The Denver Post

Disneyland set to close in response to outbreak

- By Brooks Barnes

The Walt Disney Co. announced Thursday that it would close the Disneyland resort in Anaheim for the first time since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and just the fourth time in its 65-year history, because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure — two adjoining but separately ticketed theme parks — will close Saturday morning through the end of March. Disney’s hotels in Anaheim will remain open until Monday.

Disney noted that there had been no reported cases of the virus at the resort.

The company said it would continue to pay its employees while the resort is closed. Refunds will be given for hotel bookings during the closure period.

Disneyland looms large in the popular imaginatio­n as the “happiest place on Earth,” where visitors trade an imperfect world for a perfect one. There is no trash blowing down Main Street U.S.A. Dream big, and the utopian technology of Tomorrowla­nd just might come true. The animatroni­c figures inside It’s a Small World never stop smiling and singing. The park receives almost 19 million visitors from around the world each year.

In recent days, as sports events, concerts and other mass gatherings have been canceled in response to the pandemic, Disneyland and its bigger sibling in Florida, Walt Disney World, remained crowded. Wednesday at 9 p.m., so many people were trying to get on Space Mountain at Disneyland that the line stretched more than an hour. Disneyland’s Indiana Jones ride had a 45minute line.

In a statement posted online shortly before midnight Wednesday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said gatherings of 250 or more people “should be canceled or postponed” to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“Changing our actions for a short period of time will save the life of one or more people you know,” Newsom said. “That’s the choice before us. Each of us has extraordin­ary power to slow the spread of this disease.”

That seemed to apply to Disneyland and other California theme parks, including Universal Studios in Los Angeles and Knott’s Berry Farm in Buena

Park. But Newsom backtracke­d at a Thursday morning news conference, saying that his guidelines excluded large parks such as Disneyland and places such as casinos and movie theaters because of “the complexity of their unique circumstan­ces.”

Disney made its announceme­nt shortly thereafter.

“After carefully reviewing the guidelines of the governor of California’s executive order and in the best interest of our guests and employees, we are proceeding with the closure of Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure,” the company said.

A couple hours later, Universal Studios Hollywood, a theme park and movie studio tour in

Los Angeles that attracts about 9.1 million visitors annually, said it would also close Saturday. Universal said it hoped to reopen March 28.

Disneyland — which employs about 31,000 people — has had unschedule­d closures only three times since debuting in 1955. The first time was in 1963 for a national day of mourning after the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy. The second was in 1994 after the Northridge, Calif., earthquake. The third was after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Walt Disney World in Florida — eight separately ticketed parks with combined annual attendance of 93 million — has so far not been affected. Disney Cruise Line, which operates four ships that can carry 13,400 people, also remains open.

Disney World, where Disney also owns and operates about 30 hotels, has experience with sudden closures. Disney has shuttered the resort for various lengths of time because of hurricanes in Florida, including Matthew in 2016, Frances in 2004 and Floyd in 1999.

The coronaviru­s has caused major problems for Disney overseas. The company’s entire Asian theme park operation has been closed for weeks — four parks in China and Japan that together attract 51.2 million visitors annually. Disney has said its China parks will remain shuttered until the end of March.

Tokyo Disneyland and Tokyo Disney Sea are scheduled to remain closed through early April.

Disneyland Paris, which includes two separately ticketed parks with combined annual attendance of 15 million, remains open, although some experience­s — princess meet-and-greets, and the Illuminati­ons fireworks show — have been canceled.

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