Disney Magic renovation aims for ‘something for everybody’

Disney Magic renovation aims for ‘something for everybody’

By Tom Stieghorst
Disney Magic AquaDunk renderingGALVESTON, Texas — The 15-year-old Disney Magic will get new water features and more exciting slides in a September refurbishment that will be the biggest in the ship’s history.

The tone is set by the AquaDunk, a thrill slide in which riders step into a chamber, a door closes, the bottom falls out, and a plunge of 40 feet ensues before riders loop out over the ocean in an enclosed tube.

Also new will be “Twist N’ Spout,” which Disney executives describe as a family slide.

It will replace the tamer slide that goes into the Mickey Pool, which will be reborn as AquaLab after the renovations.

The general idea is to make the pool and water areas on the Disney Magic less age-specific, said Joe Lanzisero, senior creative vice president at Walt Disney Imagineering.

Lanzisero, the ship’s chief designer, led a preview tour of upgrades for a handful of journalists during a recent turnaround, using iPads to display renderings of the new features.

He said families on Disney ships prefer to stay together rather than be broken up into smaller units (although the Quiet Cove pool remains adults-only).

“We think now, between the family slide, the AquaLab, the thrill slide, that there should be something for everybody out there,” Lanzisero said.

Disney Magic Andys Room renderingCurrently sailing from Galveston, the Disney Magic will spend the summer in the Mediterranean before its six-week drydock in Cadiz, Spain. Afterward, it will head to Miami to replace the Disney Wonder for the rest of 2013.

The pool deck will get the most noticeable makeover, but Disney is making changes throughout the ship to freshen it, change the predominant color scheme and replace some of the more dated concepts.

One area in need of an update, Lanzisero said, is the casual restaurant now called Parrot Cay, which has a quasi-tiki design. Under its new name, Carioca’s, it will get a more contemporary and “timeless” look, he said.

The children’s play areas will be redone, in part to accommodate Disney’s $4 billion acquisition of Marvel Entertainment, whose stable of superheroes, including the Avengers, will be represented for the first time at sea on the Disney Magic, Lanzisero said.

“We definitely wanted to do something with Marvel, especially for boys,” Lanzisero said.

Disney Magic Cabanas renderingAnother big change will be additional space for Topsider, the upper-deck buffet restaurant, which will gain seats by enclosing some walkways and adjacent exterior deck areas. It will be rechristened Cabanas, given an Australian beach theme and have serving stations rather than cafeteria-style lines.

Two areas that won’t change much are Animator’s Palette and the adult restaurant Palo’s, which are both so popular that Disney plans to leave them essentially as they are.

The Magic will keep its art deco design elements but have a lighter, more aquatic color scheme.

The pool changes include building stairs beside the ship’s forward funnel to access the AquaDunk, a follow-on to the bigger AquaDuck water coaster developed for the Disney Dream and Fantasy.

The Disney Magic’s pool changes will also include adding waterplay features from newer Disney ships, such as bucket dumps and, for children under 3, an interactive Nephew’s Splash Zone with pop jets and bubblers similar to Nemo’s Reef on the Disney Dream.

Cruise ships come to aid of Cuban refugees

Cruise ships come to aid of Cuban refugees

Two cruise ships have come to the aid of Cuban refugees stranded at sea.

On Friday, the Carnival Conquest spotted a raft with 13 people on board approximately 40 miles off the coast of Key West, Florida.

The refugees were rescued and taken on board where they were provided with food, water and medical treatment.

Gerry Cahill, Carnival president and chief executive, said: “We are happy to have come to the aid of these individuals and to support the long-established tradition among the global maritime community of providing assistance to mariners in distress.”

Shortly after, reports emerged that the Disney Wonder had picked up eight people stranded 45 miles from Key West.

Both of the ships coordinated with the US Coast Guard to undertake the rescues and also to determine their next steps.

If the Cuban refugees were seeking asylum in the US, they will now need to be interviewed by the US Citizenship and Immigration Service to see if they are eligible.

Disney aims to work Magic in Med

Disney aims to work Magic in Med

By Mike Kelly
Disney MagicDisney Cruise Line is gearing up for its return to the Mediterranean next summer, when it will offer four-, seven- and 12-day itineraries out of Barcelona.

Disney has sailed the Mediterranean off and on since 2007, last cruising there in 2011.

Among the 13 ports that the 2,400-passenger Disney Magic will visit in 2013 are five where Disney has previously dropped anchor: Piraeus (Athens) and Mykonos in Greece; Kusadasi, Turkey; Dubrovnik, Croatia; and Venice.

With shore excursions (or as Disney calls them, “port adventures”) a major component of most Disney cruises — more than 75% of passengers sign up for an excursion before sailing — officials from Disney just returned from a seven-day visit to some of the Magic’s scheduled ports of call, where they checked on the planning progress for a few of next summer’s shore excursions.

Kusadasi archaeologistDisney, like other cruise lines, partners with local tour operators to provide shore excursions, and it’s sometimes a challenge trying to preserve an authentic experience for visitors while mixing in a Disney twist, according to Arnaldo Zanonato, Disney’s shore excursions manager, who was among those making the recent overseas visits.

“Often the initial impression they have of what we want is parties, balloons [and] colors,” Zanonato said. “But we tell them, ‘No, we want to tell your story.'”

Disney’s great entertainment, imaginative stories and its characters are all found onboard, he added.

“On shore, we just take our storytelling skills and work with the locals to help tell our guests why we are bringing them to Venice or Croatia or Turkey,” Zanonato said. “And when it’s appropriate we try to make it more fun, make it hands-on for the kids, make it a learning experience for everybody.”

In the coastal Turkish resort town of Kusadasi, a stop on one of the two 12-day itineraries, several excursions will include tours of the ancient city of Ephesus, the largest collection of Roman ruins in the Eastern Mediterranean. The site has long been a popular spot for other cruise lines sailing the Med, but Disney aims to add its typical array of Disney touches to make its shore excursions there something different.

COLISEUM excursionAt the ruins of St. John’s Basilica, where the Apostle John is said to be entombed, Disney guests will encounter an “archaeologist” who will lead them in a competition to find scattered pieces of a sacred symbol, which they’ll then have to piece together.

At Ephesus, a real-life archaeologist will be on hand to explain his job, show visitors a working dig and invite them to put their own digging skills to the test, searching for replicas of artifacts.
Another shore excursion for adults at Kusadasi will be a hammam, or Turkish bath, which combines elements of a steam bath and a massage parlor. Meanwhile, kids age 5 and over can make Turkish bracelets with the help of youth counselors from the ship.

In Venice — the only port where the Magic will overnight on one of its 12-day itineraries — Disney passengers can get a private, after-hours tour of the Doge’s Palace, one of the city’s most famous landmarks. Capping the tour will be a glitzy reception featuring Venetian royalty as well as Disney’s own “royalty,” in the form of several of its princesses: Snow White, Cinderella, Ariel, etc.

Guests 16 and older can learn to pilot a gondola, while younger kids can help race a “dragon boat” or create their own version of a traditional Venetian mask.

Italy PUPPET SHOWOther offerings in Venice include visits to textile and marble workshops where artisans are commissioned to create items for exclusive clients such as the Vatican and Dolce & Gabbana. In the textile shop, the tools are a century old, and the workers produce just 8 to 10 inches of fabric a day.

Rome (Civitavecchia) has nearly always been a stop on Disney’s past Med itineraries, so the challenge was to offer different experiences for visitors making a return trip to the Eternal City. “Highlights” tours will include the usual stops at St. Peter’s Basilica, the Sistine Chapel, the Colosseum and the Trevi Fountain.

But other options will take guests to places like San Clemente Basilica, where they can descend to the bottom levels of the three-tiered complex, which dates back to the first century, when it was a pagan temple. Another offbeat destination is the Galleria Borghese, one of Rome’s premier art collections, assembled and displayed in the residence of a single, fabulously wealthy 17th century family.

An art class for adults will instruct students in making mosaics as they enjoy wine, prosciutto and cheese. Younger passengers will have the opportunity to make pizza or take in a traditional Italian puppet show.

On all of its 2013 Med sailings, Disney is offering a limited number of packages featuring Adventures by Disney, which specializes in small-group themed tours. Some are precruise outings in Barcelona or Madrid, while others provide deeply immersive excursions at every port of call.

Tom Wolber, Disney Cruise Line’s senior vice president of operations, said the cruise line expects that the new four- and seven-night itineraries will be popular with European markets, which are becoming more important to Disney as its North American market is dampened by the increasing cost of transatlantic flights.

Disney’s Med cruises are already on sale, as are the accompanying Adventures by Disney excursions. Regular port adventures can be booked by repeat customers 120 days before sailing, and new customers can book them 75 days before departure.