Herald on Sunday

STILL GOT THE MAGIC

Damon Smith proves you are never too old for Disneyland.

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At six-and-a-half — the half was spoken with chest-puffing pride back then — Disney became my recreation­al drug. My parents were my dealers, kick-starting my habit one Saturday afternoon in the stalls of the local cinema, as an animated bear in an ill-fitting red T-shirt shimmied up a tree, rhapsodisi­ng the growl in his furry belly.

A most befuddling thing happened: pure, unadultera­ted joy washed over me. In the darkness, I was hooked.

That same feeling of unabashed glee bedevils me whenever I make a pilgrimage to Disneyland Paris.

I visited last year and the fizz of childhood wonder was diluted by a sombre realisatio­n that Disneyland Park and Walt Disney Studios Park were looking tired, like a beloved soft toy that has been hugged and snuffled until its colours are bleached and seams distressed.

A few months later, as I walk out of Marne-laVallee/Chessy train station on a rather blustery day, I find my little patch of heaven has been extensivel­y replanted and repolished to a lustre for the 25th anniversar­y celebratio­ns.

The Newport Bay Club, which exudes the sprawling grandeur of a 1920s Cape Cod mansion, has been completely renovated with nautical but nice flourishes, including knotted profiles of a certain anthropomo­rphised mouse in carpets and animated characters peeking

through portholes above the beds. Anchored within a leisurely 10-minute walk of both parks, it’s a convenient if disconcert­ingly labyrinthi­ne base of operations for the weekend.

I pack the bare necessitie­s, including a portable mobile phone charger. The official app is invaluable to discern where you are, and delivers real-time updates on queues for rides and shows. Be prepared, however, to rack up data roaming charges as you zig-zag between two worlds of wonder, taking full advantage of the Fast Pass system that permits queue-jumping on major attraction­s, except the topsy-turvy Crush’s Coaster.

Kitsch and wistful nostalgia have always been the best of friends at the resort and that’s evident during the silver anniversar­y. Main Street Station, iconic gateway to Disneyland Park, now conceals its stained glass windows behind a shimmering overlay, framing a cameo containing two silhouette­s in digitised fairy dust of the Sleeping Beauty castle and a curlicued 25.

The colours of the wind blowing through every design element are royal blue and silver sparkle, while sheen Tinkerbell­s flit atop lamp posts that light a path to Fantasylan­d, casting blue shadows on the trail.

Following a year-long refurbishm­ent, the Big Thunder Mountain runaway train in Frontierla­nd chugs past rainbow-coloured pools of water, encircled by glistening stalagmite­s. A falling oil lamp ignites a simulated explosion on the final ascent of the journey, replete with lit fuses skittering over jagged rocks and a theatrical blast of TNT smoke.

A revitalise­d Pirates Of The Caribbean galleon ride has an animatroni­c Captain Jack Sparrow and swashbuckl­ing special effects enhancing rum-soaked scenes from a pirate’s life awash with boisterous buccaneers barking at the moon, and poor unfortunat­e souls trapped in a dungeon.

Back above ground, I see the light refracted in the 250,000 hand-glued Swarovski crystals, that adorn the Royal Castle Stage, situated

to the right of the moat. Several times a day, weather permitting, the stage hosts the bilingual anniversar­y spectacula­rs Mickey Presents

Happy Anniversar­y Disneyland Paris and The

Starlit Princess Waltz. I hail Princess Aurora, Belle, Cinderella and five other spirited heroines as they waltz dreamily with their swaggering beaus.

At 5.30pm, we gather — a dozen deep

— to witness eight gargantuan floats snake through the park, steady as the beating drum, on the inaugural Disney Stars On Parade. Mickey and Minnie, dressed fetchingly as explorers, lead festivitie­s, followed by elaborate mobile designs dedicated to Toy Story, The Lion

King, Finding Nemo and Peter Pan, fronted by the elegant Captain Hook. Some floats are enlivened with Cirque du Soleil-style acrobatics, and a 15m dragon spews blood red fire, all in the golden afternoon.

At nightfall, millions of LEDS framing Main Street are dimmed for the premiere of Disney Illuminati­ons. State-of-the-art projection mapping

brings to life scenes from animated classics on the castle ramparts, enhanced with lasers, fireworks and choreograp­hed water jets. For the first time, live action elements from Pirates

Of The Caribbean and Star Wars have been incorporat­ed, building to a pyrotechni­c-laden crescendo infused with heartwarmi­ng sisterly solidarity and love courtesy of Frozen.

Tomorrow is another day and after a hearty, buffet-style breakfast in the hotel’s Yacht Club restaurant, I join the excitable throng heading to Disneyland Park for the grand opening of Star

Tours: The Adventure Continues. Reimagined in eye-popping 3D, the white-knuckle simulator ride seesaws wildly through a whole new world of Star Wars-related escapades, against iconic backdrops including the ice planet Hoth and forest moon of Endor. Across the repaved Discoveryl­and courtyard in the Star Port, an imposing Darth Vader hosts private audiences with new recruits to the Galactic Empire.

Outside, I’m in great spirits as I greet Chewbacca. Enveloped in a Wookiee hug, I fail to notice two approachin­g Stormtroop­ers in shiny white armour.

“Do you have clearance for this area?” asks one accusingly. I blush and blither a feeble response.

“Calm down,” gestures his partner in intergalac­tic crime.

Very good advice for a 43-year-old man, who still thinks he’s that six-and-a -half-year-old boy. Let it go . . . until next time.

 ??  ?? Disneyland Paris. Picture / Getty Images
Disneyland Paris. Picture / Getty Images
 ??  ?? Above: Pirates of the Caribbean. Inset: Fireworks. Pictures / Getty Images
Above: Pirates of the Caribbean. Inset: Fireworks. Pictures / Getty Images
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