The Denver Post

Disney celebrates 100 years; company’s challenges mount

- By Brooks Barnes

Walt Disney has been dead for nearly 57 years. In the coming weeks, however, he will begin greeting museum visitors on two continents.

As part of its 100th anniversar­y marketing- palooza, the Walt Disney Co. used archival video and artificial intelligen­ce tools to create a lifelike hologram of its founder — a fullsize digital avatar that speaks in Walt Disney’s voice and appears as part of interactiv­e exhibition­s of Disney artwork, props and costumes that will tour the world until at least 2028.

“I get goose bumps every time I see it,” said Becky Cline, director of the Disney Archives.

Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to buy tickets — and Disney, more than any time in recent memory, needs them to leave with a similar emotion: Ah, yes, the magical entertainm­ent brand that marries nostalgia with how-didthey-do-that technical wizardry. Let’s go see a Disney movie, buy some Disney bedsheets and book a vacation at a Disney theme park.

For decades, the public has been saying exactly that. But in a twist that would have seemed far-fetched just a couple of years ago, Disney’s centenary celebratio­n arrives at a moment when the company’s formidable standing in the culture has started to show a few cracks.

Five years ago, when Cline started to think about the “Disney100” museum shows, Disney was hitting new heights at the box office and basking in its $71.3 billion purchase of 21st Century Fox assets. Now, Disney is cutting $5.5 billion in costs and eliminatin­g 7,000 jobs as it scrambles to contend with losses in streaming, the eroding profitabil­ity of traditiona­l TV and debt from the pandemic and Fox acquisitio­n.

Disney remains a box office superpower — “Avatar: The Way of Water” has collected $2.2 billion worldwide — but its last two animated movies, “Strange World” and “Lightyear,” badly underperfo­rmed. In November, Disney fired its CEO and brought Robert Iger out of retirement to retake the reins.

Disney also has become a political piñata among conservati­ve pundits, partly because it has added openly gay, lesbian and queer characters to its animated movies. Gov. Ron Desantis of Florida, who has attacked the company as “woke Disney,” on Friday gained control of the board that oversees developmen­t at Walt Disney World, a move that strips Disney of the autonomy it has enjoyed for 56 years.

The upshot: For Disney, a little brand polish (or a lot) cannot come soon enough.

“It’s a unique opportunit­y for Disney to remind people about the breadth and depth of what it does, while reinforcin­g emotional connection­s to its characters and products,” said John

Wentworth, an adjunct professor of entertainm­ent marketing at Emerson College. “This all seems especially important right now.”

Disney began to celebrate its 100th birthday in September at the D23 Expo, a fan convention in Anaheim, Calif. Bob Chapek, the company’s CEO at the time, paid homage to Walt and Roy Disney, the brothers who founded the company in 1923, and declared that “10 decades of creativity, innovation and determinat­ion” had resulted in “the most enduring and beloved name in entertainm­ent.” Centennial merchandis­e — Minnie ears dipped in platinum, limited-edition pins, products showcasing Disney films from the 1930s and ’ 40s — went on sale.

The campaign kicked into high gear last month, when Disneyland draped itself in purple and platinum bunting and opened a new ride focused on Mickey and Minnie. On Sunday, Disney had a 90-second spot during the Super Bowl; the commercial highlighte­d the company’s history of “storytelli­ng and innovation” and showed heartstrin­g-tugging footage of children dressed as Disney princesses and playing with Star Wars lightsaber­s. It also incorporat­ed Walt Disney’s voice, thanking artists, workers and fans. (A wave of Disney adoration immediatel­y washed through Twitter, although some people pointed out the awkward timing, an ad arriving in near-lockstep with layoffs. A Disney spokespers­on said the company used advertisin­g credits owed by Fox to cover the commercial’s placement cost.)

There are two “Disney100” museum exhibition­s. One version opens at the Franklin Institute in Philadelph­ia on Saturday and runs through Aug. 27. It will then go on tour to Chicago, Kansas City, Mo., and other cities in North America. A second “Disney100” exhibition, identical in overall design, will open in Munich on April 18 and move to London in the fall before heading “elsewhere in the world,” Cline said.

Tickets at the Franklin Institute run from $25 to $45, depending on time of day, one’s age and whether visitors want to see the entire museum or just the Disney portion.

Each of the 15,000-square-foot exhibition­s will have 250 items on display, with classic Disney as a focus. The tour in North America includes part of the prop storybook that opens “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” (1937), a model for Cinderella’s castle at Disney World and the “Feed the Birds” snow globe from “Mary Poppins” ( 1964), which Cline called “very, very dear to my heart.”

Marvel movies, the Star Wars franchise and Pixar hits also are incorporat­ed, along with nods to Disney divisions including National Geographic and ABC. “We want to make sure that everybody has the opportunit­y to enjoy the entire exhibition, not just their era,” Cline said, noting that the show is organized by theme (the importance of music to Disney’s content, sources of inspiratio­n) and not chronologi­cally.

Disney has a vast archive. It includes 25 million photograph­s and takes a staff of 40 to manage. There are seven storage spaces for props, costumes, scripts, theme park artifacts and corporate items, including Mickey Mouse One, the Gulfstream plane used by Walt Disney in 1963 to secretly scout locations to build Walt Disney World.

To design the exhibits, Disney teamed with Semmel Exhibition­s, known for “Tutankhamu­n: His Tomb and His Treasures,” which is touring with three units around the world. “Disney100: The Exhibition” incorporat­es four dozen video screens that play more than 300 clips from Disney movies and television shows.

Visitors enter through a dark tunnel and emerge in what Cline described as the “prologue room.” This is where a digital Walt Disney materializ­es to offer a greeting and provide a taste of his creative philosophi­es.

“Frankly, there are people in this world who don’t realize that Walt was a real person,” Cline said. “We want to make sure that everyone knows that our company was founded by real people — creative storytelle­rs.”

 ?? HANNAH YOON — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Banners advertise the “Disney100” exhibition at the Franklin Institute in Philadelph­ia on Jan. 9. The Walt Disney Company is opening two exhibition­s that will tour the globe until 2028. It comes at a moment when its formidable stature in the culture has shown a few cracks.
HANNAH YOON — THE NEW YORK TIMES Banners advertise the “Disney100” exhibition at the Franklin Institute in Philadelph­ia on Jan. 9. The Walt Disney Company is opening two exhibition­s that will tour the globe until 2028. It comes at a moment when its formidable stature in the culture has shown a few cracks.
 ?? HANNAH YOON — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? This prop carousel horse that Julie Andrews rode in “Mary Poppins” is part of the “Disney100” exhibition at the Franklin Institute in Philadelph­ia.
HANNAH YOON — THE NEW YORK TIMES This prop carousel horse that Julie Andrews rode in “Mary Poppins” is part of the “Disney100” exhibition at the Franklin Institute in Philadelph­ia.

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