USA TODAY US Edition

Disney World’s galaxy far, far away

“Star Wars” and more are coming. Travel,

- Arthur Levine Special to USA TODAY

The biggest news at Disney World for 2019 – really, the biggest theme park news in years – will be the debut of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge.

But wigged-out Obi-Wannabes will need to heed Yoda’s advice: Patience you must have. The land isn’t expected to open until the fall, after the prime summer season. But there are many other cool things on the way to Mickey’s Florida mega-resort in the coming year.

The Mouse has been doling out details about the Star Wars lands it has been developing at Disney’s Hollywood Studios and Disneyland (the California Galaxy’s Edge is scheduled to open in the summer) in dribs and drabs, and the full picture has yet to come into full focus. At the Destinatio­n D event held for members of Disney’s D23 fan club in November at Disney World, Bob Chapek, chairman of Disney parks, experience­s and consumer products, nearly broke the Internet when he revealed the names of the two Star Wars attraction­s.

Find your inner Chewbacca

First up: Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run. The Imagineers will turn the controls of the legendary starship over to visitors. Each flight crew will include six members, including pilots, engineers and gunners. They will be able to make like Chewbacca and fiddle with the cockpit’s switches and dials as they engage on a mission to collect a bounty while evading TIE fighters. The story and the interactiv­e experience will vary depending on the passengers’ actions.

With Disney largely remaining silent about the exact nature of Galaxy’s Edge, it had been assumed that the Millennium Falcon attraction would be the headliner. As more is unveiled about the land’s second ride, which will be named Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance, it appears that the E-ticket attraction will at least share top billing.

Passengers will board eight-person trackless ride vehicles, themed as hijacked fleet transport pods. Droid pilots will navigate the vehicles through the hangar bay of a Star Destroyer, and guests will be front and center as a battle goes down between the First Order and the Resistance. There is strong speculatio­n (but no confirmati­on from Disney) that passengers will have to disembark the fleet transport vehicle in the middle of the attraction and hightail it to another location. They may then load onto a second vehicle that will blast them into hyperspace.

Chapek also announced that composer John Williams, whose “Star Wars” scores are part of film iconograph­y, is creating the music for Galaxy’s Edge.

Mickey still has star power

Walt Disney once famously said, “I only hope that we never lose sight of one thing – that it was all started by a mouse.” The focus may be on intergalac­tic adventures at Disney World in 2019, but Mickey Mouse, who recently celebrated his 90th birthday, will help bring things down to Earth with a number of developmen­ts dedicated to him.

In mid-January, Mickey & Minnie’s Surprise Celebratio­n will kick off at the Magic Kingdom. The festivitie­s will include the Move It! Shake It! MousekeDan­ce It! Street Party. Besides the honorary celebrants, the show will include three-fingered pals such as Donald Duck, who will surely do his darnedest to get guests to shake their tail feathers.

The beloved mice also will be featured in Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, the new attraction that is replacing The Great Movie Ride at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. Set to open in fall 2019, the ride will transport guests into the animated world of the Disney Channel’s Mickey Mouse cartoon shorts.

Imagineer Kevin Rafferty, who is leading the attraction’s design, has said that passengers will experience a sense of spatial dimension in the ride, but will not need 3D glasses. He has dubbed the effect “2 1⁄2 D.” It is likely that there will be practical sets, and, to help make the imagery pop, some of it will be screened on props using projection mapping. (Think the “Grim Grinning Ghosts” singing busts in the Haunted Mansion, but more sophistica­ted.)

Mickey will be among the cavalcade of stars who will be lionized in “The Wonderful World of Animation,” a new nighttime show that will honor the company’s legacy. It will kick off May 1 at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. It will use projection mapping along with pyrotechni­cs, lasers and other effects.

“The Wonderful World of Animation” will be part of the 30th anniversar­y celebratio­n of the Studios park, which is set to commence on Jan. 18. Visitors will be able to hobnob with characters from “Monsters, Inc.” and “The Incredible­s” as well as get their groove on with Doc McStuffins and other video celebs at the Disney Junior Dance Party! Energized visitors also could head to Disney’s Animal Kingdom for the new Hakuna Matata Time Dance Party.

Illuminati­ng shows at Epcot

The “IllumiNati­ons” fireworks spectacle that caps each evening at Epcot has been running for years, and there has been talk about replacing it. Chapek confirmed that the show will end in summer of 2019 and that a new presentati­on will take its place in 2020. Using the enormous World Showcase Lagoon, it will include moving fountains and floating set pieces along with other elements.

In the interim, a short-term presentati­on, “Epcot Forever,” will kick off in the fall of 2019. Using fireworks, lasers and what the park is calling “choreograp­hed, special effects kites,” it will focus on Epcot attraction­s of the past and present. Reportedly, the characters Dreamfinde­r and Figment as well as the song “One Little Spark” will be among “Epcot Forever’s” highlights.

Epcot is abuzz with lots of other developmen­ts. At the front of the park, a gargantuan show building under constructi­on will house a “Guardians of the Galaxy” attraction that Disney is promising will be one of the world’s biggest indoor roller coasters. At the back of the park, a new dark ride is coming to the France pavilion, which Chapek said will be called Remy’s Ratatouill­e Adventure.

The Disney parks chairman also said that a “Beauty and the Beast” singalong presentati­on would be another addition to Epcot’s France pavilion, although he did not specify an opening date. Chapek said that the park’s “O Canada!” Circlevisi­on show would be updated as well.

New places to stay

There will be a new way to get to Epcot along with Disney’s Hollywood Studios next year when the resort opens its new Skyliner transporta­tion system in the fall. The Skyliner will connect the two parks with the Art of Animation, Caribbean Beach and Pop Century resorts as well as the new Riviera Resort.

Disney’s Coronado Springs will add 545 guest rooms when the 15-story Gran Destino Tower expansion opens in July.

Coronado Springs will welcome two restaurant­s that will feature Spanish cuisine. One will be a table-service eatery at the top of the new tower, and Villa del Lago, will be on an island in the resort’s lake. Contempora­ry Spanish dishes also will be on the menu at Jaleo, coming in early 2019 to Disney Springs.

In Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, passengers will experience a sense of spatial dimension without 3D glasses. Imagineer Kevin Rafferty calls the effect “21⁄ 2 D.”

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DISNEY/LUCASFILM
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DISNEY/LUCASFILM Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run will turn the controls of the legendary starship over to visitors.

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