Daily Breeze (Torrance)

almost ORLANDO magic IN THE FALL

That’s when theme parks line up new shows and attraction­s — plus shorter lines for the best rides

- By David Dickstein Correspond­ent

Chances are you won’t be replicatin­g my itinerary by visiting six theme parks in six days on your first or next Orlando vacation — even the official tourism associatio­n for the region considered that a “whirlwind trip” that was bookended by travel days. But when you’re a theme park enthusiast who’ll travel across the country to Florida to see Mickey Mouse and Harry Potter, both bicoastal residents of California as well, walking 147,000 steps to experience 67 attraction­s in less than a week seems pretty normal.

Day 1 — Disney’s Animal Kingdom; Day 2 — Magic Kingdom Park; Day 3— Epcot; Day 4 — Universal Studios Florida; Day 5 — Universal’s Islands of Adventure; and Day 6 — Disney’s Hollywood Studios.

That’s three more parks and two more lodging nights than the average Central Florida visitor, according to Visit Orlando. The ambitious adventure wasn’t cheap. Cost of admission for the region’s six most popular theme parks (according to prepandemi­c numbers tallied by the Themed Entertainm­ent Associatio­n) was more than $1,500 for two people, and that’s with an online discount. Food, flights and accommodat­ions are additional expenses, as is parking if applicable. But souvenirs and Universal’s Express Pass, its version of Disney’s now-obsolete FastPass, soon to be the fee-based Disney Genie+, are optional.

Also discretion­ary is going to one amusement park, let alone a half-dozen, on a single trip. But if you’ve been waiting out the pandemic and summer 2021 to take a much-needed vacation, now might be a prime time to make an escape to Orlando. COVID-19 is still among us, of course, and those nasty variants don’t seem to be going away anytime soon, either. What has dissipated somewhat are families with children, now back in school. Even sweeter, many debuting and reopening attraction­s have been waiting until after summer for their comingout party.

“Visitors to Orlando this fall will find a variety of special events like Disney’s 50th anniversar­y celebratio­n, food festivals and Halloween fun that lasts for more than two months,” said Casandra Matej, president and CEO of Visit Orlando. “We also usually see a slowdown of visitation due to school starting, making fall a perfect time to visit.”

Theme park attendance drops roughly 20% between Labor Day and Thanksgivi­ng, a stat not lost on families that prioritize vacation over education, or adults without children who enjoy smaller crowds, shorter lines and oftentimes cheaper rates.

But enough of the teasing. Let’s drop the rope and punch our own version of a park-hopper ticket by checking out what’s in store for an Orlando getaway now that autumn is here and many families aren’t.

Magic Kingdom Park

The only theme park in the world with more annual visitors than Disneyland turns 50 on Oct. 1. The Golden Jubilee anniversar­y, or what the resort is calling “The World’s Most Magical Celebratio­n,” is planned to last 18 months.

That’s also how long the Magic Kingdom’s next nighttime spectacula­r is expected to run. On the actual anniversar­y, “Disney Enchantmen­t” will replace “Happily Ever After,” which sees its fairy tale run end two nights earlier after enthrallin­g millions of visitors with pyrotechni­cs and projection mapping across Cinderella Castle since May 2017.

If you want to ride the original “Song of the South”-inspired

The Tree of Life is seen at Walt Disney World Resort’s Animal Kingdom in Florida.

Splash Mountain, time is running out. Disney hasn’t announced when the flume ride — and its near-identical twin in Anaheim — will reopen as a reimagined nod to the 2009 animated feature “The Princess and the Frog,” but the mountainou­s makeover is on the horizon.

There’s no talk about removing or changing the last remaining Country Bear Jamboree in the U.S. Anaheim’s went into permanent hibernatio­n in 2001, but Orlando’s is still packing in the footstompi­ng crowds.

Meanwhile, the very Carousel of Progress that showed Anaheim guests a “great, big, beautiful tomorrow” from 1967-1973 is still exploring the joy of technologi­cal advancemen­ts using audio-animatroni­cs in Orlando’s Tomorrowla­nd. Seeing these attraction­s for the first time since childhood brought tears to this Orange County-raised writer’s eyes.

Disney’s Animal Kingdom

Three-dimensiona­l kites bearing likenesses of Simba, Baloo, King Louie and other jungledwel­ling Disney characters will soar over Discovery River Amphitheat­er

A view of iconic Spaceship Earth at Epcot at the Walt Disney World Resort.

starting Oct. 1 with “Disney KiteTails.” Details are few, but rumors point to a 15-minute daytime show featuring Jet Skis zigzagging on the water with wind catchers and kites as long as 30 feet — all to a soundtrack of Disney favorites, naturally.

Even after four years, Avatar Flight of Passage is the darling of the second most visited Orlando theme park. Attraction­s Magazine rightfully ranks the 3D simulator ride as the one to dash to at opening; within an hour of the rope drop the wait time was over 100 minutes on the day we went. Before guests mount a Banshee for the ride of their life, they serpentine through the best preshow queue in Orlando — mystical and detailed scenery definitely makes the line feel shorter.

Other don’t-misses at Animal Kingdom are Expedition Everest, a Matterhorn-like coaster that goes backward; Kilimanjar­o Safari, like an abridged San Diego Zoo Safari Park experience; and the “Festival of the Lion King” show with less audience participat­ion due to COVID-19.

Epcot

Epcot doesn’t turn 50 until 2032, but that’s not stopping Walt Disney World’s third-most popular park from getting in on the anniversar­y action. “Harmonious” debuts Oct. 1, staged on the World Showcase Lagoon and billed as one of the largest nighttime spectacula­rs ever created for a Disney Park.

That day, Remy’s Ratatouill­e Adventure and La Creperie de Paris open to riders and diners, respective­ly, visiting the nearby France pavilion. The ride, based on Pixar’s 2007 “Ratatouill­e,” “shrinks” guests to the size of rats for a “4D” culinary adventure that turns Gusteau’s famous Paris restaurant upside down.

Also on Oct. 1, Spaceship Earth, Epcot’s iconic geodesic sphere, will show off new lighting as part of a nightly, resortwide “Beacons of Magic” extravagan­za.

Disney’s Hollywood Studios

Disney’s Hollywood Studios is home to the most inaccessib­le attraction at a Disney park since Club 33 — Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance. Perhaps the end of summer offers a new hope to those shut out from experienci­ng Rise due to an agonizing reservatio­n system that involves a virtual queue known to fill up in less than a second.

Frustratio­n reaches the height of Chewbacca when Rise is down, and according to its ride operators, that happens a lot. Rise gets deserved rave reviews and is arguably the main attraction of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, the newest land here and at Disneyland. Also a blast is Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run, a clone of what’s at Disneyland.

Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway isn’t expected to open at Disneyland until 2023, but the first major ride-through attraction to feature the world’s most famous rodents is already a big hit in Orlando. Despite the overuse of high-tech projection screens, the trackless dark ride is frenetic fun. Is the experience worth waiting in line for over an hour, all the while wearing a mask in that Florida humidity? If that’s a “no,” then you probably found your ropedrop ride.

Universal Studios Florida

While we have a soft spot for Universal Studios Hollywood, the two Orlando parks reign supreme in several categories. A big one is in how they pay homage to the magical mind of J.K. Rowling.

California’s Hogsmeade is quaint compared with the dual Wizarding Worlds of Harry Potter at Universal Studios Florida and the nearby Islands of Adventure. The layout of the Potterthem­ed environmen­t makes for a more immersive experience as one strolls the fantastica­l shops, eateries and other oddities of Diagon Alley. Ridewise, there’s the mind-blowing Harry Potter and the Escape from Gringotts and the Hogwarts Express train that runs between the two “Harry Potter” lands for those with a parkto-park admission ticket.

Similariti­es between the Universal Studios parks in Florida and California are many, but one difference nostalgic West Coasters will appreciate is seeing — and riding — E.T. Adventure. At Universal Studios Hollywood, that attraction failed to phone home in 2003 and was destroyed to make room for the Mummy ride.

Universal’s Islands of Adventure

Jurassic World VelociCoas­ter is Orlando’s first major theme park thrill ride to open since the COVID-19 pandemic began. It’s also the best coaster in town, though to be fair, this adrenaline junkie hasn’t ridden the highly rated Mako at SeaWorld Orlando. An instant classic when it opened in June, VelociCoas­ter boasts the world’s first 100-foot weightless inverted stall, 12 total seconds of out-of-your-seat airtime and 4,700 perfectly engineered feet of track.

Other must-do’s at Islands of Adventure are the Jurassic Park River Adventure (similar to what’s at Universal City), the wet and wild Dudley Do-Right’s Ripsaw Falls, Skull Island: Reign of Kong (in California the ride is part of the studio tour, which Orlando doesn’t have), and the Spider-Man and Incredible Hulk rides — all winners for thrillseek­ers who meet the minimum height. For youngsters who don’t, there’s Seuss Landing and a host of relatively tame rides.

Islands of Adventure’s “Harry Potter” section is the icing on the cake, or more appropriat­ely, the butterscot­ch froth on the butterbeer — a must-drink regular or frozen ($7.99). Four years older than its Universal Studios counterpar­t, the area treats guests to a re-creation of Hogsmeade and three rides: Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey and Flight of the Hippogriff, both also found at the California park, and the sortanew and splendid Hagrid’s Magical Creatures Motorbike Adventure. Wands are best bought at Ollivander­s and the hungry can’t go wrong at Three Broomstick­s.

The Wizarding Worlds at either park are so popular, just about the only way to avoid elbow-to-elbow crowds is to go in the cooler days of winter before or after the holidays, and, as we’ve been saying, in the early fall when school is in session. Of course, if you’re a wizard with a working wand, you can always use the Vanishing Spell. Populus evanesco!

 ?? PHOTO BY DAVID DICKSTEIN ?? Firework shells bursting over Cinderella Castle at the Magic Kingdom in Orlando produce a hidden Mickey.
PHOTO BY DAVID DICKSTEIN Firework shells bursting over Cinderella Castle at the Magic Kingdom in Orlando produce a hidden Mickey.
 ?? PHOTO BY DAVID DICKSTEIN ?? Diagon Alley at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter in Universal Studios Florida.
PHOTO BY DAVID DICKSTEIN Diagon Alley at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter in Universal Studios Florida.
 ?? CHARLES SYKES — INVISION/AP ??
CHARLES SYKES — INVISION/AP
 ?? MARK EADES — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ??
MARK EADES — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER

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