The secret world of Disneyland
Bridget Gleeson
Lonely Planet Author
The California Adventure at Disneyland in Anaheim.
Disneyland may look like a straightforward theme park. But there’s a secret world hidden behind the balloons, castles and cotton candy – a place where wild cats roam the park at midnight, Mickey Mouse hides in the wallpaper, and movie stars sip martinis behind closed doors.
Feline security
It’s not easy keeping the grounds of Disneyland utterly spotless, as well as free of unwanted pests. Every night after closing time, 200 feral cats are released into the park to help keep the rodent population under control. Though Disney doesn’t comment on the matter, rumour has it that the feline taskforce dates back to 1957, when renovations to Sleeping Beauty Castle revealed a colony of more than 100 stray cats. After unsuccessful attempts to chase them out of the park, Disney decided to put the cats to work instead. Today they spend their daylight hours resting in the park’s well-concealed ‘cat houses’, though you can sometimes spot a furry face peeking out between the mechanical lions on the Jungle Cruise.
Hidden Mickeys
At Disneyland, the round-eared Mickey Mouse emblem is everywhere. But thanks to clever Imagineers (Disney’s specially trained designers and engineers), hundreds of ‘Hidden Mickeys‘ are also scattered across the park. The subtle symbols are often difficult to spot: they’re camouflaged in the architecture and landscaping as well as in the smallest stylistic details, from the floral wallpaper of the First Aid station and the rust marks atop a treasure chest in the Pirates of the Caribbean ride, to the shapes of car speakers on Space Mountain. No one knows exactly how many exist.
Cocktails behind closed doors
Disneyland is dry – unless you can manage to get your name on the list at Club 33. The secret cocktail lounge, tucked away above the Blue Bayou in New Orleans Square, has a limited membership of just 487 and a waiting list of approximately 14 years. Walt Disney designed the club as an exclusive space to entertain possible investors; since then, the lounge, complete with an elegant dining room and a first-class wine cellar, has hosted US presidents, film stars, foreign dignitaries, and lucky guests with connections. It’s said that Robert Kennedy dined here on 3 June, 1968, two days before he was assassinated.
Trick of the eye
Things are not always as they appear at Disneyland. The park’s design employs ‘forced perspective,’ creating optical illusions that make structures appear larger or smaller than they actually are. Sleeping Beauty Castle, for example, looks much taller than its 77 feet – that’s because the ‘bricks’ and other architectural features grow progressively smaller as the towers rise. The Matterhorn also appears more massive than it is, since the tallest trees are at the base of the mountain and the smallest are placed at the summit. Entering Main Street, thanks to clever angles and scaling techniques, the castle seems far away and the old-fashioned shops and ice cream parlours seem to be several stories tall. As you exit, the same Main Street seems much shorter. Walt Disney figured that families coming into the park would be filled with anticipation, but on leaving, they’d be too tired for a leisurely stroll.
Always on stage
At Disneyland, a janitor isn’t a janitor – he’s a ‘cast member’. So are the legions of cashiers, painters, ride operators, gardeners, and performers, from the girl who portrays Cinderella to the guy pushing a broom around Frontierland. All cast members are trained to follow a specific code of etiquette that helps preserve the Disney magic. On the list of dos and don’ts? Never break character. If wearing a costume that belongs in Fantasyland, don’t set foot in Tomorrowland – it might confuse visitors or break the park’s orderly image. When directing guests, point with two fingers or an open palm, never the index finger. Cast members are issued a Disney ‘look book’ that details the fresh-faced ideal – no long fingernails, beards, or unnaturally coloured hair allowed. It’s a throwback to Walt Disney’s All-American standards: when the park opened even guests with facial hair weren’t allowed entrance.
A light stays on
When construction was underway in the early 1950s, Walt didn’t want to miss a moment of his dream coming to life. That’s why he installed a small private apartment for his family above the Fire Department on Main Street. Decorated by one of Disney’s set designers, the apartment featured turn-of-the-century decor; the apartment still contains Walt’s tiled shower (fitted with multiple shower heads to soothe an old polo injury) and a ceramic bar set Walt used to serve his favourite hot drink, the rum- and brandy-based Tom & Jerry. The lamp in the window, visible from the park, was once illuminated to signal to cast members that the head honcho was on the premises. Today the lamp always stays lit in honour of the man behind the mouse.
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The secret world of Disneyland
The secret world of Disneyland
There are lots of hidden Mickeys at any number of Disney attractions, including the Magic Kingdom - there are books dedicated to spotting them.Hidden Mickeys
I can't speak as to the feral cats, but cast members at the Magic Kingdom use a vast network of underground tunnels so they won't be caught out-of-place.
Finally, this post leaves out the greatest little-known Disney fact of all: Walt Disney's frozen head, once kept in a vault below the Matterhorn is Disneyland is now kept suspended precisely in the center of the big sphere at Epcot, in order to isolate the machinery keeping it alive from earth movement.
The secret world of Disneyland
So the ride that goes up through the sphere doesn't create motion that will disturb the machinery? Now that's impressive engineering.
The secret world of Disneyland
Peoples fanaticism of that company never ceases to amaze me. They make the Apple fanboys look like tourists.
“The Knave abideth.” I dare speak not for thee, but this maketh me to be of good comfort; I deem it well that he be out there, the Knave, being of good ease for we sinners.
The secret world of Disneyland
I worked at the WDW Magic Kingdom or the first 6 years it was open-I kept notes on all sorts of things that I saw-especially in the tunnels-wish I still had that stuff-it would have made for one helluva expose'
And that's a first down!
The secret world of Disneyland
[quote=g8orbill]I worked at the WDW Magic Kingdom or the first 6 years it was open-I kept notes on all sorts of things that I saw-especially in the tunnels-wish I still had that stuff-it would have made for one helluva expose'[/QUOTE]
share pls
share pls