San Diego Union-Tribune

Walt Disney World reopens amid surge of new cases in Florida.

Some visitors see facility as an escape from virus pandemic

- BY BROOKS BARNES

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla.

The Bibbidi Bobbidi Boutique, a Magic Kingdom hair salon where little girls get styled like Disney princesses, remained closed over the weekend. Buzz Lightyear was only able to wave from a distance. Parades and fireworks? Scratched.

And the coronaviru­s continued its rampage through Florida, with state officials reporting more than 15,000 new infections Sunday, a daily record for any state, including New York.

None of which stopped Sonya Little and thousands of other theme park fans from turning out — in masks in the scorching Florida heat — for the reopening of Walt Disney World. After closing in March because of the pandemic, the mega-resort near Orlando began tossing confetti again at 9 a.m. on Saturday.

Two of its four major parks, the Magic Kingdom and the Animal Kingdom, welcomed back a limited number of temperatur­echecked visitors, with some attraction­s and character interactio­ns unavailabl­e as safety precaution­s. Epcot and Disney’s Hollywood Studios were set to reopen Wednesday.

Disney’s parks have always been about leaving your troubles behind, a sunny outlook some might find improbable during a pandemic. The reopening amounts to a breathtaki­ng effort by a corporatio­n to prove that it can safely operate — entertaini­ng families and employing tens of thousands of workers — at a highly dangerous time.

“I’m so overwhelme­d with emotion,” a weeping Little said, as she stood on Main Street USA wearing Minnie Mouse ears. “The last few months have been so hard. We have just felt so defeated. Being here gives me the strength to go on.”

With that, Little, 45, who flew to Orlando from Birmingham, Ala., with her friends Tammy Richardson and Kristi Peek, adjusted her face mask and set forth for Fantasylan­d.

Throughout the opening morning, the scene near Space Mountain in Tomorrowla­nd was relaxed as most visitors took care to socially distance and Disney employees, each wearing a mask and a face shield, kept a close eye. Disney would not say how many people it let inside, but the grounds did not feel crowded. At midday, the park — usually the busiest in the world, with about 21 million visitors last year — was a surreal sight: sparsely populated plazas, families sauntering between attraction­s rather than racing, rides with 5-minute wait times. There was barely a stroller to be seen near Disney’s singsong It’s a Small World boat ride, much less the usual gridlock.

“It was almost more enjoyable than usual because we got to ride everything with no wait times,” said Samantha Harris, who drove to Orlando from Myrtle Beach, S.C., with her family, including her 5-year-old niece, Addilyn. Harris said she was so eager to score tickets that she logged onto Disney’s booking website at 5 a.m. on the day it opened. To limit capacity, Disney no longer allows visitors to walk up and buy tickets, instead making blocks of “reservatio­ns” available online. Some blocks for July were gone in minutes when Disney opened the site June 24.

After months of home quarantini­ng, the chance to have some wholesome fun and perhaps touch a childhood memory seemed to outweigh the risk of catching the virus for visitors. “A Welcome Respite” read a headline in the Orlando Sentinel about Disney’s reopening.

Barnes writes for The New York Times.

 ?? GREGG NEWTON GETTY IMAGES ?? Guests wearing protective masks wait outside the Magic Kingdom theme park at Walt Disney World on the first day of its reopening near Orlando, Fla.
GREGG NEWTON GETTY IMAGES Guests wearing protective masks wait outside the Magic Kingdom theme park at Walt Disney World on the first day of its reopening near Orlando, Fla.

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