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It's a Small World

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It’s a Small World
Entrance logo sign and building of It's a Small World at Disneyland in Anaheim, California
Disneyland
AreaFantasyland
Coordinates33°48′53″N 117°55′04″W / 33.8147°N 117.9178°W / 33.8147; -117.9178
StatusOperating
CostUS$1.5 million
Opening dateMay 30, 1966; 58 years ago (1966-05-30)
WebsiteOfficial website
Lightning Lane available
Magic Kingdom
AreaFantasyland (Castle Courtyard)
Coordinates28°25′15″N 81°34′55″W / 28.4208°N 81.5820°W / 28.4208; -81.5820
StatusOperating
Opening dateOctober 1, 1971; 52 years ago (1971-10-01)
WebsiteOfficial website
Lightning Lane available
Tokyo Disneyland
AreaFantasyland
Coordinates35°37′49″N 139°52′52″E / 35.6304°N 139.8812°E / 35.6304; 139.8812
StatusOperating
Opening dateApril 15, 1983; 41 years ago (1983-04-15)
Closing dateFall 2024 (temporary overhaul)
Replaced byIt's a Small World with Groot
WebsiteOfficial website
Disneyland Park (Paris)
AreaFantasyland
Coordinates48°52′31″N 2°46′34″E / 48.8753°N 2.7761°E / 48.8753; 2.7761
StatusOperating
Opening dateApril 12, 1992; 32 years ago (1992-04-12)
WebsiteOfficial website
Hong Kong Disneyland
AreaFantasyland
Coordinates22°18′49″N 114°02′21″E / 22.3137°N 114.0391°E / 22.3137; 114.0391
StatusOperating
Opening dateApril 28, 2008; 16 years ago (2008-04-28)
WebsiteOfficial website
1964 New York World's Fair
StatusRemoved
Opening dateApril 22, 1964; 60 years ago (1964-04-22)
Closing dateOctober 17, 1965; 58 years ago (1965-10-17)
Ride statistics
Attraction typeOld Mill
DesignerWED Enterprises/Walt Disney Imagineering
ThemeWorld peace and unity
Music"It's a Small World (After All)", written by the Sherman Brothers
Vehicle typeBoats
Riders per vehicle16
Rows4
Riders per row4
Duration12–15 minutes
Propulsion methodWater jets, electric turbine
Number of lifts0
Disabled access Wheelchair accessible

It’s a Small World (stylized in all lowercase and in quotations or with exclamation mark) is an Old Mill boat ride located in the Fantasyland area at various Disney theme parks around the world, including Disneyland Park in Anaheim, California; Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World Resort in Bay Lake, Florida; Tokyo Disneyland; Disneyland Paris; and Hong Kong Disneyland. The inaugural version of the ride premiered at the 1964 New York World's Fair before permanently moving to Disneyland in 1966.

The ride features over 300 audio-animatronic dolls[1] in traditional costumes from cultures around the world, frolicking in a spirit of international unity, and singing the attraction's title song, which has a theme of global peace. According to TIME.com, the Sherman Brothers' song "it's a small world" is the most publicly performed song of all time.[2][3] In recent years, the Small World attractions at the various Disney parks have been updated to include depictions of Disney characters—in a design compatible with the original 1960s design of Mary Blair—alongside the original characters.

Background

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Ride

[edit]

The ride was fabricated at the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank as Children of the World, and created by WED Enterprises. It was shipped to the 1964 New York World's Fair, where it was housed at the UNICEF pavilion (sponsored by Pepsi), which featured at its entrance a kinetic sculpture, The Tower of the Four Winds, a 120-foot perpetually spinning mobile created by WED designer Rolly Crump.[4] The ride joined three other World's Fair attractions—Magic Skyway (Ford pavilion), Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln (Illinois pavilion), and The Carousel of Progress (General Electric pavilion)—that Disney was already involved with. All were intended to be dismantled and rebuilt at Disneyland after the World's Fair had closed in 1966.[4][5]: 53–57 

Mary Blair was responsible for the attraction's whimsical design and color styling.[6][7] The scenes and characters were designed by animator Marc Davis,[8][9] who also choreographed the audio-animatronic figures' dances.[10] His wife Alice Davis designed the dolls' costumes.[9][10] The costumes were heavily influenced by other countries' clothing,[10] as Walt Disney had directed Alice Davis to "do whatever it takes to make these look like dolls every woman in the world would want to have".[11] Crump designed the toys and other supplemental figures on display, as well as the original attraction's facade.[8] The animated dolls were designed and sculpted by Blaine Gibson.[12]

Arrow Development was heavily involved in the design of the passenger-carrying boats and propulsion system of the attraction. Two patents that were filed by Arrow Development staff and assigned to The Walt Disney Company illustrate passenger boats and vehicle guidance systems with features very similar to those later utilized on the Disneyland installation of the attraction.[13][14] The firm is credited with manufacturing the Disneyland installation.[15]

Song

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"Children of the World" was the working title of the attraction. Its soundtrack, composed by the Sherman Brothers,[16] was originally supposed to feature the national anthems of every country represented throughout the ride; however, the anthems were all played at once, resulting in a cacophony.[11] Walt conducted a walk-through of the attraction scale model with his staff songwriters Robert B. and Richard M. Sherman, saying, "I need one song that can be easily translated into many languages and be played as a round."[17] The Sherman brothers then wrote "It's a Small World (After All)"[18] in the wake of the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, which influenced the song's message of peace and brotherhood.[19] When they first presented it to Walt, they played it as a slow ballad. Walt requested something more cheerful, so they increased the tempo and sang in counterpoint. Walt was so delighted with the final result that he renamed the attraction "It's a Small World" after the Sherman Brothers' song.[20] Recordings of the song were first sold in October 1964.[21]

The Sherman Brothers originally wanted to donate all profits from "It's a Small World (After All)" to UNICEF, but Walt Disney dissuaded them from doing so, telling the brothers that the song would become popular.[22] The Christian Science Monitor wrote of the song in 1967: "Visitors go away humming it as though they had made it up themselves."[23] Robert B. Sherman's youngest son, Robert J. Sherman, has said that this song is the single most-performed and most-translated piece of music ever produced.[17] In 2014, it was estimated that the song had played nearly 50 million times worldwide on the attractions alone, beating the radio and TV estimates for "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" and "Yesterday", which were believed to have been played at least eight and seven million times, respectively.[2][24] On average, the song is played 1,200 times during a 16-hour operating day.[11][25]

A third verse celebrating the attraction's 45th anniversary was written and popularized, but not incorporated into the ride.[26] In 2022, a 1964 recording of "It's a Small World (After All)" performed by the Disneyland Boys Choir was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry[27][28] as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[29]

World's Fair

[edit]
1964 World's Fair "It's a Small World" ticket, logo portion

The first incarnation of It's a Small World—which debuted at the 1964 New York World's Fair at Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, New York, U.S.—was a last-minute addition. It was only announced in August 1963, eight months before the fair was to open.[30][31] The Ford Motor Company and General Electric had engaged Disney early on to create their pavilions for the 1964 New York World's Fair.[5]: 53–55  WED Enterprises had already been at work developing a crude audio-animatronic fashioned as Abraham Lincoln when the state of Illinois approached Disney to create the Illinois Pavilion.[5]: 56  Afterward, Pepsi approached Disney with a plan for a tribute to UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund.[32] Walt Disney Productions agreed to construct, maintain, and operate a boat ride for Pepsi-Cola,[33] which was called "It's a Small World – A Tribute to UNICEF".[30][31] Pepsi also gave UNICEF $100,000 for the construction of an exhibit next to the ride, as well as $200,000 in bonds.[34][35]

Disney seemed to be the showman to give us the package we want ... He's terrific. He's got his hands in more bowls than anyone I've ever seen, but he accomplishes what he sets out to do. — J. G. Mullaly, Ford's World's Fair program manager[32]

Operations

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The World's Fair opened on April 22, 1964,[36] and UN Secretary General U Thant dedicated It's a Small World three days later, on April 25.[37][38] Tickets cost 60 cents for children and 95 cents for adults, and proceeds from ticket sales were donated to UNICEF.[34][35] Despite the admission fee, it was still one of the fair's most popular exhibits, with 35,000 to 40,000 daily riders on average.[35] The attraction saw nearly five million visitors during the first year alone.[39][40] A writer for The New York Times wrote that the "wondrous boat ride" was worth riding multiple times,[41] and The Christian Science Monitor called the attraction "one of the greatest contributions to world peace ever shown anywhere".[42] The World's Fair version of the ride was also featured in the TV show Disney Goes to the World's Fair.[43]

The fair did not operate between October 18, 1964,[44] and April 21, 1965.[45] Between the fair's two seasons, the figures were refurbished at Disney's studios in Hollywood.[46] The ride remained otherwise unchanged, although the queue line was modified to increase visitor flow.[39] To accommodate the high ridership, the ride was operating 15 hours a day by mid-1965;[47] the attraction had recorded 10.3 million total visitors by the end of the second year.[48] After the fair ended on October 17, 1965,[49] the Walt Disney Company planned to send the ride to Disneyland in Anaheim, California, U.S.[50][51] Its high hourly capacity influenced future attractions; Pirates of the Caribbean had been under construction at Disneyland as a subterranean walk-through, but that design was changed to a boat ride.[52]

Description

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The ride was located on one of the largest sites in the fairground's industrial zone.[53] The 1965 Official Guide Book to the New York World's Fair described the ride as "a salute to the children of the world".[54] As planned, the ride was nine minutes long and could accommodate 54,000 visitors an hour.[55][31] Outside was Rolly Crump's 12-story Tower of the Four Winds,[56][57] an openwork structure made of aluminum.[58] The tower was a large sculpture measuring 120 feet (37 m) tall,[34][57] with depictions of animals that blew around in the wind.[59] Next to the ride was a store for UNICEF,[60] and there were also UNICEF exhibits that were managed by Disneyland staff.[31]

Entertainers dressed as the Seven Dwarfs roamed around the attraction's queue line, mingling with riders.[61] Silent jets propelled the boats through a winding track.[34] The boat ride depicted faraway locations where people could buy Pepsi-Cola,[58][39] as well as fanciful depictions of landmarks such as the Tower of Pisa, Taj Mahal, and Eiffel Tower.[34][62] Throughout the ride were audio-animatronic dolls of singing children from around the world,[55][39] placed on both sides of the ride.[50] There were 350 figures that sang the "it's a Small World (After All)" song in various languages.[16][62] Each of the figures was intended to be in constant motions; some figures sang, while others danced or played instruments.[10] Each section of the ride included figures from a different nationality, except at the end of the ride, where figures from every nationality sang side-by-side.[63]

Disneyland

[edit]
It's a Small World in Disneyland

In February 1966, Walt Disney announced that It's a Small World would be reinstalled at Disneyland as part of a $23 million expansion of that theme park.[64][65] The ride was installed at the northern end of Fantasyland,[56] opening on May 30, 1966.[66][67] One critic for the Chicago Tribune said the ride "captures the essence of Walt Disney as it shows the children of the world in joyous abandon".[68] Within a year, It's a Small World was one of the park's most popular attractions.[69] In 2014, The Providence Journal estimated that the Disneyland installation of It's a Small World had carried 290 million riders since its opening. The ride's popularity has been attributed to its design, the 15-minute ride time, the fact that the queues typically move quickly, and its indoor location.[25]

The ride building occupies a 1.25-acre (0.51 ha) site[66] and is four stories high, covering 65,000 square feet (6,000 m2).[70] The facade was designed by Rolly Crump, who was inspired by Mary Blair's styling. On the attraction's primary facade, Crump designed a clock with a smiling face,[8] located 30 feet (9.1 m) high.[64][65] Every 15 minutes, costumed wooden dolls dance out from the base of the clock.[71][72] When the ride opened, it was accessed by an oval pavilion surrounded by gardens and paths.[48][66] There were originally 70 ride vehicles.[48][66] The boats carry voyagers past representations of structures such as mosques, huts, and castles,[68] as well as figures singing "It's a Small World (After All)" together in their native language.[64][68]

1966–2008 changes

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When the ride was moved to Disneyland, the Tower of the Four Winds was scrapped.[56] In addition, representations of children from the Pacific islands and the Arctic were added to the attraction,[73] and the number of figures was expanded to 500.[72][73] The ride was originally sponsored by Bank of America.[66][67] It was an E-ticket attraction, which meant that only visitors with an E ticket—the highest tier of Disneyland admission ticket at the time—could ride.[74]

The facade was changed following the opening of another version of the ride at Disneyland Paris in 1992.[75] In addition, the Bank of America canceled its sponsorship in 1992.[76] The toy company Mattel agreed to sponsor the attraction in late 1991[77] and built a shop at the ride's exit the next year.[78] Mattel dropped its sponsorship in 1999 and closed its store at the attraction's exit.[79]

2008 refurbishment and aftermath

[edit]
Alice and White Rabbit (from Alice in Wonderland) stand inside It's a Small World in Disneyland since 2008 refurbishment

Disneyland's "It's a Small World" was closed from January to November 2008 (closed and reopening in a holiday version, skipping the summer season) to receive a major refurbishment.[80][81][82] The building's structure was improved, permanent attachments created for the "It's a Small World Holiday" overlay, the water flume replaced and its propulsion upgraded to electric water jet turbines, and the attraction's aging fiberglass boats redesigned in durable plastic. The refurbishment added 29 new Disney characters, each in their native land in a similar manner to the Hong Kong Disneyland version.[83]

New wheelchair doll (right) in the Disneyland version of It's a Small World since 2022 holiday

Osram Sylvania agreed to a twelve-year sponsorship in 2009.[84] The sponsorship was taken over by Sylvania's parent firm Siemens AG in 2014,[75] and Siemens discontinued its sponsorship effective October 2017.[85][86] The ride got another change during It's a Small World Holiday in 2022, in which two new dolls in wheelchairs (one in the South America scene and one in the Finale room) were added in the ride.[87][88]

Magic Kingdom

[edit]
It's a Small World at Magic Kingdom, Disney World, Florida

On October 1, 1971, a version of the ride opened within the Fantasyland section of Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World in Bay Lake, Florida, U.S.[89] It was one of Magic Kingdom's original rides.[90][91] This version of the ride included over 600 figures with costumes.[92]

The attraction lacks the elaborate facade present on the Disneyland version of the attraction,[75][93] and it is also smaller in scale compared to the Disneyland ride.[93] For three decades, the Magic Kingdom version of the attraction underwent relatively few changes. Depictions of Chinese dolls were added in the 1990s, and a set of laughing African children with hyenas were removed in the 2000s.[22]

Kodak sponsored the attraction in the early 1980s.[94] The toy company Mattel agreed to sponsor the attraction in 1991,[77] discontinuing its sponsorship in 1999.[79] The ride was closed in May 2004 for refurbishment, which included a new entrance, a refurbished exterior, and a new sound system inside.[22] After the renovation was completed, the ride reopened in 2005.[95] In 2021, for the park's 50th anniversary, its facade was repainted in bright colors.[96] A doll in a wheelchair was added in 2023,[97][98] and further minor adjustments to the dolls took place in 2024.[99]

Tokyo Disneyland

[edit]
It's a Small World at Tokyo Disneyland

Another version of It's a Small World opened at Tokyo Disneyland in Chiba, Japan, on April 15, 1983.[89] The Tokyo Disneyland version of the attraction is identical in layout to the Magic Kingdom version except for these differences:

  • The facade's design is an almost-complete replica of the California counterpart under a different color scheme, resembling Disneyland's 1990s version.
  • The loading area is split into two zones instead of one.
  • A Welcome room was added during the 2018 refurbishment, resembling the one at the California version.
  • There are scenes featuring various Disney characters redesigned in Mary Blair's style that were added during the 2018 refurbishment.
  • The Asian room features radically different sets and dolls for Japan and China compared to the Magic Kingdom version. A Mandarin-language track was added to the China section in the 2018 refurbishment.
  • The ride uses a different, more recent recording of the song sung in Japanese specifically created for this version instead of the original Japanese recording. The vocal track is used for both the Asian room and finale room.
  • The walls of the African, South American, and Oceanian rooms are painted in colors similar to the Magic Kingdom version before its 2005 renovation.
  • The Polynesian room has vocals singing in English.
  • The Goodbye room resembles the one found at the California version.

2018 refurbishment

[edit]

On March 1, 2017, Tokyo Disneyland's version of "It's a Small World" closed down for refurbishment for its first major update since the park's opening in 1983. Reopened in April 2018,[100] to coincide with Tokyo Disneyland's 35th anniversary, the attraction featured 40 characters from Disney properties including Cinderella, Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, The Aristocats, Brave, The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Pinocchio, The Jungle Book, The Lion King, Hercules, The Three Caballeros, Mulan, Tangled, Lilo & Stitch, Frozen, Finding Nemo, and Moana similar to its counterparts in California and Hong Kong.[101][102]

The attraction was initially set to be relocated to another area in Fantasyland with a new facade similar to the California counterpart as part of original expansion plans announced in October 2014 for the resort within the next ten years, before being revised and updated.[103] The transformed version of the attraction soft-opened on April 15, 2018, revealing an updated color scheme for the facade, a new tick-tock sound and parade music (similar to the ones used in Hong Kong and Anaheim), an entirely reconstructed loading area dubbed "Small World Station," a new Welcome room, an extended Goodbye room, rebuilt set pieces, and music tracks new to the ride including a Mandarin language track added to the China scene formerly exclusive to the Hong Kong version along with the aforementioned Disney characters.[104]

"it's a small world with Groot" overlay

[edit]

On March 27, 2024, Tokyo Disneyland announced that "It's a Small World" will receive a Marvel-themed overlay, called "it's a small world with Groot", closing in fall 2024 for installation.[105][106] The park did not specify when the overlay would end, but it indicated that the ride would reopen in 2025.[106]

Disneyland Paris

[edit]
It's a Small World at Disneyland Paris, which has a different facade design compared to the other versions.

A fourth version of It's a Small World opened at Disneyland Paris in Marne-la-Vallée, France, on April 12, 1992.[89] France Telecom was the original sponsor of the Disneyland Paris version of the ride.[107]

The attraction at Disneyland Paris is a departure from other versions of the attraction. The facade features rearranged and slightly redesigned landmarks with a completely different clock tower. The exterior clock face features a wide-awake sun on its left half and a sleeping moon on its right half. Unlike all other versions of the ride, every scene is housed in one room with arches being used to define sections of the ride. The scenery design is a complete departure from Mary Blair's distinctive style, though the dolls used remain identical to all other versions. The ride also uses a completely different soundtrack composed by John Debney. This is the first version of the ride to incorporate a vibrant European room with dolls singing in French and German, a distinct Middle Eastern section with dolls singing in Arabic and Hebrew and a scene for North America with dolls representing Canada and the United States. In the Finale room, in addition to the song being sung in English, it is also sung in French. Also, the attraction had a post-show area called World Chorus that was sponsored by Orange S.A., which opened with the park in 1992 and then closed in 2010 to make way for the Princess Pavilion meet and greet area.[108]

2015 refurbishment

[edit]

As part of an ongoing plan to refurbish several attractions for the park's 25th anniversary, this version was refurbished for six months, reopening on December 19, 2015. The refurbishment included a different color scheme for the facade that is identical to the color scheme when it first opened, restored assets and special effects, refurbished boats, new LED lighting to replace the old stage lighting, and all 176 dolls in the ride being progressively replaced through 2017. The entrance and exit rooms have been completely revamped, being identical to the entrance scene in Hong Kong Disneyland's version and the exit scene in the Magic Kingdom and Hong Kong Disneyland versions (rendered in the Mary Blair style similar to the other parks). The soundtrack has been completely remastered with the base instrumental removed from the majority of the ride's audio except for the finale, making the soundtrack more similar to the original version. Additionally, new audio tracks are added including a new recording of someone yodeling to the tune of the song in the Switzerland scene.[109]

2021–2023 refurbishment

[edit]

Disneyland Paris's "It's a Small World" was scheduled to be closed for extensive refurbishments from November 2021 until May 2023.[110] After an additional nineteenth-month delay and during Disneyland Paris' 30th anniversary celebration and the Walt Disney Company's 100th anniversary celebration, the ride was officially reopened on May 5, 2023 and featured 3 new, added, disabled and handicapped, Wheelchair accessible dolls in 3 scenes: a German doll in the Germany scene, an Arabian doll in the Arabia scene and another German doll in the Finale scene. It is similar to 6 other, added, disabled and handicapped Wheelchair accessible dolls that are incorporated into 6 scenes on the US and Asian versions of the original, classic attraction: a Mexican doll in the Mexico scene and another Mexican doll in the Finale scene in the Disneyland version in California, a Swedish doll in the Sweden scene in the Magic Kingdom version in Florida and a Mexican doll in the Mexico scene and a Swedish doll in the Finale scene in the Hong Kong Disneyland version in Hong Kong.[111]

Hong Kong Disneyland

[edit]
It's a Small World at Hong Kong Disneyland

The Hong Kong Disneyland version of the attraction on Lantau Island, Hong Kong, opened on April 28, 2008.[112] It is located in the Fantasyland section of the park.[113] Hong Kong Disneyland marketed the ride using a Cantonese version of the song "It's a Small World (After All)" by James Wong Jim.[114] The ride is mostly modeled after the original Disneyland counterpart in that the boats travel through a canal. Some of this version's prominent and unique characteristics include:

  • 38 Disney characters (all rendered in the Mary Blair style) added to scenes where their stories originated.[115]
  • An expanded Asia sequence with Hong Kong, the Philippines and Korea represented with children singing in Cantonese, Tagalog and Korean, respectively, as well as an extended China scene with represented with children singing in Mandarin
  • A distinct Arabian room, and scenes for North America, similar to the Paris version
  • Extraordinary fiber-optic lighting effects in the Finale room not seen on any other Disney attraction[116]
  • Cantonese, Korean, Mandarin, and Tagalog versions of the song that were specifically recorded for Hong Kong Disneyland. The finale is sung in three languages: Cantonese, English and Mandarin.

Holiday overlay

[edit]
It's a Small World Holiday
"It's a Small World Holiday" lighting display
Disneyland
AreaFantasyland
Coordinates33°48′53″N 117°55′04″W / 33.8147°N 117.9178°W / 33.8147; -117.9178
StatusOperating
Opening dateNovember 25, 1997; 26 years ago (1997-11-25)
Tokyo Disneyland
Name"It's a Small World" Very Merry Holidays
AreaFantasyland
Coordinates35°37′49″N 139°52′52″E / 35.6304°N 139.8812°E / 35.6304; 139.8812
StatusRemoved
Opening date2003
Closing date2018
Disneyland Park (Paris)
Name"It's a Small World Celebration"
AreaFantasyland
Coordinates48°52′31″N 2°46′34″E / 48.8753°N 2.7761°E / 48.8753; 2.7761
StatusOperating
Opening date1999
Hong Kong Disneyland
Name"It's a Small World" Christmas
AreaFantasyland
Coordinates22°18′49″N 114°02′21″E / 22.3137°N 114.0391°E / 22.3137; 114.0391
StatusRemoved
Opening date2009
Closing dateJanuary 1, 2010; 14 years ago (2010-01-01)
Ride statistics
Attraction typeOld Mill
DesignerWED Enterprises/Walt Disney Imagineering
ThemeWorldwide winter holidays
MusicJingle Bells and/or Deck The Halls (finale only) featuring "It's a Small World (After All)", written by the Sherman Brothers
Vehicle typeBoats
Riders per vehicle16
Rows4
Riders per row4
Duration12–15 minutes
Propulsion methodWater jets, electric turbine
Number of lifts0
Disabled access Wheelchair accessible

Starting in 1997, Disneyland has featured "It's a Small World Holiday" during the end-of-the-year Christmas and holiday season.[117][118] The Disneyland version of the ride has been redecorated nearly every year since then.[75] The attraction is closed in late October to receive temporary holiday decorations inside and outside and reopens in early November before the start of the busy holiday tourist season. After the holiday season, "It's a Small World Holiday" stays open until late January where it closes to remove the holiday overlay and return to classic "It's a Small World" in early February. Almost one million lights are included during the holidays.[119] In "It's a Small World Holiday", the main theme song is not played in full; instead, the children sing "Jingle Bells" and a bridge of "Deck the Halls" in addition to the main theme.[117][118] In addition, the ride has decorations and symbols that are based on the holidays celebrated in different parts of the world.[118]

Prior to the 2018 refurbishment, Tokyo Disneyland had a version of "It's a Small World Holiday" called "It's a Small World Very Merry Holidays".[120]

Disneyland Paris had a version of the overlay in which the full holiday soundtrack was not used. For the 2009 winter season, it received an overhaul with an official name of "It's a Small World Celebration". The overhaul included new lighting and decorations throughout the ride, and the entire ride now uses the full "It's a Small World Holiday" soundtrack.[121] Following a 2015 renovation, "It's a Small World Celebration" was planned to use an updated soundtrack originally set for winter 2016.[122] However, it was delayed for unknown reasons. "It's a Small World Celebration" returned for the 2017–2018 holiday season, featuring an updated soundtrack.

Hong Kong Disneyland implemented its own version called "It's a Small World Christmas" that highlights the Disney character scenes in Christmas fashion with an appearance of Santa Claus in the Arctic scene.[123]

The Magic, the Memories, and You

[edit]

As part of Disney's "Let the Memories Begin" campaign for 2011, a nighttime projection show premiered at the Disneyland version of It's a Small World on January 27, 2011.[124] The Magic, the Memories, and You show projected sequences of Disney attractions and characters set to Disney music onto the exterior facade of It's a Small World to fill its architectural features, personalized with exclusive photographs and videos of park guests taken that day by Disney's PhotoPass cast members. The show also existed in Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom, but was projected onto Cinderella Castle. As the Let the Memories Begin campaign drew to a close, the show ended its run on Labor Day, September 3, 2012, at both locations. The Florida version was eventually replaced by Celebrate the Magic in fall 2012 and later by Once Upon a Time in 2016.

The Magic, The Memories, and You theme song was later used for Celebrate! Tokyo Disneyland as part of the Tokyo Disney Resort 35th Anniversary celebration that premiered at Tokyo Disneyland on July 10, 2018.[125]

In other media

[edit]
  • In the 1970s, a planned feature film was going to be a Cold War-tinged comedy adventure where the children of UN leaders try to get their parents to stop squabbling through faking mass-kidnapping, only for a war profiteer to try to take advantage of the fear and start a mass conflict.[126]
  • In the 2005 children's book Disney After Dark, the dolls from It's a Small World attack holograms of the main characters.[127]
  • An attraction titled "it's a small world" appears in Kinect: Disneyland Adventures.[128]
  • On November 26, 2013, Disney premiered It's a Small World: The Animated Series on Disney.com as an online-exclusive series, and the final episode was released on February 4, 2014.[129][130][131][132][133]
  • On April 22, 2014, it was announced that a feature film franchise about the ride was in the works, to be directed by Jon Turteltaub, written by Jared Stern, and produced by Turteltaub, Stern, and Dan Lin.[134] The project was still in development in early 2016;[135] as of 2024, no new information on the film has been released.

Accidents

[edit]
  • On October 6, 2010, a Disneyland Paris staff member died when the ride restarted unexpectedly while he was working on it. According to police, the 53-year-old man was cleaning the amusement park ride due to an earlier incident with a child guest. The unnamed man, a sub-contractor of the park, was reportedly trapped beneath a boat on the ride when it started up by accident. He was severely injured and transported by helicopter to a nearby hospital where he later died of his injuries.[136][137]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Montgomery, Allison (October 4, 2016). "QUIZ: '"it's a small world"' at Magic Kingdom Park". Disney Parks Blog.
  2. ^ a b Corliss, Richard (April 30, 2014). "Is This the Most Played Song in Music History?". TIME.com. Archived from the original on October 26, 2014. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  3. ^ Kubersky, Seth (January 7, 2014). "Fact-Checking Saving Mr. Banks with Disney Historian Jim Korkis". orlandoweekly.com. Archived from the original on August 17, 2017.
  4. ^ a b "History of It's a Small World". Hunting Pixie Dust. June 26, 2018. Archived from the original on April 21, 2019. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c Tirella, Joseph (2013). Tomorrow-Land: The 1964-65 World's Fair and the Transformation of America. Lyons Press. ISBN 978-1-4930-0333-4.
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