T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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311.1 | viewing spots | MR4DEC::AWILLIAMS | Some imagination, huh?? | Wed Jun 17 1992 10:12 | 24 |
| Okay, now that they have this great new show, where's the best place to
watch it from??
The Disney Gallery. Although so far it seems this area has been
reserved for VIP seating...
The bridge over the Pirates entrance. Best place if you're there early
enough. Check out Annie Lund's reply in the Disneyland topic
(8.16mumble) for better info on how to snag a spot on the railing.
Down in front. Worked for me. Sure, you get a little wet but that's
what you call, "audience participation..." :-)
The River Belle Terrace. The plus is that you can sit down (yes, in
real chairs); the minus is that I don't know how well you can see over
the crowds.
A bad spot?? On the shore, way to the right. Most of the floats move
from right to left around the river, following the same basic course of
the Columbia and the Mark Twain during the day. So they could have
passed you before they're even lit. A good deal of the show plays to
the audience along the front shore.
- Skip
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311.2 | Some Fantasmic on fourth special | LUDWIG::ROBROSE | | Mon Jul 06 1992 08:23 | 8 |
|
There was a Disney special on for the fourth that had a couple of
minutes of Fantasmic in it. This looks like a super show, but since I
don't think I will make it to Cal. anytime soon, I sure hope they find
a place to run this show at WDW.
-Rob
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311.3 | Fantasmic is fantastic! | OFFPLS::GRAVELLE | | Thu Jul 16 1992 11:25 | 16 |
| I recently had the opportunity to take in the Fantasmic Show at
Disneyland. It is the best show of it's kind I have ever seen.
It's unbelievable that they do this a couple (I believe twice a night)
of times every evening!
This shows got everything - Music, Lasers, Fireworks, Boats, Disney
Characters, Fire! WOW!!!
It's kind of like Disney decided to pull slightly ahead of the
competition when it comes to this kind of entertainment... Sort
of like on star trek when they go from
cruising along to "light speed" leaving everyone else standing
"still"...
Enjoy...
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311.4 | Imagineers prep versions of " Fantasmic " for WDW, TDL & EDL | ISLNDS::HILL | | Fri Aug 07 1992 07:52 | 54 |
|
Okay, Mouse Fans : I've just talked with my mole at WDI and -- if
all goes according to plan -- this is how the magic of " Fantasmic "
will makes its way 'round the world :
The version of " Fantasmic " that's currently playing on
Disneyland's Rivers of America will stay where it is for five years.
During that time, Walt Disney World will gets its own version of the
water pageant. Current timetables call for WDW's " Fantasmic " to be
up and running by the summer of 1995. And -- * YES * -- the earlier
reports we've been hearing about the show being installed at the
studio theme park ( * NOT * WDW's Magic Kingdom ) appear to be true.
Now -- after five years of performances -- Disneyland's original
version of " Fantasmic " will close. Then that show will be packed up
and shipped to Tokyo Disneyland, where it will begin a five year run
at that park in the summer of 1998. That same year, an all-new version
of " Fantasmic " will debut at Disneyland.
Then -- following five years of performances in Orlando -- WDW's
version of " Fantasmic " will be moved to the Euro Disney resort's
not-yet-constructed-but-sure-to-be-open-by-then studio theme park.
That show will begin five years of performances in the summer of 2001,
with an all-new water pageant bowing at the Florida park that same
year.
Confusing ? Sure it is -- but also pretty damn ambitious. Eisner's
long range plan is to have each version of " Fantasmic " play at each of
the parks for several summers in a row, thereby getting most out of the
company's investment. Each version of the show would make use of the
same mix of water, pyrotechnics, lasers, barges, meet-n-greet
characters as well as mechanical / inflatable monsters. ( I'm told that
the WDW version has Mickey rubbing the lamp we'll see in Disney's upcoming
animated version of " Aladdin " -- which features Robin Williams as
the Genie ! -- to create magical images. But then Ursula rises up out
of the lagoon, steals the lamp and -- well, you get the idea. The
climax would supposedly recreate the climax of the " Little Mermaid "
film, with Mickey doing battle with a three story tall version of the
sea witch ... Sounds pretty cool, don't you think ? )
But that show -- as well as the all-new Disneyland show as well
as the second WDW version of " Fantasmic " are years away. In the
mean-time, the Imagineers are trying to come up with easy, workable
solutions to the how-do-we-create-seating-for-6000-people-around-the-
Rivers-of-America-without-totally-ripping-New-Orleans-Square problem.
Disneyland fans should expect another round of construction on this
side of the park this fall and/or next spring as they try to make
" Fantasmic " a much more pleasant viewing experience for guests in
the summer of '93.
Any other questions ?
jrh
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311.5 | memorial day - labor day? | COGITO::STAATS | same Bat-channel... | Fri Aug 07 1992 11:19 | 4 |
| Is Fantasmic just a summer attraction?
thanks
todd///
|
311.6 | More of a running-when-the-park's-open-late kind of show | ISLNDS::HILL | | Mon Aug 10 1992 01:52 | 12 |
|
Not necessarily. Though -- what with the hoopla surrounding its
first year of performances -- Disneyland's " Fantasmic " water pageant
will probably run well into the fall. But -- beyond that point ...
Well, Disneyland officials eventually plan on running " Fantasmic " on
the same schedule they use for " Fantasy in the Skies " : You'll get a
performance ( or two or three ) every night the park is open late. So
-- should you be planning a trip to Disneyland after Labor Day and
definitely want to catch " Fantasmic, " make a point of hitting the park
on a Friday or Saturday night. Better still, call ahead to Disneyland's
Guest Relations desk and find out for sure if the show's running and
when.
|
311.7 | Better Viewing for Fantasmic | WREATH::SCOPA | | Wed Dec 15 1993 15:22 | 11 |
| Good news for you DL goers.
The area between the River Belle Terrace and the Haunted Mansion has
been terraced to give visitors an unobstructed view of Fantasmic at
every level. This new viewing area blends into the New Orleans Square
landscaping by day, but becomes a series of staggered viewing platforms
by night.
This new viewing area debuted on November 18.
Mike
|
311.8 | | NEWPRT::NEWELL_JO | Graphically Yours | Wed Dec 15 1993 18:38 | 6 |
| It's about time!!!
If you didn't get a lawn seat 1�-2 hours before show time,
you were out of luck being able to see the whole show.
Jodi-
|
311.9 | And Soon... at WDW! | VMSNET::mickey.alf.dec.com::s_vore | Smile, Mickey's watching! [email protected] | Tue Apr 22 1997 09:53 | 115 |
| This article is from today's (4/21) Orlando Sentinal.
Walt Disney World
will announce today
that it is bringing the
Fantasmic show to
Disney-MGM
Studios next year, an expansion that likely will
become one of the park's top draws.
The nighttime water and fireworks production made its
debut at Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., five years
ago, combining live action, lasers and numerous
special effects, including film projected onto huge
water screens.
As soon as Fantasmic opened, Disneyland officials saw
a shift in attendance, with fewer people arriving in
the morning and more in the late afternoon and
evening.
Crowds watching the show were larger than expected,
prompting park officials to renovate the viewing area
in Frontierland, which had been big enough to hold
about 6,500 people comfortably.
''That first summer we never had fewer than 8,000 for
a show,'' said Disneyland spokesman John McClintock.
''They were crowded in shoulder-to-shoulder.''
The new show's script -- based on a good vs. evil
battle between Disney characters -- is similar to
that of the original Fantasmic. But in other
respects, it's a very different undertaking.
Most important, it will have its own home in a new
6,900-seat amphitheater that also will have standing
room for 3,000, making it the largest theater at any
of Disney World's theme parks. For the Disneyland
show, the audience has to stand or sit on grassy
patches and sidewalks, just as they do for parades.
The amphitheater will curve around a man-made lagoon
or moat, which will be rigged for high-tech water and
pyrotechnic effects. In the middle of the lagoon
there will be an island with a 40-foot-high
''mountain'' where much of the action will take
place.
Disney executives would not disclose the cost of
Fantasmic except to acknowledge that it will match
the tens of millions spent on other major
attractions. Workers are scheduled to break ground
on the project this morning at a site behind the
Studios' best-known attraction, the Twilight Zone
Tower of Terror.
Company officials say the show will debut in late
1998.
Like Epcot's IllumiNations, it will play every night.
Fantasmic's script follows a dreamlike sequence that
relies on sophisticated stage technology for the
illusionary effects.
It opens with the night sky suddenly illuminated by a
burst of light. A spotlight falls on Mickey Mouse,
who's playing conductor by making the waters in front
of him ''dance'' to the music. An animated comet
sweeps across the sky and -- here's where the laser
graphics and other techniques start to come in -- it
sprinkles stars across a giant water screen.
After some musical numbers by live actors and
animated characters from Pocahontas and The Lion King,
the playful mood suddenly gives way to a threatening
atmosphere and Disney villains such as the evil queen
from Snow White take over the show.
Lightning, smoke, fog and other ominous effects
dominate the next segment, which concludes with a
40-foot-tall dragon coming up through the mountain
and setting the lagoon on fire. In the climax, Mickey
appears to rise up out of the water atop a fountain,
using lasers to slay the dragon. The show concludes
with Disney characters sailing around the lagoon in
the Steamboat Willie riverboat.
In other Disney news, the company is planting a toe
in the International Drive retail scene with plans to
open a store this summer at the Pointe Orlando
shopping and entertainment complex.
Unlike the Disney Stores at shopping malls, the
I-Drive store will carry merchandise exclusive to
Disney's theme parks. The store, designed to resemble
a turn-of-the-century train depot, will plug Disney
attractions on changing sign boards.
The store's proximity to the Orange County Convention
Center -- the new shopping center is right across the
street from the massive complex -- will give the
company access to the I-Drive area's burgeoning
convention crowds.
Disney also recently opened a second store at Orlando
International Airport in the Delta Air Lines gate
area. The store, designed as two Plexiglas enclosures
in the center of the terminal atrium, is divided into
adult's and children's souvenirs.
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