Disney plans Star Wars and Marvel attractions for theme parks

Disney plans Star Wars and Marvel attractions for theme parks

By Michelle Baran

On the heels of announcing the date for the next Star Wars movie — Dec. 18, 2015 — and that it would begin developing a Marvel-themed series for Netflix, executives at the Walt Disney Co. said that its two most recently acquired franchises will eventually have a greater presence at the company’s theme parks.

“Both of today’s announcements underscore the value of two of our major acquisitions, Marvel and Lucasfilm,” Disney CEO Bob Iger said during the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call on Thursday.

“As you know, over the last several years, we’ve made a number of major acquisitions and capital investments to drive growth and create shareholder value. Now that some on those investments have been completed and the acquisitions are fully integrated, their positive impact is clear in our results, especially in parks and resorts.”

Iger said that the Disneyland Resort in California had record attendance, revenue and profitability during Cars Land’s first full year of operation at Disney’s California Adventure. It was an example of how the Pixar franchise enhanced the parks experience.

As for integrating the newer franchises, Hong Kong Disneyland will become home to the company’s first Marvel themed attraction, the Iron Man Experience, in late 2016.

Disney’s Parks and Resorts division continues to be a strong and growing segment of the company’s business. Revenue for the fourth quarter, which ended on Sept. 28, increased 8% to $3.7 billion, and segment operating income increased 15% to $571 million. For the year, Parks and Resorts revenue grew 9% to $14.1 billion and segment operating income increased 17% to $2.2 billion.

Walt Disney World set attendance records for the year, assisted by the Magic Kingdom’s Fantasyland expansion, which will be fully completed in 2014. Disney has also begun construction on an Avatar-themed area at the Animal Kingdom park in Florida, and is continuing to work on a full rollout of the MyMagic+ program.

The Tokyo Disney Resort and Hong Kong Disneyland also had record attendance this year.

The Walt Disney Co.’s fourth-quarter revenue grew 7% to $11.6 billion, and net income grew 12% to $1.4 billion.

Full-year revenue increased 7% to $45 billion, and full-year net income increased 8% to $6.1 billion.

Dream-class upgrades don’t diminish Disney Magic’s charm

Dream-class upgrades don’t diminish Disney Magic’s charm

By Tom Stieghorst
Animator's PalateONBOARD THE DISNEY MAGIC — Disney Cruise Line’s first ship has a new story to tell after undergoing the biggest renovation in its 15-year history.

The story is about a ship that got lighter, fresher-looking, with a new water slide and pools, an improved Animator’s Palate dining room, a remade kids’ club with a cool new Iron Man feature and more.

While the Magic’s makeover at the Navantia shipyard in Cadiz, Spain, wasn’t quite as magical as that of Cinderella’s coach and horsemen, it pleased Disney Cruise Line President Karl Holz, especially the new Drawn to Magic show installed in Animator’s Palate.

“This is just a Disney classic experience that exceeded all of our expectations,” Holz said.

Disney top brass including Holz, Disney Parks and Resorts President Tom Skaggs and Disney Imagineering chief wizard Joe Lanzisero, were onboard a two-day cruise recently to inspect the ship, which will be departing from Miami on three-, four- and five-day sailings through year end.

“We tried to take an approach that this ship deserved everything we could give it in terms of what we’ve learned, every way we pushed the needle with the Dream-class ships, and yet retain all the charm that made Disney Magic such a beloved ship for these 15 years,” Skaggs said.

For passengers, the new look begins in the atrium where they step aboard to begin their cruise. Gone is the Dale Chihuly glass chandelier, replaced by an art deco fixture. Paired staircases have been reduced to one, and the gold, blue, coral and aquamarine color scheme brightens the space.

The pool deck has been notably transformed. A new, more daring water slide called Aqua Dunk may become the Disney Magic’s signature. Installed, for now, on no other Disney ship, the 37-foot-tall body slide starts high atop the forward funnel on Deck 13 and ends on Deck 10.

Aqua Dunk slideAfter riders enter a chamber, the floor drops out, sending them plunging through a tube that loops over the side of the ship before ending an exhilarating 10 seconds later in the runout.

A tamer slide, called the Twist ’n’ Spout, and an AquaLab water playground have been added where Mickey’s Pool used to be. Also new as of September are lifeguards to keep tabs on the hoard of kids in the AquaLab pool.

A second space on the Disney Magic that will generate buzz is Animator’s Palate, where all the sound, lighting and video equipment has been updated and a new show created.

The room’s signature trick, going from black and white to full color over the course of a dinner, doesn’t get old. The oversized digital wall canvases start out displaying the most tentative of pencil sketches and end with a symphonic splash of light, color, movement and character. The food is almost beside the point.

Two other restaurants have been revised. The former Parrot’s Cay has become Carioca’s, with a Brazilian theme, pan-Latin menu and snazzy, oversize modern lanterns. And the nautical Topsider Buffet gave way to the beach-themed Cabanas, which has been expanded indoors by 3,400 square feet to a total of 9,460 square feet.

The kids’ clubs on Deck 5 have been redone, with one standout addition being “Become Iron Man,” in which kids virtually test drive the Iron Man armor.

For adults, the old Beat Street nightclub section has been remade into After Hours, with a more minimalist black and silver color scheme and several new bar/lounge concepts.

And the Senses spa and salon has been expanded by an additional 725 feet to 11,500 square feet and now includes a two-chair barbershop that offers men’s haircuts and hot-lathered shaves.

Disney Magic cruise cancelled to complete renovations

Disney Magic cruise cancelled to complete renovations

By Tom Stieghorst
Disney Cruise Line has cancelled a sailing of the Disney Magic in order to complete extensive renovations to the 15-year old ship.

The five-day cruise was scheduled to depart Miami Oct. 20, but bad weather during a transatlantic crossing from Spain made it impossible for workers on-board to finish needed refurbishment work on time. The ship had been undergoing renovations in dry dock in Spain following its Mediterranean season.

Passengers booked on the cruise will get a full refund and a complimentary Disney Magic sailing between now and May 16. Airline change fees will also be covered.

Alternately, they can opt for a 35% discount on a Bahamas or Caribbean cruise anytime in the next two years, excluding holiday dates.

The Disney Magic is getting new restaurants, children’s play areas, water slides and other features, along with a complete overhaul of furnishings, fixtures and colour schemes.

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.