Sunday, May 31, 2015

60 Disneyland Diamonds: 1966-1975

60 Disneyland Diamonds for the Diamond Anniversary continues! If this is your first time reading this blog, first of all, where have you been? Second of all, you can find the introduction to the 60 Diamonds premise here and the first ten here. And now, on to the second decade's worth!

Sunday, May 24, 2015

60 Disneyland Diamonds: 1956-1965

Welcome back! Last week, I announced a new post series I'll be running here at the Disneyland Dilettante in honor of Disneyland's 60th birthday: 60 Disneyland Diamonds for the Diamond Anniversary. So let's get the ball rolling with the first ten!

Sunday, May 17, 2015

60 Disneyland Diamonds: Introduction

On July 17 of this year, the Happiest Place on Earth turns 60. The party starts this Friday!


60...wow. Feels like only yesterday that it was turning 50.
 

Back then, they did something called Magical Milestones to highlight just how much the park had grown since it opened. There were actually two versions of Magical Milestones: a set of trading pins and a special set of penny presses installed for the duration. Both versions consisted of 51 items, one for each calendar year Disneyland had been in operation and featuring a landmark event from that year—usually the opening of an attraction, but the M.M.'s also included parades, other important anniversaries, and even lesser-known events like the launching of the Disneyland Ambassador program.
The pin set would have been nice to have, but the pins started at like eight dollars a pop, and there were fifty-one of them to collect. I didn't have anything like that kind of money,* so I got the pressed pennies—a much lighter investment. I assembled a bunch of nice shiny pennies and got about $30 in quarters and had a great time hunting down all the special machines. Ten years on, the pennies aren't nearly as shiny, but I'm still proud of finishing that sidequest...and of the special drawstring pouch I made to keep the pennies in:



(I feel safe in saying that no one else in the whole world did this. Made a pouch for the Magical Milestones pressed pennies, that is. I am a special kind of strange.)
Where was I...?
Anyway, Disneyland's Golden Anniversary was great, largely due to cool things like Magical Milestones which delved into the history of the park. The Diamond Anniversary seems...less focused on that stuff (although of course I won't know for sure until it kicks off and I get to see what's what). So just in case the Powers That Be don't revisit something like Magical Milestones now that Disneyland has another decade's worth under its belt...I'm doing my own version:

60 Disneyland Diamonds for the Diamond Anniversary.

Not only will this be a nice tribute to the occasion, it will allow me to talk up rides and other things that might not merit a full post. A lot of the Diamonds will be the same as the corresponding Magical Milestones from 2005. How could they not be? The debut of the Haunted Mansion was the Disneyland event of 1969; Space Mountain was likewise the highlight of 1977. But rather than copying that list wholesale and tacking on ten extra, I've set myself a couple of limiting guidelines:
    1. Disneyland Park is what's turning 60, not “the Disneyland Resort.” Saints preserve us from brand manipulation. So nothing from California Adventure, Downtown Disney, or the resort hotels will be included in this list.

    2. Many of the Magical Milestones referenced attractions that are long-gone. I want each and every one of my Diamonds to be something you could go enjoy tomorrow, if you so chose.
In order to make up for these limitations, I've expanded the list of candidates to include not just attractions and parades, but shops, restaurants, and various tidbits not considered glamorous enough to be featured on any official merchandise. But they're all, in their own way, Diamonds in the Disneyland crown.
The entry for 1955 is obviously and inevitably Disneyland itself, and this whole blog is dedicated to discussing it. So next week I'll pick up starting in 1956 and give you the first ten Diamonds from that first magical decade! See you then!

* I did buy one M.M. Pin, though—1977, my birth year.

Sunday, May 10, 2015

We Name the Nameless

A couple weeks ago, I shared a tidbit about having made up my own names for the individual members of America Sings's Gander Quartet*, since they never had official ones, and teased that I might do an entire post about this weird habit I've developed of doing just that. Let it never be said that I'm content to be a tease...

Monday, May 4, 2015

STAR WARS DAY BONUS! After-Action Report: A Tale of Two Tours

This post is sort of an After-Action Report and a Sentimental Paleontology in one. You can most definitely go to Disneyland and ride Star Tours in the present...but it's on its second incarnation, which is different enough from the original to almost be considered a new attraction. Whether it really is or not is a matter of opinion and perception, but it seems like Disney is counting it that way. Either way, such a major change to a long-standing E-ticket level attraction inevitably invites a Before vs. After comparison. And that's exactly what you're gonna get here.
It might surprise you to learn that I even have a preference vis-a-vis the two versions of Star Tours, after I thoroughly decried the presence of Star Wars material in Disneyland at all, in large part because I'm just not into the franchise. But here's the thing: I don't hate Star Wars. I can appreciate the importance of this film series in terms of its effects on the art of filmmaking and popular culture as a whole. I can understand why people find it so cool. I can even, from time to time, enjoy watching the movies, although no more than a chunk or two at a time.
And I do, for the most part, enjoy Star Tours. It's effective both as an adaptation of its source material and as a fun ride in its own right. Do I ride it every time I go to Disneyland? Heck no. But I ride it often enough to intelligently weigh in.

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Sentimental Paleontology: Pop! Went the Weasel

Tomorrowland is a mess. This much is a largely agreed-upon fact in the Disneyland fan community. Saint Walt's Utopian Dream of the Future has Lost Its Way and become a ghastly mishmash of attractions with vague technology, science-fiction/fantasy, and even cartoon themes—mostly from IPs Disney has purchased, as opposed to creating in-house. It's probably true that the area is more inconsistent than ever before, but if we're completely honest with ourselves...we have to admit that “theme confusion” in Tomorrowland is nothing new. It arguably goes right back to Opening Day, when budget shortfalls forced Walt to fill Tomorrowland with corporate sponsors who had much more to say about what they were doing in the present than about what they would do in the future. But those exhibits at least had a scientific or technological bent that worked with the area.
So let's try a different approach. What was the last major Tomorrowland attraction to be straightforwardly futuristic rather than taking a sideways leap into science-fantasy or sillier? I think you could make a case for Space Mountain, which debuted in 1977.* It is first and foremost a roller coaster (in the dark!), but it appears to take place in a setting where people hop into tiny rockets and go zooming around the asteroids for fun. That's fanciful, but it's at the harder end of the science-fiction scale. Personal spacecraft launching from a space station are a believable future technology.
But even by the time Space Mountain made the scene, Tomorrowland already hosted a ride that had nothing to do with the future or outer space or science or technology.** That ride was America Sings, a brief history in four acts (plus an introduction and an epilogue) of American music as demonstrated by audio-animatronic cartoon animal characters. Described so brusquely, it almost sounds like a parody of Disney attractions, like the sort of thing that would be featured in an episode of The Simpsons lampooning the whole institution, while those in the know would be aware that all of those individual elements could be found in abundance throughout Disneyland, but never all in the same attraction.
But they were all in the same attraction. America Sings was sort of a distillation of Disney park tropes of its era. It was installed in 1974, timed for synergy with the upcoming American Bicentennial. But why in Tomorrowland? Even as a young child, I realized how weird this was. Why not, say, Main Street, which already had patriotism as a major theme?