SeaWorld replacing ‘Blue Horizons’ show with ‘Dolphin Days’
SeaWorld Orlando is replacing a long-running show featuring dolphins doing tricks alongside acrobats with a new one designed to educate audiences about the animals’ personalities.
The changes come as SeaWorld tries to remake its theme parks with an emphasis on conservation and animal rescues. Among the changes: The theme park’s orca shows in the future will concentrate on natural behaviors of the animals.
”Dolphin Days” will include information about how to protect the animals in the wild, and it will have a segment in which a volunteer from the audience gets an encounter with a dolphin and a green-winged macaw.
The shift — from a bright, sensational style to one with a more envi-
ronmentally friendly message — is not surprising, said Scott Smith, assistant hospitality professor at the University of South Carolina.
“It kind of goes with the whole narrative that they’re trying to do right now,” Smith said.
Naomi Rose, a marine mammal scientist with the Animal Welfare Institute in Washington D.C., said she had been concerned that there would not be “Blue Horizons” changes.
“It was inconsistent to me to retain ‘Blue Horizons’ while you’re changing the orca show to something more natural,” Rose said.
But the addition of an upclose encounter was not a positive development, she said.
“In my opinion, encouraging that sort of interaction with a wild animal at a zoo or aquarium or theme park like SeaWorld is exactly the wrong message,” she said.
“They should be in the vanguard of teaching people how to respectfully interact with wildlife,” Rose said. “And it’s not by going up to them and patting them on the head.”
“Dolphin Days” will debut on April 1 in the theme park’s Dolphin Theater, the company announced Thursday. Final performances of “Blue Horizons” will be March 31.
SeaWorld said that the new show is “still in development.” It will include macaws and other tropical birds, which were popular elements in “Blue Horizons.” SeaWorld’s park in San Diego also has a show named “Dolphin Days.” The Orlando production will be “inspired by” the California version but will not be a clone of it, SeaWorld says.
On the other side of the Orlando park, a remodeled dolphin nursery is under construction. It is expected to open by this summer, SeaWorld says.
The park is also planning “Electric Ocean,” a nighttime spectacular, and a virtual-reality add-on to its Kraken roller coaster this year.
“Blue Horizons” had an 11-year run at SeaWorld Orlando. The show had included dolphins doing tricks alongside human performers, some of whom did acrobatics above the water and with the animals.
The park may be aiming for visitors in the middle of the spectrum between extreme animal activists on one end and, on the other end, the “Joe Regular Tourist,” who wants to see dolphins jump through hoops, Smith said.
It’s that “middle-of-theroad family that’s not environmental activists, but they’re environmentally conscious. They recycle, and they try to do the right thing, so to speak,” he said. “I suspect that’s who SeaWorld is aiming for.”
Earlier this week, SeaWorld Entertainment reported that attendance and revenue dropped in 2016. It had had a net loss of $12.5 million for the year.
SeaWorld cited weather, including Hurricane Matthew, a sluggish year for Orlando tourism and competition as reasons its attendance declined 2 percent for 2016.