Antelope Valley Press

Disneyland reopening marks state’s virus turnaround

- By AMY TAXIN

ANAHEIM — Disneyland swung open its gates to cheering visitors donning sequined Minnie Mouse ears and snapping selfies Friday, marking a dramatic turnaround in a state so overwhelme­d with Coronaviru­s cases just four months ago that patients were being treated in outdoor tents.

California’s world-famous theme park, which reopened after an unpreceden­ted 13-month closure, is admitting only state residents and operating under a limited capacity for now.

Once inside, guests decked in Disney gear waved excitedly at employees tidying up the park’s hallmark Main Street, which was lined with hand sanitizing stations and signs reminding people to wear face coverings.

After spending the year mostly teaching her thirdgrade class from a tent in her backyard, Libby Birmingham was thrilled to be there. The 38-year-old, who attended the park regularly before the pandemic with an annual pass, took the day off work to make the trip down from Pasadena with friends.

“Disneyland is like my happiest place, to be totally honest,” she said. “It’s one of those places that I can always enjoy, and it lets me be the kid — not always be in charge of the kids.”

The reopening highlights a big shift for the nation’s most populous state from just months ago when COVID-19 cases were surging, hospitals were running out of ICU beds, and hundreds of people died from the virus each day.

Now, California boasts the country’s lowest rate of confirmed Coronaviru­s infections and more than half of the population eligible for vaccinatio­n has received at least one dose. Children have been returning to in-person classes, shops and restaurant­s are expanding business, and Gov. Gavin Newsom set June 15 as a target date to further reopen the economy, albeit with some health-related restrictio­ns.

“It has such a symbolic nature to really quantifyin­g that we’re finally rolling out of COVID,” said Caroline Beteta, president and CEO of state tourism promoter Visit California.

Theme parks were among the last California businesses allowed to reopen, in contrast to states with fewer restrictio­ns such as Florida, where Disney World’s Magic Kingdom resort has been up and running, though at lower-than-usual capacity, since July. Another major U.S. amusement park, Ohio’s Cedar Point, opened last summer and will do so again for the upcoming season — only this time, it won’t require masks on rides.

At Disneyland, visitors must wear masks and can remove them to eat only in designated areas. Hugs and handshakes with characters are off limits, and parades and fireworks shows have been shelved to limit crowding.

On Friday, an updated Snow White ride drew throngs of visitors who were methodical­ly spaced out in a winding outdoor line to prevent congestion indoors. Other areas of the park had fewer people. In a section devoted to Star Wars, there was ample space for children to run freely, and visitors waved from a distance to Rey, who flashed a smile and waved from a platform overlookin­g the park.

Outside a popular boat ride, Allison Sanger and her four-year-old daughter, Emily, stopped by a cordoned-off patio to chat with a parasol-twirling Mary Poppins and Bert. The 28-year-old said she was glad her daughter could get close enough to see the characters and snap photos even with the new rules.

“We honestly have so many memories here,” she said. “We missed our memories and our magic.”

There was even a marriage proposal.

Zach Bolger, 35, said he met his girlfriend, Mackenzie Brown, 26, some three years ago at Disneyland trading collectibl­e pins. The couple returned to the park Friday, and Bolger pulled out a ring box near Snow White’s wishing well. Brown cried tears of joy.

While California continues to “strongly discourage” anyone from visiting the state as tourists, the travel industry is banking on pent-up demand from its own nearly 40 million residents for a comeback. An advertisin­g campaign encourages California­ns to travel within the state, mirroring a pitch made after 9/11.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A family takes a photo Friday in front of Sleeping Beauty’s Castle at Disneyland in Anaheim. The iconic theme park, which was closed under the state’s strict virus rules, swung open its gates Friday, and some visitors came in cheering and screaming with happiness.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A family takes a photo Friday in front of Sleeping Beauty’s Castle at Disneyland in Anaheim. The iconic theme park, which was closed under the state’s strict virus rules, swung open its gates Friday, and some visitors came in cheering and screaming with happiness.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States