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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQS);faqs.226
Scott & Leslie's (714)-538-6893 (Orange, CA)
Seaside Art (919)-441-5418 (Nags Head, NC)
Silver Stone (310)-598-7600 (Long Beach, CA)
Gallery
Stabur Corp. (800)-346-8940, (313)-425-7940 (Livonia, MI)
Stay Tooned Gallery (708)-382-2357 (Barrington, IL), (708)-234-3231
(Lake Forest, IL)
Sweatbox Art (408)-225-9698 (San Jose, CA)
Toys To Go (215)-649-2555, (215)-649-8444 (Ardmore, PA)
Vintage Animation (213)-393-8666 (Santa Monica, CA)
Gallery
Cels are also sold at the Disney theme parks. Serigraphs and cels are
sold at the Disney Stores (see question #14). The Disney Store was selling
a line of production cels with reproduced backgrounds from The Little
Mermaid.
6) To what degree are computers being used in Disney animated films today?
There seems to be a lot of confusion on this issue, partly because
Disney seems to be trying to remain at least a little secretive about the
exact processes they use. But here's some information obtained and
consolidated from various sources, including the periodical Computer
Graphics World and some reference books on Disney animation and computer
graphics.
Much of the computer graphics work is done by the artists at Disney's
Computer Generated Imagery (CGI) department in Glendale, CA. There were 14
animators and software engineers there for the production of Beauty and the
Beast (they're listed in the credits).
Computers are used for several different purposes in Disney animation.
One purpose is to process the colorization of the "cels" (I put that in
quotes because while there still are pre-production cels, they don't look
like the final product- more on this in a moment). Another purpose for
computers is for the generation of backgrounds. A third purpose is for the
generation of certain types of animated objects. A fourth purpose is for
simple modeling. There are probably others.
The colorization and compositing of the characters is the most notable
use, as it represents the biggest change in the state of the art of Disney
animation. In the past, the animators would draw an image on the cel, and
pass the cel on to be carefully colored by hand. (Note that after Sleeping
Beauty, however, Disney animators drew on paper, frame by frame, and had
their drawings transferred to cels via a xerography process to be
individually colored.) Note that, in general, consecutive cels would use
the same colors (i.e. although a particular character wouldn't always be
the same color during the entire film depending on light and shadow, or
other Disney magic, the next frame of animation is often times very similar
to the frame before it). This represented a lot of redundancy.
With modern computer graphics, this process can be eliminated,
speeding up the rate of output significantly. The title for the new system
is CAPS, which stands for "Computer Animation Production System."
Animators' drawings are transferred directly to a computer, where the
computer colors the image based on color models. This is not an automatic
process, but a given palette can be repeatedly applied by the computer
artist far more quickly than an artist can color a bunch of cels by hand.
The last scene from The Little Mermaid (Ariel and Eric kissing) used the
process. Most, if not all, of The Rescuers Down Under, and all of Beauty
and the Beast used the process. This is *not* to say there is no coloring
of cels; models are needed for the computer. In addition, there is still
quite a bit of cleanup work done by hand (though most of the final cleanup
in done on computer).
There are other advantages of the process as well. Since the images
are effectively digitized in a computer, they can be manipulated and merged
at will. The impressive multiplane (3D) effect at the opening of Beauty
and the Beast, where the camera travels through a forest past an animated
waterfall took advantage of the CAPS process; in the past, a multiplane
effect would be difficult at best. For example, the final scene in the
"Ave Maria" sequence from Fantasia, involved building a horizontal camera
crane, moving the camera along a track "through" panes of glass on which
the images of the forest, cathedral, and sunburst at the end, with the
panes of glass being yanked out of the way when they became out of focus.
Since then, multiplane techniques have improved, but none of these is as
easy as simply using a computer to move and blur images in pseudo-3D space.
Other advantages of CAPS include: the ability to easily blur images that
are "out of focus" relative to the camera position, to blend (e.g. the
blush on Belle's cheeks) and to intricately shade the characters (e.g.
Belle and the Beast dancing in the ballroom- you were watching them, not
the spinning background, right? :-) ); and to combine images of different
sizes seamlessly (i.e. you can draw the image at any size and
enlarge/shrink to fit as necessary).
Other miscellaneous benefits include access to a wider range of
colors (if you've used any 24-bit color computer paint/DTP program on a
Mac or PC, you can see how this works- you get 16.7 million exact colors
versus whatever number you can come up with just mixing paint), and the
coloring of the lines that border the characters (note the black lines
that border the characters in films after Sleeping Beauty- a Xerox process
was used that introduced this- it was something that annoyed Walt Disney
when it was introduced, but it helped speed up the production rate).
Another significant use of computers is the generation of backgrounds.
Although 99% of the backgrounds are painted (and colored) by hand (and then
entered into the CAPS system), there are some notable exceptions. (Note
that for a background, it's not necessarily better to color by computer
since an artist can paint with a brush just as well, if not better, and
there isn't a lot of redundancy since the same background is repeatedly
used; incidentally, there were 1300 background created by 14 artists for
Beauty and the Beast.) The most notable exception to date is probably the
ballroom in Beauty and the Beast. The spinning ballroom sequence was first
choreographed using Wavefront Technologies software on an SGI machine, then
modeled in 3D using the Alias software and finally rendered frame by frame
using the Renderman software (probably using some form of distributed
processing, or at least rendering different images on different computers).
The animators' drawings of Belle and the Beast were then merged normally
using CAPS. In addition, a computer-rendered table was used in the "Be Our
Guest" sequence (the scene where Mrs. Potts is singing, with little tea-
cups circling her). The staircase that Ariel runs down before first seeing
Eric with Vanessa in The Little Mermaid also was generated via computer.
Yet another use of computers is for certain types of 3D objects. The
modeling and rendering process is similar to that of the Beauty and the
Beast ballroom. Some examples include: the gears in The Great Mouse
Detective during the chase scene at the climax; the carriage in The Little
Mermaid, external views of the villain's vehicle, and the Sydney opera
house in The Rescuers Down Under; the dancing forks on the cake chandeliers
in the "Be Our Guest" sequence in Beauty and the Beast.
A final, minor use of computers, would be for simple modeling. For
example, the ship at the beginning of The Little Mermaid was wireframe
modeled on computers, but was drawn by hand. I'm sure the Disney artists
have found other ways to use computers to assist them, much in the same way
they might use clay models to visualize various objects, such as the
characters themselves.
(I'd be interested in hearing about other uses, by the way. In fact,
if there's a Disney artist out there reading this who has anything to add
to this description in general... :-) )
6b) Since computers are being used quite a bit in Disney films now, does
that mean there are no "genuine" cels from the movies?
Unfortunately, the answer is no, there are no more original, hand-
painted production cels that were used directly for on-screen images in any
Disney animated feature film after The Little Mermaid. Hand-inked cels are
created as color models during the production process, and hand-inked cels
will probably be created for the purpose of auctioning backgrounds (note:
if you look closely through the Sotheby's catalogue for the recent Mermaid
auction, it is advertised as a background auction, not a cel auction). For
the Sotheby's auction for Beauty and the Beast, Disney auctioned genuine
backgrounds with one-of-a-kind cels created by hand by Disney artists based
on the directing animator's drawings. See also question #4 for a
discussion of cel types.
Xref: bloom-picayune.mit.edu rec.arts.disney:11445 news.answers:4725
Path: bloom-picayune.mit.edu!enterpoop.mit.edu!mojo.eng.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!mlb.semi.harris.com!uflorida!purdue!haven.umd.edu!uunet!seismo!tanida
From: tanida@forseti.css.gov (Tom Tanida)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.disney,news.answers
Subject: rec.arts.disney FAQ, part 1b
Summary: FAQ for rec.arts.disney
Keywords: FAQ, disney
Message-ID: <51655@seismo.CSS.GOV>
Date: 16 Dec 92 22:43:21 GMT
Expires: 16 Dec 92 22:43:20 GMT
Sender: usenet@seismo.CSS.GOV
Reply-To: tanida@esosun.css.gov (Tom Tanida)
Followup-To: rec.arts.disney
Lines: 581
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Nntp-Posting-Host: beno.css.gov
Originator: tanida@beno.CSS.GOV
Archive-name: disney-faq/part1b
Last-modified: 16 Dec 1992
7) I heard that Walt Disney is "cryopreserved"/"in cryogenic suspension."
Is this true?
No, this is an "urban legend," although a joke goes "Yes- he's in
suspended animation" :-). Walt Disney died at 9:35 am on December 15,
1966, of lung cancer. He was cremated (quite the opposite of being frozen,
ironically) and is buried at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, CA.
His parents are buried there as well.
This rumor did not come about completely out of the blue, however.
Some of the reasons this rumor started were: there was a significant time
period between the time of Walt Disney's death and the public announcement
of his death; Walt himself is said to have shown an interest in cryogenics
in his final years (ref. the book Disney's World, see "Books" in question
#99, below); and even his animators have been quoted to say that it's an
interesting thought that Walt might someday return to "set things straight"
in the company.
8) Who did the voice of {Ariel, Belle, my favorite Disney character}?
I can't include the voice of *every* Disney character here, but here
is a comprehensive list of the most popular characters. One good
reference to the Disney movies is The Disney Studio Story, by Richard
Holliss and Brian Sibley, Crown Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, 1988, ISBN
#0-517-57078-5. (See also "Books", in question #99, below). If you're
looking for the voice of a more obscure character, just post. You can also
ask me (tanida@esosun.css.gov); I *might* be able to find out if it's not
*too* obscure. :-)
This list is in approximate chronological order (by appearance).
Mickey Mouse: Walt Disney himself did the voices of both Mickey and Minnie
in the early cartoons, including "Steamboat Willie."
(Incidentally, "Plane Crazy" was Mickey's first cartoon,
"Steamboat Willie" was the first cartoon with sound.) He is
currently voiced by Wayne Allwine.
Minnie Mouse: Currently voiced by Russi Taylor.
Donald Duck: Initially voiced by Clarence Nash. First appeared in "The
Wise Little Hen." Nash also voiced Donald in Mickey's Christmas
Carol (1983). He is currently voiced by Tony Anselmo, as Nash
later passed away in the late '80s.
Goofy: Originally voiced by Pinto Colvig. He currently voiced by Bill
Farmer.
Chip and Dale: (?)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs - Snow White: Adriana Caselotti; Prince:
Harry Stockwell; Wicked Stepmother: Lucille La Verne; Grumpy:
Pinto Colvig
Pinocchio - Pinocchio: Dickie Jones; Jiminy Cricket: Cliff Edwards
Dumbo - Timothy: Edward Brophy; Stork: Sterling Holloway; Jim Crow: Cliff
Edwards
Bambi - Thumper: Peter Behn; Bambi's Mother: Paula Winslowe; Flower:
Sterling Holloway
Saludos Amigos, The Three Caballeros - Joe Carioca: Jose Oliveira
Make Mine Music - Willie the Whale: Nelson Eddy
Song of the South - Brer Rabbit: Johnny Lee; Brer Bear: Nicodemus Stewart;
Uncle Remus/Brer Fox: James Baskett. The boy (Johnny) was played
by a young Bobby Driscoll.
Fun and Fancy Free - ("Mickey and the Beanstalk")- Giant: Billy Gilbert
The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad - Ichabod was narrated and sung by
Bing Crosby. Toad: Eric Blore; Cyril (the horse): Pat O'Malley
Cinderella - Cinderella: Ilene Woods; Prince Charming: Mike Douglas (the TV
personality/talk show host); Stepmother: Eleanor Audley; Fairy
Godmother: Verna Felton.
Alice in Wonderland - Alice: Kathryn Beaumont; White Rabbit: Bill Thompson;
Cheshire Cat: Sterling Holloway; Queen of Hearts: Verna Felton
Lambert, the Sheepish Lion (short)- Narrated by Sterling Holloway (Dumbo,
Alice In Wonderland, Jungle Book).
Peter Pan - Peter: Bobby Driscoll; Wendy: Kathryn Beaumont; Captain
Hook/Wendy's Father: Hans Conried; Mr. Smee: Bill Thompson
Lady and the Tramp - Lady: Barbara Luddy; Tramp: Larry Roberts;
Peg/Darling/Siamese Cats: Peggy Lee
Sleeping Beauty - Aurora: Mary Costa; Phillip: Bill Shirley; Maleficent:
Eleanor Audley
101 Dalmatians - Cruella DeVille: Betty Lou Gerson; Pongo: Rod Taylor;
Perdita: Cate Bauer; Roger: Ben Wright; Colonel: J.Pat O'Malley
The Sword in the Stone -Wart: Ricky Sorenson; Archimedes: Junius Matthews;
Merlin: Karl Swenson; Madame Mim: Martha Wentworth
Winnie the Pooh: Initially voiced by Sterling Holloway (who you'll see pop
up quite a bit in this list of Disney voices). The first two
Pooh stories (Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree and Winnie the
Pooh and the Blustery Day) were narrated by Sebastian Cabot (The
Jungle Book). Other voices: Christopher Robin: Jon Walmsley;
Tigger: Paul Winchell
The Jungle Book - Mowgli: Bruce Reitherman (son of the director, Wolfgang);
Baloo: Phil Harris; Bagheera: Sebastian Cabot; Kaa: Sterling
Holloway; Shere Khan: George Sanders; Colonel Hathi: J. Pat
O'Malley
The Aristocats - Duchess: Eva Gabor; Thomas O'Malley: Phil Harris;
Roquefort (mouse): Sterling Holloway: Scat Cat: Scatman Crothers;
title song sung by Maurice Chevalier
Robin Hood - Robin: Brian Bedford; Little John: Phil Harris (The Jungle
Book, The Aristocats); Prince John: Peter Ustinov; Sir Hiss:
Terry Thomas; Allan-a-Dale (rooster): Roger Miller; Maid Marian:
Monica Evans: Sheriff: Pat Buttram; Friar Tuck: Andy Devine; Lady
Kluck: Carole Shelley
The Rescuers - Bernard: Bob Newhart; Bianca: Eva Gabor; Madame Medusa:
Geraldine Page; Penny: Michelle Stacy; Mr. Snoops: Joe Flynn;
Orville: Jim Jordan
The Fox and the Hound -Tod: Mickey Rooney; Copper: Kurt Russell; Big Mama
(owl): Pearl Bailey
The Black Cauldron - Voices included: John Hurt; Freddie Jones; Nigel
Hawthorne
The Great Mouse Detective - Basil: Barrie Ingham; Dr. Dawson: Val Bettin;
Ratigan: Vincent Price
Oliver and Company - Dodger: Billy Joel; Tito (Chihuahua): Cheech Marin;
Georgette (poodle): Bette Midler
The Little Mermaid - Ariel: Jodi Benson; Sebastian: Samuel E. Wright;
Ursula: Pat Carroll; Eric: Christopher Barnes; Scuttle: Buddy
Hackett
The Rescuers Down Under - Bernard: Bob Newhart; Bianca: Eva Gabor; McLeach:
(the) George C. Scott; Wilbur: John Candy; Jake: Tristan Rogers;
Cody: Adam Ryen
Beauty and the Beast - Belle: Paige O'Hara; Beast: Robby Benson; Mrs.
Potts: Angela Lansbury; Luminere: Jerry Orbach; Cogsworth: David
Ogden Stiers; Gaston: Richard White; Lefou: Jesse Corti; Maurice:
Rex Everhardt; Chip: Bradley Pierce; Wardrobe: JoAnne Worley
Aladdin and the Magic Lamp - Aladdin: (speaking) Scott Winger, (singing)
Brad Kane; Genie/Trader: Robin Williams; Trader (singing): Bruce
Adler; Princess Jasmine: (speaking) Linda Larkin, (singing) Lea
Salonga; Abu, the monkey: Frank Welker; Jafar: Jonathan Freeman;
Iago: Gilbert Godfrey; Sultan: Douglas Seal
Other voices:
Darkwing Duck- Jim Cummings
Gosalyn (Darkwing Duck)- Christine Cavanaugh
Winnie the Pooh, Tigger (New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh)- Jim Cummings
Uncle Scrooge (Mickey's Christmas Carol, DuckTales): Alan Young
Roger Rabbit: Charles Fleischer
Theme parks:
Sam the Eagle (from "America Sings"): Burl Ives
Robot-Pilot from "Star Tours": Paul Reubens ("Pee-Wee Herman")
Ghost Host ("Haunted Mansion"), narrator from "Adventure Through Inner
Space": Paul Frees
Singing Statue in Haunted Mansion Graveyard (among others at Disneyland):
Thurl Ravenscroft
9) How do I get a job working for Disney?
Of course, the answer to this depends on what you want to do.
All Disney employees go through a training program which introduces
them to the Disney philosophy and some of the history of the company.
If you're looking for a summer job at Walt Disney World, consult with
"Central Casting," located near the Disney Village, where you can get an
application. Or you can write to "Professional Staffing", c/o WDW, at the
address in question #99 below. At Disneyland, go to the customer relations
desk near the fire station on Main Street. If you do get a summer job,
you'll probably be making minimum wage (and shaving regularly, since facial
hair is not allowed if you're in the public eye- although animators at WDW
seem to be an exception).
To get a job at the Disney Store, simply request a job application,
preferably from the store manager. They aren't always hiring, but like
most retailers, will hire more employees for the Christmas Season. When a
new Disney Store is opened, a "Casting Call" advertisement is placed in the
local paper, and they will interview 300-400 people for 20-25 positions.
When a position becomes available, the hiring ratio is 15-20 interviews for
one Cast Member. For more information on what's it's like to work at the
Disney Store, see question #16, below.
If you're interested in animation, you need to be talented and lucky.
It helps if you attended the California Institute of the Arts ("CalArts"),
which Walt Disney helped found, and currently has 900 students and five
schools (art, dance, music, film video, theater). I suspect Disney
currently helps to fund CalArts. If you didn't attend CalArts, some other
prestigious school of art with some animation training will probably do
(some of the animators were hired out of the University of California at
Los Angeles, the University of Southern California, and the Art Center at
Pasadena). If you do get a job as an animator, you'll probably start out
by working on "tweening" (i.e. drawing cels that lie in sequence between
the cels produced by the primary animators), so you won't have a lot of
creative freedom, and you'll probably be quite busy (i.e. working longer
than 8 hour days on a regular basis). Show promise, get noticed, and the
sky's the limit. At the very least, you get your name in the credits. :-)
An address to try writing to regarding employment opportunities with
the studios would be:
Walt Disney Studios
1400 Flower Street
Glendale, CA 91221
10) Is Goofy a dog, a horse, or what?
Goofy is a dog. He originally started life as "Dippy Dawg" early in
the history of the Disney studios, in both comic strips and short films,
but evolved into "Goofy" by 1934. He first appeared in film in 1932 (as
Dippy Dawg) in Mickey's Revue.
This begs the question "well, if Pluto is a dog too, then why don't
they act the same (e.g. why does Pluto not talk, why doesn't Goofy walk on
all fours, etc.)?" My answer to that is because that's the way Walt wanted
it. :-) Pluto is more of a pet to Mickey; Goofy is simply more
individualistic and anthropomorphised. In addition, they're both different
breeds of dog. :-) (I won't even get into the thread about how Goofy dated
Clarabelle Cow.)
11) How can I get the song lyrics to {The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the
Beast, etc}?
Some of the lyrics to The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast are
available via anonymous FTP at garfield.catt.ncsu.edu. If you can't FTP,
send me e-mail (tanida@esosun.css.gov) and I can mail them to you.
Otherwise, you can order the sheet music from the Hal Leonard
Publishing Corporation, 7777 West Bluemound Road, P.O. Box 13819,
Milwaukee, WI 53213. There is also The Illustrated Disney Song Book which
is published by Random House, Inc., of New York, NY, with the ISBN #0-394-
50745-2. It contains the lyrics (and piano music) to many of the most
popular Disney songs. There is a "New" Illustrated Disney Song Book as
well (bibliographical reference at the end of this question). In addition,
the address to the Walt Disney Music Company is given in question #99,
below.
There is quite a bit of Disney music available on CD and cassette; if
there is a demand for it, I'll add a list of Disney music to this list.
Disneyland/Buena Vista Records and Tapes (Burbank, CA 92521) is the
"official" label that distributes the majority of the music.
The New Illustrated Disney Songbook, introduction by Steven Spielberg
Abrams, New York, 1986
ISBN 0-810-90846-8 (Abrams)
ISBN 0-881-88467-7 (Hal Leonard)
Notes: For voice and piano; includes chord symbols and guitar chord
diagrams. Presents in sheet music format about eighty songs from such Walt
Disney movies as "Cinderella," "Dumbo," and "Mary Poppins." 215 pages.
12) What are the Magic Kingdom Club benefits?
As a Magic Kingdom Club (MKC) member, you receive the following
benefits:
- Special offers on Theme Park admission (usually 10%- there's a price
guide), including EuroDisney and Tokyo Disneyland
- 10-30% discount on WDW resort accommodations
- Ability to take advantage of special vacation packages
- 10% discount on merchandise at The Disney Stores
- Reduced admission to Pleasure Island, Typhoon Lagoon, River Country,
and Discovery Island (at WDW), and the Queen Mary and Spruce
Goose attractions (Long Beach, CA)
- Membership in Entertainment Publications' Travel America for half
price
- Up to 30% discounts with National Car Rental
- 10% discount on Delta Air Lines tickets when traveling to the theme
parks
- 10% discount on Premier's Caribbean Cruise and Walt Disney World
Week
- 15% discount on cruises aboard the Royal Caribbean Cruise Line
- 10% discount on the Norwegian Cruise Line
- 20% nightly discounts at The Hotel Queen Mary
- 10% discount at the Paradise Guest Ranch in Wyoming
- Special Club Vacations in San Diego, CA
There are a wide variety of vacation packages to choose from, with the
prices depending on where you stay and for how long, and what time of year
you visit the theme parks.
I believe there is no charge for joining the MKC if your employer has
a group number.
You can also join as a MKC Gold Card member. You receive a
personalized, embossed Gold Card, a two-year subscription to Disney News
magazine (8 issues, worth $14.95), and a membership kit, containing a tote
bag, key chain, travel video, and 5 Disney Dollars. The price for joining
is $49 for two years. You also receive a list of toll free numbers to call
to make travel reservations.
There is also a Magic Years Club for those over 60 years of age. It
costs $35 for a 5-year membership, and has the same benefits as the
standard MKC, plus a few extras (an embossed card, tote bag, key chain,
bumper sticker, Magic Key newsletter).
The phone numbers for the MKC, MKC Gold Card, and Magic Years Club are
given in question #99, below.
13) What are the stockholder benefits?
Here's an informative post, from July 1992.
From: brenda@bookhouse.Eng.Sun.COM (Brenda Bowden)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.disney
Subject: Disney shareholder benefits list (for 92)
Message-ID: <l6r4beINNeuh@exodus.Eng.Sun.COM>
Date: 22 Jul 92 16:48:46 GMT
References: <92204.075437ICWFM@ASUACAD.BITNET>
Distribution: na
Organization: Sun Microsystems, Mt. View, Ca.
Lines: 172
NNTP-Posting-Host: bookhouse
I've received about a dozen requests for the shareholder benefit list,
so I decided to post the list.
Standard disclaimer: Remember that these are the current benefits, and
no one can guarantee what next year will provide.
The 1992 Disney shareholder benefits are:
* Special shareholder accommodations offers
WDW resort in Florida (discount amounts depend on date of visit
and resort)
Aug. 16, 1992 to Dec. 18, 1992
Jan. 3, 1993 to Jan. 31, 1993
40% discount off regular off-season rates during above dates
at:
* Yacht and Beach Club
* Contemporary
* Polynesian
* Disney's Village Resort
* Disney Inn
* Fort Wilderness Homes
25% to 30% discount off regular off-season rates during
above dates at:
* Fort Wilderness Campsites (30% discount)
* Grand Floridian (25% discount)
April 26 - June 6, 1992 (20% discount off regular value
rates)
Feb. 9 - April 25, June 7 - Aug. 15, and Dec. 19 - Dec.
31, 1992
(10% discount off regular rates)
* Disney's Yacht and Beach Club
* Disney's Contemporary Resort
* Disney's Fort Wilderness Homes
* Disney Inn
* Disney's Village Resort
* Disney's Polynesian Resort
Disneyland Hotel in California (Feb. 9 to Dec. 31, 1992)
$89 (plus resort and sales tax) per night Sundays through
Thursdays
$109 (plus resort & sales tax) per night Fridays and Saturdays
Hotel Queen Mary in California (Feb. 9 to Dec. 31, 1992)
$85 (plus city and sales tax)
Euro Disney Resort in France (April 12 - Dec. 31, 1992)
Special two-night package includes per person:
* Two-nights accommodations (including tax) at one of:
* Disneyland Hotel
* Hotel New York
* Newport Bay Club
* Sequoia Lodge
* Hotel Cheyenne
* Hotel Santa Fe
* One Character Breakfast
* Unlimited use of all attractions within Euro Disney Theme
Park
* Commemmorative Medallion
* T-shirt
Rates begin from $234 to $266 per adult, based on double-
occupancy
These offers do not apply to previously made reservations. Limited
number of accommodations available and all reservations subject to
space availability. Offers do not apply to Vacation Packages,
group/commissionable rates or other special promotions. Offers do not
include Concierge Service or Suite accommodations (except Disney
Village Resort Club Suites), Disney's Caribbean Beach Resort, Disney's
Port Orleans Resort, or Disney's Dixie Landings Resort. Additional
adult charges apply.
You must identify yourself as a Disney Shareholder and your Magic
Kingdom Chapter Number will be required at time of booking. Present
your valid Magic Kingdom Club Membership Card at check-in. [Note:
Shareholders are identified by special charter number of MKC
membership card.] Offers good only for Disney Shareholders who
owned/purchased Disney stock prior to Dec. 23, 1991.
<summary of MKC benefits deleted; see question #12, above>
That's it.
- Brenda