-tall "mist screens," upon which animated scenes are projected.
  • Frontierland
    • The Golden Horseshoe Saloon, offering a live stage show with a frontier or old-west feel. The Golden Horseshoe Revue—an old-west Vaudeville type of show starring Slue Foot (or Sluefoot) Sue and Pecos Bill—ran until the mid-1980s, when it was replaced by a similar show starring Lily Langtree (or Miss Lily) and Sam the Bartender. Most recently, Billy Hill and the Hillbillies have played their guitars and banjos in a bluegrass-and-comedy show.
    • The Laughing Stock Co., providing small humorous skits with an old-west theme.
  • Fantasyland
  • Special and Historical events
    • During the summer of 2006, Mickey climbed Matterhorn Mountain several times a day with the support of his friends Minnie, Goofy, as well as Disneyland guests. He posted the 50th anniversary flag at the summit of the mountain.

Passport Fees

Currently Passport fees are as follows:

  • 1-Day, 1 Park = $63 ages 10+, $53 ages 3-9, $61 Senior
  • 1-Day, with "Park Hopper" Privileges = $83 ages 10+, $73 ages 3-9
Historical One-Day, One-Park, Adult Admission Prices
Date Price
01/05/1999 $39
01/05/2000 $41
11/06/2000 $43
03/19/2002 $45
01/06/2003 $47
03/28/2004 $49.75
01/10/2005 $53
06/20/2005 $56
01/04/2006 $59
09/15/2006 $63


Attraction Tickets

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Ticket book circa 1975-1977.

From Disneyland's opening until 1982, the price of attractions was in addition to the price of park admission. Park-goers paid a small sum to get into the park, and, then, bought coupons (also called tickets), individually or in booklets, that provided access to attractions. The least-expensive "A" tickets gave access to the less popular or higher-capacity attractions, while the most expensive "E" tickets gave access to the most popular or lower-capacity attractions. This system led to the term "E ticket" being used in popular culture to mean any particularly outstanding, special, or thrilling experience.

While Pacific Ocean Park is credited as being the first amusement park to use a "pay one price" admission ticket,[1] it was in the 1970s when nearby Magic Mountain introduced their one-price admission ticket which allowed free access to all attractions within the park when the "pay one price" model really took off. This model spread rapidly to all other parks, including Disneyland, because its business advantages were obvious: in addition to guaranteeing that everyone paid a large sum even if they stayed for only a few hours and rode only a few rides, the park no longer had to print tickets or ticket books, staff ticket booths, or provide staff to collect tickets or monitor attractions for people sneaking on without tickets.

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2002 Fast Pass.

In an effort to present guests an alternative to waiting in physical queues for the most popular attractions, Disneyland offered the FASTPASS ticket system as a complimentary feature in 1999. [4]. At attractions featuring the FASTPASS feature, a guest can use his or her Passport to obtain a FASTPASS ticket with a return time later that day (an hour-long window) printed on it. If the guest returns at his or he designated Return Time, he or she is admitted to the attraction with a minimal wait. The selection of attractions offering Fastpass changes over time.

The Magic Kingdoms around the World

Plaque at the entrance that embodies the intended spirit of Disneyland by Walt Disney: to leave reality and enter fantasy

Despite the problems on opening day, Disneyland became an enormous success within its first few months. It attracted visitors worldwide in unprecedented numbers. Soon, even as Disneyland continued to grow, Walt Disney planned an expansion of the concept: Walt Disney World.

Walt Disney World would be a self-contained and completely-integrated vacation experience encompassing more land than twice that of the island of Manhattan.

Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Florida is the world's largest privately-owned vacation destination in the world, in addition to being its most popular.

Walt Disney World opened in 1971 under the guidance of Roy O. Disney, almost five years after the death of Walt Disney. Since the initial opening with one theme park and two hotels, the resort has grown into a collection of: four theme parks; two water parks; twenty-three hotels; and, an entertainment district.

In 1983 the first international Disney theme park opened: Tokyo Disneyland Park in Japan. Tokyo Disneyland is now part of Tokyo Disney Resort and has a sister theme park Tokyo Disney Sea. Tokyo Disneyland and Tokyo Disney Sea are owned by a Japanese corporation, Oriental Land Company. The Walt Disney Company receives royalties based on revenues and maintains creative control.

In 1992 EuroDisney opened in France and is now part of Disneyland Resort Paris with two theme parks.

On September 12, 2005,Hong Kong Disneyland was opened in the People's Republic of China. Hong Kong Disneyland Resort is owned jointly by the Hong Kong Government and The Walt Disney Company.

1990's Transition: A Single Park with a Single Hotel Becomes a Resort Destination

In the 1990s, major construction began to transform Disneyland from a theme park into a vacation resort. The Walt Disney Company purchased land surrounding the park that was once the site of low-budget motels and trailer courts and — on the site of Disneyland's original "Hundred-Acre Parking Lot" — Disney's California Adventure Park and Downtown Disney opened in 2001. The Grand Californian Hotel, patterned after the Arts and Crafts movement of the early 20th century, extends into Disney's California Adventure Park and allows paying guests to enter that park through the hotel itself.

Most of the resort's parking today is handled by the six-level "Mickey and Friends" parking terrace. With six levels and 10,250 parking spaces, it was for a short time the largest parking structure in the world. Propane-powered trams bring visitors to the entrance plaza between the two parks. There are three other Disney-owned parking lots in the Resort. The Timon Parking Lot entrance is right at the intersection of Harbor Blvd. and Disney Way. The other lot, the Pumbaa Lot, sits across Harbor Boulevard at Disney Way, but has no tram access. The Pinocchio lot sits just north of the Disneyland Hotel adjacent to the "Mickey and Friends" parking structure. There are also some smaller, off-property lots with regular shuttle service to the parks, and most nearby hotels offer regular shuttle service as well.

The park's management team of the mid-1990s was a tremendous source of contention to many Disneyland fans and employees. Headed by executives Cynthia Harriss and Paul Pressler, each with a retail marketing background, Disneyland's focus gradually changed from attractions to merchandising. The leaders came under increasing criticism for a host of cost-cutting initiatives and profit-boosting schemes.

Under their direction, few new attractions were built and many were closed down. Shops that once carried a variety of items themed to their locations now carried general Disney character products. Themed restaurants and shops were closed and replaced by Outdoor vending carts which caused crowds to clog walkways. The decision to remodel Tomorrowland, derided by some fans, was attributable to Pressler, as was the closure of a great many popular attractions within the area. Dewitt "T" Irby, a retired U.S. Army officer hired as facilities manager, was blamed for the destruction of much of the tooling and attraction components in storage in the backstage areas in an effort to streamline operations as recommended by outside consultants.

After nearly a decade of deferred maintenance, Walt Disney's original theme park was showing visible signs of neglect. Paint was peeling off buildings and roofs were literally disintegrating from age, especially the thatched roofs in Fantasyland and Adventureland. Light bulbs, which were once replaced before they burned out, not only were run to burnout but were so numerous as to make the facades they outlined look almost toothless. Fans of the park decried the perceived decline in customer value and park quality and rallied for the dismissal of the management team.

Disneyland in the 21st Century

In 2003, both Harriss and Pressler stepped down to take over operations of national clothing retailer The Gap. Irby stepped down the following year.

Matt Ouimet, formerly the president of the Disney Cruise Line, was promoted to assume leadership of the Disneyland Resort in late 2003. Shortly afterward, he selected Greg Emmer as Senior Vice President of Operations. Emmer is a long-time Disney cast member who had worked at Disneyland in his youth prior to moving to Florida and holding multiple executive leadership positions at the Walt Disney World Resort. Ouimet quickly set about reversing certain trends, especially with regards to cosmetic maintenance and a return to the original infrastructure maintenance schedule, in hopes of restoring the safety record of the past. Much like Walt Disney himself, Ouimet and Emmer could often be seen walking the park during business hours with members of their staff. They wore cast member name badges, stood in line for attractions and welcomed comments from guests.

In July 2006, Matt Ouimet announced that he would be leaving The Walt Disney Company to become president of Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide. Soon after this announcement, Ed Grier, executive managing director of Walt Disney Attractions Japan, was named president of the Disneyland Resort. Greg Emmer remains at the Disneyland Resort.

Disneyland Park hosted its 500-millionth guest in 2004.

Recently, Disney purchased a large plot of strawberry fields near Disneyland. There is much speculation as to what Disney will do with the land, including a rumor that a third theme park will be built on the land.<ref name="land">

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50th anniversary

In 2004, the park undertook a number of major renovation projects in preparation for its fiftieth anniversary celebration. Many classic attractions (often ones neglected during Paul Pressler and Cynthia Harriss' times as Disneyland Resort President) have been restored, probably most notably Space Mountain, Jungle Cruise, and Walt Disney's Enchanted Tiki Room, which has received a complete restoration of its 40-year-old soundtrack.

Official marketing logo
Official marketing logo

In 2005, the entire Walt Disney Company celebrated Disneyland Park's 50th anniversary, marketed as the "Happiest Homecoming on Earth." The official celebration began on May 5, with a dedication from Michael Eisner, Bob Iger, and Art Linkletter. On July 15, 2005, Disneyland Park became the first 'location' to get a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Richard Marx wrote the official theme song, "Remember When", which was performed by Grammy winning country artist LeAnn Rimes, for the 50th Anniversary of Disney.

The actual anniversary day (July 17) was an event marked by fans' enthusiasm. The first person to enter the park on the official 50th anniversary was Madison Steigerwald, a 15-year old girl from Old Greenwich, CT. She and her grandmother, Mary Madison, began to line up at 3 p.m. the day before. Overnight, park management opened the gates of Disney's California Adventure Park simply to house the thousands of people who showed up over the course of the night. A second line formed outside the security checkpoints as thousands more arrived in the final hours before the park opened. Disneyland Park opened at 7:00 a.m., although it took several hours to admit the crowds that showed up that morning.

At 10:00 a.m., Diane Disney Miller reread her father's original dedication speech in a ceremony with Art Linkletter, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, CEO-elect Robert Iger, and CEO Michael Eisner. Later that day, a recording of Walt Disney's original dedication speech was replayed throughout the park, exactly 50 years to the minute from when it was originally delivered. No other special events had been planned for the day, making for a much smaller celebration than the media blowout of May 5. There were also complimentary golden Mickey ears that were specifically made for July 17, along with cupcakes for the guests. Many of the people who had waited overnight left after the rededication. Although the gates had been temporarily closed in the morning, it was done only to control crowds which were flooding Main Street for the morning ceremony. The park never reached capacity that day.


Incidents

In August 1970, Disneyland Park was literally invaded by several Yippies who planned the stunt as an attack on what they saw as bloated establishment decadence. In their leaflets, they stated they would help "liberate" Minnie Mouse, arrange a Black Panther Breakfast at the now-closed Aunt Jemima Pancake House, and attack the Bank of America on Main Street, USA and the attraction "it's a small world", which Bank of America sponsored. The stated reason for the attack was because the Bank was financing the Vietnam War, which they opposed. They raised a Viet Cong flag on Tom Sawyer's Island chanting "Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh", filled the now-closed Inner Space dark ride with marijuana smoke and also displayed the Yippie flag (which had on it an image of a marijuana leaf in a red star on a black background). Park officials were aware ahead of time of the invasion. Police units from every city in Orange County were on duty that day. All supervisors were called in and were dressed "undercover". In light of the employee dress code regarding hair length, etc, it was pretty obvious who was who. As a result, Disneyland was closed early for the first time since the death of John F. Kennedy.

With memories of this event in mind, in May 1989, park security personnel were prepared for a rumored invasion of the park by neo-Nazis in honor of the birth of an obscure Nazi leader named Gregor Strasser. Although several leaflets were published announcing the invasion, only one car of neo-Nazis was seen in the parking lot before the park opened, and they were turned away at the entry gate.

Closures

In addition to the Yippie Invasion, Disneyland has been forced to close two other times in its history.

The first occurrence was due to President Kennedy's assassination, yet urban legends have circulated that Walt Disney refused to heed orders from Under Secretary of State George Ball to lower the US Flag in Town Square. This is highly unlikely, though, since Disney and his brother were on the other side of the country surveying land for the future site of the Walt Disney World Resort.

Disneyland Park and Disney's California Adventure did not open on September 11, 2001 out of respect for the time of national mourning and out of fear of further attacks directed at high-profile targets such as the park.

In Disneyland's early years, the park was often scheduled to be closed on Mondays and Tuesdays during the off-season. They worked with nearby Knott's Berry Farm, which closed on Wednesdays and Thursdays to keep costs down for both parks, while offering Orange County visitors a place to go 7 days a week. ref

A scheduled closure occurred on May 4, 2005 so that the finishing touches for the 50th Anniversary Celebration media event (held May 5, 2005) could be completed.

An additional restriction was imposed by the Federal Aviation Administration after September 11, a temporary flight restriction, which forbids civilian and media aircraft from flying over the park. Although called "temporary," this restriction is still in place as of May, 2005, however it has since been weakened, only creating the "No-Fly Zone" when the Terror Alert Level is Orange or higher.

Disneyland in Fiction

  • Disneyland Park, and a learned discussion of its social function, occurs with deliberate incongruity in the closing pages of E. L. Doctorow's novel The Book of Daniel.
  • The 1962 movie 40 Pounds Of Trouble starring Tony Curtis and Suzanne Pleshette culminates in a madcap chase through Disneyland's various realms.
  • In Kim Stanley Robinson's novel The Gold Coast (set in a dystopian Orange County of 2030), the core characters mention a perverse game where the person who has to wait the longest for the least thrilling ride at Disneyland wins.
  • In Eric Wilson's young adult novel Disneyland Hostage (which is part of the Canadian mystery series featuring Liz Austen) terrorists take over Disneyland and hold guests hostage on Tom Sawyer's Island.
  • In the 1996 movie "Escape From L.A.", Snake Plissken and his band of mercenaries ascend onto Disneyland (although not called Disneyland in the film) via hangliders. When seen from above, Snake asks: "Is that what I think it is?" and his cohort, Map-to-the-Stars Eddie replies "Yeah..place kept changing owners. The place in Paris killed them!" a reference to the failure of Disneyland Paris upon its opening. The scene was actually filmed on the same set as the famous Hill Valley Courthouse Square from the Back to the Future trilogy in Universal Studios Hollywood.
  • When John Hughes wrote the screenplay for National Lampoon's Vacation (1983), the storyline originally had Disneyland as the Griswold family's final destination on their cross-country roadtrip. In the film the family arrives at the park, after several days of bizarre and unpleasant mishaps en route, only to find that it is closed, a plausible outcome as Disneyland used to close Mondays and Tuesday during the off-season. Yet by 1983 Disneyland was operating every day, 365 days a year. For this and other reasons, Disney executives objected to Disneyland being the park in question. Hughes acquiesced and Disneyland was supplanted by the fictitious Wally-World Amusement Park. Wally-World's mascot, Marty Moose, is an obvious parody of Disney's Mickey Mouse. The filming spot was relocated to Disneyland's rival, Six Flags Magic Mountain.
  • In the film Jurassic Park John Hammond mentions his park is just going under a delay. He mentions when Disneyland first opened, nothing worked. Ian Malcom replied with "If Pirates of the Caribbean breaks down, the pirates don't eat the tourists." Hammond also incorrectly mentions the opening date as being in 1956.
  • In the Prince song Lady Cab Driver, he mentions the tourists at Disneyland two times.

Management

The operations of Disneyland are mostly merged with that of its sister park, Disney's California Adventure, so both parks, as well as the other Disneyland Resort properties, are managed by one team of senior executives.

Ed Grier is president of the Disneyland Resort. Grier reports to Al Weiss, president of worldwide operations for Walt Disney Parks and Resorts; Weiss reports to Jay Rasulo, chairman of Walt Disney Parks and Resorts, who in turn reports to Bob Iger, the president and CEO of The Walt Disney Company.) Grier is assisted by several experienced theme park managers, including senior vice president of operations Greg Emmer and vice president of theme park operations Jon Storbeck.

On a minute-to-minute basis, the parks are run by duty managers, who are identified by their radio call signs. Disneyland's senior on-the-ground manager at any time is called Theme Park One, a position which rotates among a group of managers in the resort's Theme Park Operations department. (DCA's senior manager is called Theme Park Two.) These managers respond to situtations throughout the park and are empowered to open backstage areas for crowd control purposes, close specific locations, or even close the entire park.

Guest service managers from the park's several business units, including Attractions, Custodial, Foods, Merchandise, and Security, report to Theme Park One, and are given call signs such as Attractions One or Merch One. Various assistant managers, in turn, report to their business unit's duty manager, and carry call signs such as River One (the manager in charge of the Critter Country and New Orleans Square rides).

See also

References

  • 1Disneyland: The First Quarter Century (1979). Walt Disney Productions.
  • Yesterland.
  • Daily park brochures from Summer 1981, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1994, 1996, 2000, 2002, 2006.

Notes

  1. ^ Although most people refer to the park as simply "Disneyland", the official name is "Disneyland Park". United States trademark practice specifies that a trademark such as "Disneyland" is always used as an adjective and never as a noun or verb. Therefore, "Xerox copier" and "Disneyland Park" are correct usage, while "use a Xerox" or "come to Disneyland" are not technically correct.

Books

  • Bright, Randy (1987). Disneyland: Inside Story. Harry N Abrams. ISBN 0-8109-0811-5.
  • France, Van Arsdale (1991). Window on Main Street. Stabur. ISBN 0-941613-17-8.
  • Gordon, Bruce and David Mumford (1995). Disneyland: The Nickel Tour. Camphor Tree Publishers. ISBN 0-9646059-0-2.
  • Dunlop, Beth (1996). Building a Dream: The Art of Disney Architecture. Harry N. Abrams Inc. ISBN 0-8109-3142-7.
  • Marling, ed., Karal Ann (1997). Designing Disney's Theme Parks: The Architecture of Reassurance. Flammarion. ISBN 2-08013-639-9. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)

33°48′44.05″N 117°55′11.85″W / 33.8122361°N 117.9199583°W / 33.8122361; -117.9199583

Aerial photos

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