The Denver Post

Disney highlights its deep ties to China with resort expansion

- By Erika Kinetz Erika Kinetz, Associated Press

SHANGHAI» Walt Disney Co. used the expansion of its $5.5 billion Disney Resort in Shanghai on Thursday to highlight its deep China connection­s despite worsening trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.

Beneath the surface, Shanghai’s Disneyland is not purely American and has been a boon to the local economy, providing both jobs and high-quality entertainm­ent, company executives said.

Disney took an unusually collaborat­ive approach to its Shanghai theme park, which opened in 2016, handing over a 57 percent ownership stake to its state-owned Chinese partner, the Shanghai Shendi Group.

“We’re excited about the fact that we’re not an American company just here by ourselves. We’re a real collaborat­ive company,” Bob Weis, president of Walt Disney Imagineeri­ng, which oversaw constructi­on of the park, said in an interview. “So far we see that collaborat­ion as being viewed by our partners in government as a real positive aspect of Shanghai Disneyland.”

He added that the “over- whelming majority” of artists and designers who built the Toy Story Land extension of the park are part of Disney’s local Chinese team.

“We’re a local company,” Weis said. “Everything here is built and made in China.”

Foreign businesses in China bear significan­t political risk. In the past, political tensions have prompted protests and boycotts of South Korean, Japanese and U.S. businesses on the mainland.

“I want to thank the people of China for wholeheart­edly embracing this resort, for truly making it your own,” Disney chief executive Robert Iger told an array of Shanghai government dignitarie­s, company officials and media at the colorful, confetti-laced launch of Toy Story Land. “We look forward to a future of continued partnershi­p.”

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