Los Angeles Times

Dive into Disney archive at the Bowers Museum

- TODD MARTENS GAME CRITIC

The Walt Disney Co. likes to say that Disneyland is not a museum — a phrase invoked whenever a beloved attraction undergoes a change that fans view as particular­ly painful. And yet there are most certainly aspects of Disneyland worthy of museum placement, and even times that Disney parks have acted like museums themselves.

So while an antique such as a grimy old telephone may not be as sexy as a largerthan-life, technologi­cally advanced attraction such as the recently opened Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance, don’t think an old rotary phone can’t influence a creative life.

Just ask Kevin Feige, president of Marvel Studios and the man largely behind the sustained popularity of the modern superhero film. On his early trips to Disney’s theme parks as a child, seemingly random artifacts and props resonated with him as much as any ride. For Feige, these glimpses behind the curtain didn’t break the illusion of fantasy; instead, they inspired a deeper love for the art and the process behind it.

“I remember seeing Walt’s telephone at one point, and thinking, ‘I can’t believe Walt used this phone,’ ” says Feige, referencin­g some of the items that once belonged to the company’s patriarcha­l founder. “I found it very powerfully emotional.”

He had similar feelings about the Great Movie Ride at Walt Disney World, an attraction that stood as a testament to classic films and contained rare movie props and costumes in its queue. While that ride featured live actors and

re-creations of film scenes ranging from “Casablanca” to “The Wizard of Oz,” it also hosted gallery-like display cases, the sort of borderline educationa­l stuff that many theme park guests skip over.

“I would see the actual ‘Mary Poppins’ merry-go-round horse or the actual underwater Nemo outfit from ’20,000 Leagues [Under the Sea].’ I was a little kid walking around the line in Great Movie Ride at Disney’s Hollywood Studios and thinking, ‘I want to do something that someday will be worthy of being preserved,’ ” says Feige, speaking via cellphone from Australia, where he was on the set of Marvel film “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.”

In an industry not known for its permanence, it is perhaps no surprise that the Great Movie Ride is no more — its replacemen­t, Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway, opened this month — but Feige’s comments cut to the importance of not only rememberin­g but also safeguardi­ng our past. The value of pop art and how revered and inspiratio­nal it can be to its audience is arguably directly proportion­al to the care with which we treat it. At least that’s a core thesis of a new Disney-themed exhibit opening at Orange County’s Bowers Museum, which aims to look not only at Disney’s history but the art of conservanc­y itself.

A half-century strong

For 50 years, the Walt Disney Archives has amassed one of Hollywood’s most extensive corporate histories, a collection that ranges from company memos — the initial contract for the silent 1920s Alice Comedies — to figurines from, yes, the recently retired Great Movie Ride. That Alice Comedies contract as well as a xenomorph from “Alien,” which was once housed in that Walt Disney World attraction, are part of the expansive “Inside the Walt Disney Archives: 50 Years of Preserving the Magic,” an exhibit that opened last weekend and continues through Aug. 30 at Santa Ana’s Bowers Museum.

It’s an exhibit the Bowers Museum has been angling for since 2017, when the institutio­n’s VP of programs and collection­s, Victoria Gerard, placed a call to the Walt Disney Archives and asked to collaborat­e. While there’s an obvious local angle in nearby Disneyland — among the missions of the Bowers is to document how Orange Country has transforme­d — Gerard saw other benefits to a pop-focused exhibition with clear broad appeal.

“It’s no secret that museums are kind of struggling these days to reinvigora­te a younger audience,” she says.

In turn, Gerard hopes the exhibition — a modified version of a show Disney debuted at Japan’s D23 Expo in 2018 — will deepen the understand­ing of archivists, librarians and historians while instilling some appreciati­on for the work the Bowers does year-round.

The exhibit is not set up by year or theme. It instead focuses on how the Walt Disney Archives actually work. Thus, there’s a dive into its 1970 founding under the tutelage of the late Dave Smith, who was hired to catalog Walt Disney’s belongings at a time when other studios were more likely to stage massive auctions, as well as a look at one of its current tasks: making sense of its recently acquired assets from the 21st Century Fox purchase.

Fox, says Walt Disney Archives director Becky Cline, has a photo collection that dwarfs the 5 million owned by Disney, with more than 20 million images that she and her team are sorting though. But in a not entirely unfamiliar Hollywood story, the studio’s actual collection of items from films before 1990 is rather hit-and-miss.

Props from Fox works are on display at the Bowers; they’re intermixed with an attempt to create the Walt Disney Archives’ reading room, or detailed displays on how photos are digitized.

“This gave us the ability to really dive in and get into the weeds of what a collection is — what a prop collection is, a costume collection, and how we handle these things and what our research team or our digitizati­on team does,” says Robert Maxhimer, who is overseeing the exhibit.

There’s also an extensive roster of related events, from a multicours­e meal that puts a modern twist on some of Walt Disney’s favorite foods to talks that explore the unsung female artists who shaped Disney’s early animated films.

Says the Bowers’ Gerard, “I hope, of course, that people come see the show but that this also inspires people to think about historic preservati­on and why in an increasing­ly digital world it might be relevant.”

The digital revolution is another challenge for the 30-person team of the Walt Disney Archives, says Cline.

When one sets foot in the Walt Disney Archives, it’s easy to be distracted. A case in a corner holds recent acquisitio­ns, including the bejeweled and clasped giant storybook that opened the 1963 film “The Sword in the Stone,” which was recently purchased via auction. File cabinets hoist up a pitchfork-wielding devil from the Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride attraction, and signs, such as an early 1980s marquee for the People Mover, once destined for garbage — or the homes, perhaps, of “enterprisi­ng” staffers — grace the walls.

And yet documentin­g the corporate rather than just the artistic history of the company is a mandate as well. The Bowers exhibit will contrast, for instance, ornate gems such as concept art from “Fantasia,” Haunted Mansion gravestone­s and a piano bicycle from Disneyland’s Golden Horseshoe with a 1952 memo written by Walt Disney, old company ID cards and, of course, a look at the Disneyland pitch portfolio.

While interviews for this story were conducted before it was announced that Bob Chapek would succeed Bob Iger as CEO of the company, Cline says she had already been grappling with how to collect company history in the email era. In the past, Cline says, when an executive retired, his or her correspond­ence was boxed up and sent to the Archives.

“But we don’t do that anymore,” Cline says. “It is a question. We’re still trying to figure it out ourselves, frankly. But we’re talking to our executives and asking them to think about their historical collection­s and their history with the company and asking them to put things in the Archives that they think is important after they move on or retire. It’ll be up to Bob to decide what he wants to turn over to the Archives when that time comes.”

Disney’s own museum?

Under Iger, the Walt Disney Archives have taken on a more publicfaci­ng role, collaborat­ing more regularly with other institutio­ns — Maxhimer says that last year the division had more than 17,000 objects on display — and also worked to restore Walt Disney’s Burbank office, which is primarily available via tours through the D23 fan club. With a collection that now spans multiple studios as well as storage spaces in and around the Glendale area — “Usually we get first right of refusal for things,” says the Archives’ research manager, Kevin Kern — the question often comes up as to when, or if, Disney will establish its own museum.

Ten years ago, for instance, when the Archives turned 40, Iger said a dedicated Disney museum was a possibilit­y, noting that he was “intrigued” by that concept. “The idea of a bricks-and-mortar museum is still out there, as Bob mentioned,” Cline says. “But we have parks and we participat­e in exhibits there, especially at Walt Disney World at Disney Hollywood Studios. We’re doing it a little different than having a stand-alone museum.”

And while Disney isn’t above making a bit of money off its history — recently spotted for sale at Disneyland for $14,000 was a contract signed by Walt Disney and other company executives — the very presence of the Walt Disney

Archives ensures the company stays focused on preservati­on rather than simply tapping into today’s growing collectors market.

“The collectors market is out there now, and I love collecting things,” Feige says. “It’s very easy to say, ‘OK, we just finished this movie, let’s sell everything.’ ”

That’s a short-term game that ultimately devalues the work, argues Feige. “It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. If you as a company, you as a filmmaker and you as an executive believe that something is worth preserving, well, the fans will follow and history will follow.”

Someday, Feige hopes, Marvel Cinematic Universe items such as a Captain America shield or a piece of Iron Man armor, when they are no longer needed for various promotions or production, will find their way into an exhibit such as the one at the Bowers.

“It fills me with great joy,” Feige says, “thinking that there could be kids and people who could walk past those and be inspired as I was with Walt’s phone.”

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? DUMBO FLIES over the entrance to the Bowers Museum’s “Inside the Walt Disney Archives: 50 Years of Preserving the Magic.”
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times DUMBO FLIES over the entrance to the Bowers Museum’s “Inside the Walt Disney Archives: 50 Years of Preserving the Magic.”
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? WALT DISNEY ARCHIVES exhibition manager Robert Maxhimer, left, director Becky Cline and manager Kevin Kern with some of the studio’s materials from its 50-year-old collection.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times WALT DISNEY ARCHIVES exhibition manager Robert Maxhimer, left, director Becky Cline and manager Kevin Kern with some of the studio’s materials from its 50-year-old collection.
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? ARCHIVES’ oldest asset: 1922 Laugh-O-Gram megaphone.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ARCHIVES’ oldest asset: 1922 Laugh-O-Gram megaphone.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? WALT DISNEY’S own No. 1 name tag is in the archives.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times WALT DISNEY’S own No. 1 name tag is in the archives.

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