From “Once Upon a Time” to Frozen Ever After: Inside the Ride That Changed World Showcase

World Showcase

Image: Disney

For just a moment, we have to leave the worlds of Disney animation aside, and for good reason. When EPCOT Center opened in 1982, it was designed specifically to omit Disney’s beloved animated characters.

And think of how revolutionary that really was. Up until the park’s opening, a trip to “Disney” was synonymous with princesses, castles, pirates, cartoons, and Fantasyland favorites. EPCOT Center changed the model. It left the explicit fantasy and fairy tales behind and instead was made of two realms dedicated to reality: Future World (a World’s Fair style exploration of industry and technology, with mega corporations sponsoring pavilions with educational dark rides)…

Image: Disney

..and World Showcase (a World’s Fair style collection of cultural pavilions dedicated to country’s stories, architecture, culture, history, and cuisine).

As the years passed, EPCOT Center gained a nasty reputation and became a pop culture punch line – it was the theme park kids dreaded spending a day at. What child, they imagined, would trade a day of Space Mountain, Pirates of the Caribbean, Jungle Cruise, or Cinderella’s Castle for educational dark rides? In the 1990s, then-CEO Michael Eisner decided to punch up the park’s attractiveness by ending the moratorium on Disney characters.

As much as many Disney Parks fans detest the decision, you have to admit: Eisner’s regime had overseen the wild and wonderful expansion of Disney’s animated catalogue to contain characters that were defining the 1990s… except one.

The Disney Renaissance

Image: Disney

Eisner had reinvigorated almost all aspects of the newly re-branded Walt Disney Company. Before Eisner, Disney’s animated films had all but left the world of fairy tales behind.

Then, 1989’s The Little Mermaid (itself an Andersen tale) singlehandedly revived Walt Disney Animation. The release of The Little Mermaid is universally agreed upon as the start of an undisputed era of reinvention that we traced in a standalone Special Feature: The Disney Renaissance. It was during this ’90s rebirth that Disney Feature Animation had hit after hit after hit at the box office, each a Broadway-style musical based on fairy tales, legends, and myths.

That’s why Disney suspected that – fifty years after their first attempt – they should look into The Snow Queen again, as a bookend to the studio’s fairy tale era; a Hans Christian Andersen fable brought to life opposite The Little Mermaid, with Disney animators once again creating the definitive pop culture version of a literary fairytale character.

The project was reportedly given to Glen Keane, the character animator who’d given life to The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, Pocahontas, and Tarzan. As an essential component behind Disney’s Renaissance, Keane would be just the person to make The Snow Queen story fresh, relevant, and – most of all – filmable.

Until he couldn’t. Keane officially quit the project in 2002, instead shifting to Disney’s upcoming take on Rapunzel.

Image: Disney

That left the “Disney Renaissance” style renderings drawn up for The Snow Queen that would’ve made her fit alongside Pocahontas, Ariel, and Jasmine on ice. Even Keane apparently couldn’t crack the Snow Queen’s story, leaving this icy character again trapped between hero and villain in a story that didn’t feature much of her. Yep, the idea of bringing The Snow Queen to the big screen was dead on arrival… again.

Norway

As it happens, Glen Keane’s abandonment of The Snow Queen isn’t the only Disney departure in 2002. It was also that year that the government of Norway elected to stop sponsoring the pavilion dedicated to the country in Epcot’s World Showcase. Opening in 1988 (set between Mexico and China), the Norway pavilion had been a cultural showcase of the country’s industry and history.

It also had the distinction of being one of the only World Showcase pavilions to have a ride. In fact, the ride that had opened alongside the Norway pavilion back in 1988 was also billed as Epcot’s first-ever thrill ride. Norway’s representatives had requested a “travelogue” style dark ride through Norway requesting that Disney’s designers emphasize a few specific elements: “Vikings, a fishing village, polar bears, a fjord, an oil rig, and maybe a troll or two.”

Image: Disney

Seated in Viking longboats, guests would ascend into the history of Norway and – most memorably – through its mythology. In a four-minute, forwards / backwards boat ride, guests would sail through a historical Viking village, troll-infested swamps, the frigid snow-covered valleys of the country, and eventually splash down in the Baltic sea beneath a towering oil rig, exiting to a theater film about Norway’s real, modern industry. Check, check, check, and check.

Naturally, we chronicled the entire making-of and experience of this one-of-a-kind ride in its own in-depth feature – one of the most read features on Theme Park Tourist! – Lost Legends: Maelstrom. It’s important to read up on that history if you haven’t already, because it largely sets the stage for where we’re heading next…

Because, in 2002, Norway dropped its sponsorship of its Epcot pavilion, likely feeling confident that the pavilion and Maelstrom would continue sailing onward for the foreseeable future. After all, what could Disney possibly fit thematically into a pavilion dedicated to legends of Scandanavia?

Frozen

It wasn’t until 2008 that the then-Chief Creative Officer of Disney Animation, John Lasseter, got ahold of some of the art created in Disney’s Renaissance-era attempt at the Snow Queen and was “blown away.” Lasseter saw merit in reviving the concept with Chris Buck at the helm. In 2010, Anna and the Snow Queen was put into production with that same major hurdle to clear: how to work the titular villain into the story.

She was too one-dimensional; too distant; barely-a-villain who just didn’t connect in an otherwise light-hearted story. (Consider, if you dare, the “villain” in The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Beginning, a too-strict babysitter who fails to offer a compelling threat, a multi-faceted story, or a driving plot.) Ultimately, Lasseter and his team began with play with the idea that the Snow Queen, by then named Elsa, might be struggling to accept herself and a fate she didn’t ask for and considered unfair.

Image: Disney

When songwriters Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez created the character’s ‘I want’ song, “Let It Go,” Elsa’s personality began to take shape. Again, you’ll find the full, unabridged story of this frozen transformation of the Snow Queen story in our Possibilityland: Enchanted Snow Palace feature, but suffice it to say, it was the start of a brilliant (and billion-dollar) reinvention.

2013’s Frozen gave a new twist to Andersen’s story of the Snow Queen. (And indeed, Disney fans say it’s no coincidence that the film’s leads are Hans, Kristoff, Anna, and Sven… say it three times fast.)

Disney’s distinctly-21st century take centers around the frosty relationship between two sister princesses – Anna and Elsa. Elsa maintains a chilly distance from her younger sister to protect Anna from her secret (and increasingly uncontrollable) ice powers. On the night of her coronation, Elsa’s emotions get the best of her and she ignites an eternal winter that blankets the kingdom of Arendelle in snow. Naturally, it’s up to Anna to chase her fleeing, frightened sister into the snowy mountains to convince her that she’s not better off alone.

$1.287 billion later, the rest is history… Read on…

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