“Enchanted Christmas” at Disneyland Paris Photo Trip Report

A trip to a Disney theme park is always an exciting and memorable experience, whatever the time of year and whatever the weather.  However, for return guests and Disney aficionados a trip during the holidays is kind of the holy grail.  You’ll put up with the elevated crowd levels just to see the park all spruced up and decked in its winter finery.  It’s kind of a bucket list thing for a lot of Disney fans: spend Christmas Day a Disneyland park and it’s something I’d never done as a Disney lover, until this Christmas!

Seeing all the things that Disneyland Paris had in store for Christmas had me excited to book a trip to experience it.  Having done a big family Christmas the year before, I didn’t feel necessarily guilty for being away from the majority of my family and friends so my fiancé, David, and I decided to go for it.  We’d spend Christmas in Disneyland Paris – Christmas Eve until 26th December (or Boxing Day to some).

David and I had last been to Disneyland Paris in February 2014.  We recognised the crowds were probably going to be bigger at Christmas but seeing as we’d achieved a lot in our earlier trip, we were fine with having to wait a bit longer for stuff if crowds did descend on Marne-la-Vallée (it turns out we didn’t really need to worry about this too much, but more on that later).

In our last trip we’d stayed at the Sequoia Lodge, which is Disneyland Paris’s celebration of American national park hotels.  It was a great hotel for a winter stay, and was top of our list to try again, but we decided to give one of the other hotels a try.  David has a big love of westerns, and although in terms of amenities, it is lacking a pool/sauna, the wild west themed Hotel Cheyenne was very comparable in terms of comfort.  It’s theming is not subtle, by any means, but it is kind of adorably likeable with its rooms themed around different icons of the American west and staples of western films.

Disney's Wild West Hotel - The Hotel Cheyenne

Disney’s Wild West Hotel – The Hotel Cheyenne

We’re experienced Disney travellers by this point so we’d planned our trip to make the best out of the relatively short time we had there.  We caught a very early flight on Christmas Eve and we’d leave very late on Boxing Day, which meant we essentially have three full days to enjoy the variety of Christmas delights Disneyland Paris had to offer. Stopping in an official hotel also meant that we had Extra Magic Hours too, which meant that we were able to enter either park on the three mornings we were there two hours before regular guests, which was invaluable to ensure we got to ride many of the latest and greatest attractions multiple times.

Whilst we’re on the subject of Disney Hotels, there’s little things about staying on them that still niggle me.  I’m not sure if this is simply something that I’ve come to expect, from my years of travel, but I’ll never get used to having to pay extra for tea and coffee facilities in room in a hotel chain as relatively expensive as a Disney hotel.  Granted, it’s not majorly expensive – a refundable€25 allows you rental of a kettle in the room and an additional non-refundable €8 gets you a tea and coffee set with a few tea bags, freeze dried coffee sachets (the less said about the disgusting Segafredo coffee served on site, the better), sugar, milk and four biscuits – but I’d just come to expect as standard by now.  Similarly, the sparse amount of shower gels and soap offered in your bathroom just comes across mean.

But enough about the hotel – what festive celebrations did Disneyland Paris have for us over the three days?  First, lets start with the decorations. I’m sure most Disney fans have googled for pictures of the parks and hotels all done up for Christmas – I know I had, but it’s very different seeing them in person.  Disneyland Paris’s are very tastefully done.  All of the six onsite hotels (I didn’t visit the Davy Crockett Campgrounds on this trip) have similar garlands in reception areas and the outside of buildings, as well as well-dressed trees in reception.  The trees all are very similarly decorated bar a few unique ornaments themed to the hotel, so Hotel New York has taxi cabs and miniature Statues of Liberty, while Newport Bay Club has boats and lighthouses and Hotel Cheyenne has rusty gold buckets and horse saddles.

David models the festive garlands on display in the Cheyenne.

David models the festive garlands on display in the Cheyenne.

They’re all very charming and get you into the Christmas spirit.

In terms of Christmas attractions, much like other Disney Parks, Disney have approached Christmas with Elsa in mind.  I was expecting this, as DLP’s publicity material for Christmas has Elsa dressing a tree (currently my holiday desktop wallpaper!) Firstly, let me preface by declaring how much I love Frozen.  I think it’s potentially one of the greatest things Disney have ever made, and in my earlier February trip, I was disappointed that there wasn’t any more Frozen merchandise and presence in the parks. However, this trip – it just felt like overkill, with none of it done particularly great.

A positive to begin with – there were lots of great Frozen merchandise to be found through the stores, from dolls to mugs and Christmas baubles, there was lot of items with Anna and Elsa’s faces on it, and it was all really well made and of impressive quality.  One of the nicest items that I’ve not seen elsewhere, and was in fairly short supply in the parks, was a great plush of Sven.  It was super cute.

Now, onto the not so great.  The big finale to a day in Disneyland Paris is Disney Dreams!  The regular show, a mix of castle projection, coloured water jets and fireworks, blew me away in February. We made a point of watching it multiple times during our four-night stay.  It was the most impressive nighttime spectacle I’d ever seen in a Disney Park (and, granted, I’ve not seen World of Colour, but I’ve seen Illuminations, Wishes and Fantasmic within the last 18 months).  So it goes without saying that I was excited for an updated version of this show with a Christmas theme.

Disney Dreams! of Christmas ... or more accurately, Disney Dreams of Frozen!

Disney Dreams! of Christmas … or more accurately, Disney Dreams of Frozen!

It was still visually impressive in some regards, with Sleeping Beauty’s castle looking amazing at night, but the projection element just felt off this time, and the Frozen elements were too heavily forced into the show.  Disney has some great winter imagery from their films and shorts, from Bambi to Beauty and the Beast to old Silly Symphony shorts, yet these really only got seconds of screen time, whilst nearly every song from Frozen (bar, Fixer Upper and Do You Want To Build a Snowman) were played almost in their entirety.  There was very little new animation either, just copy and pasted from the films.  After how much I loved the original Dreams! I was really disappointed with this version and didn’t make a return visit after viewing it for the first time on Christmas Eve.  There were great moments, though: hearing the crowd singing Let It Go, in multiple languages at the same time felt special.

Over the Christmas period, Anna and Elsa are also taking visitors in Fantasyland though expect long queues throughout the morning for the privilege.  For those who don’t get to meet the Queen and Princess in person, the royal duo make an appearance just before the main Christmas parade as they ride down Main Street USA in a horse and carriage whilst the Love is an Open Door and Let It Go blare out the speakers through Town Plaza, Main Street and the hub.  This was the element of the Christmas celebrations that seemed most thrown together.  The programme guide had me thinking it would be royal procession with the guards and citizens of Arendelle leading a mini-parade of dancers and singers preceding the arrival of Elsa and Anna, and the main Christmas parade.  In actuality, the two aforementioned songs loop continuously as the crowd in Main Street looks on quizzically, as finally a small horse and carriage with the royals finally comes into view.

Elsa and Anna meet the crowds in Main Street USA.

Elsa and Anna meet the crowds in Main Street USA.

Once they pass you, that’s really it – the music may still be playing, but you’ve seen everything, and the next parade, although scheduled immediately after in the programme guide, doesn’t in reality start for another ten minutes which leads to a lot of standing around and foot traffic on Main Street on one of the busiest days of the year.

Waiting around on Main Street led to a selfie...

Waiting around on Main Street led to a selfie…

I think it’s a feeling that’s being felt throughout the worldwide Disney Parks and fan communities, in that Disney need to cool it with Frozen (excuse the pun), unless they’re really going to create something special.  Everything feels a little thrown together, from cut and pasted video contented and lip syncing in a carriage down Main Street, Disney can and should give this a little more thought.

Okay – with the negativity out the way, Main Street is home to one of the more impressive Christmas entertainment additions in Magical Christmas Wishes or the lighting of the Main Street Christmas Tree. This event happens three times nightly and is narrated by Jiminy Cricket as talks about the magic of Christmas with Pinocchio as the already impressive tree on Main Street changes colour and fake snow falls from the sky above the street.  It was visually beautiful and the already awesome music loop of Christmas classics seemed to get even better at this point in the evening.  Like the Disney Dreams show of February past, David and I ensured we caught this show multiple times during our trip.

There were lots of little pluses throughout the parks.  Like I say, the decorations, mainly around Main Street USA in Disneyland Park and the entrance plaza in the Walt Disney Studios were really well dressed for the season with great trees, wreathes, lights and garlands.

 

Music loops had classic christmas tunes and characters appearances involved the usual fan favourites of Mickey, Minnie, Donald, Goofy, Chip and Dale, but this time in their holiday dress. A lot of the characters appeared from Extra Magic Hours onwards, so it was a really good reason to rush to the park first thing to ensure you got that brilliant photo with Mickey without having to queue for hours.

As a bit of a leftover from the Halloween celebrations, Jack from A Nightmare Before Christmas appears dressed as Sandy Claws in Frontierland which is a great photo opportunity, and Merida also is meeting fans just by Casey’s Corner.

The final big Christmas addition is a new sweet treat themed parade where Mickey and friends treat guests to festive songs and dances on gingerbread floats and parade vehicles.  It wasn’t anything totally awe-inspiring, but there are a flew lesser seen characters (Chip and Dale’s Clarice, for example) and with Main Street decorated so brilliantly, there’s excellent photo opportunities to be had here.

There’s lots to this mini-trip that I haven’t really discussed yet.   I’m planning to write about these in another article which will cover great dining experiences at Walt’s, The Lucky Nugget, Chez Remy, an amazingly well done themed area of the Walt Disney Studio’s Park housing the new attraction Ratatouille: The Adventure.  

In terms of crowd levels the parks were a lot busier than they were in February (which was still a fairly busy period with it being school holidays in the UK), however they were not totally unmanageable.  Christmas Eve and Christmas Day were still fairly busy, but we definitely benefited from later opening hours, FastPass and Extra Magic Hours for hotel guests in the morning, which meant we could do some of the busier and newer attractions like Crush’s Coaster with minimal wait times.  On Christmas Eve crowd levels dwindled towards the end of the day, presumably as local guests returned home to celebrate Christmas with their loved ones, and the parks were only really filled with hotel guests on Christmas morning.  As Christmas Day progressed Disneyland Parc started getting busier, but again, it was not unmanageable. December 26th (or Boxing Day to us Brits) was another story.  Presumably the family celebrations for the local residents now done, they descended to Disneyland Parc which caused wait times to climb (over an hour for the Disneyland Railroad nearly similar waits for Pirates of the Carribbean which the day before had been a walk on).  Tempers were flaring also as we witnessed a few instances were guests and cast members argued over various issues from carriage capacity on trains to positions on Main Street for the parade.  Having had a lot of fun and memorable experiences, we were happy to be leaving at this point.

I know that it seems that I’ve been pretty down on the experience with this trip report, but in actuality I had one of the best christmas holidays I can remember. How many times in your life are you going to be riding a roller coaster on Christmas morning? How many other boxing day mornings do you get to take a selfie with Mickey Mouse?  Christmas is really what you make of it and I think David and I certainly ensured we had a Christmas to remember as we approach 2015 and our wedding in March.  Disneyland Paris’s Disneyland Parc remains perhaps my favourite Disney park worldwide other than perhaps Epcot, but spending Christmas there was a treat which I’m sure will have to be repeated at some point.

Antony and David meet the big mouse himself!

Antony and David meet the big mouse himself!

VIDEO: Kermit The Frog Sings “It Feels Like Christmas”

Kermit the Frog is feeling the spirit of the season and teamed up with Disney.com’s Oh My Disney blog to create a special holiday greeting at Disneyland.

Kermit

Walking down Main Street, Kermit gave a live performance It Feels Like Christmas, a tune that originally appeared in The Muppet Christmas Carol.

Take a look at Kermit’s performance here:

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZzn6oznjag]

For more Disney holiday content, visit Disney.com/Holiday which features online and offline fun for the whole family, including festive games, videos, crafts and more.

Happy holidays from The Muppets and WDWNT!

Enjoy an Enchanted Christmas at Disneyland Paris in 2014

Disneyland Paris is treating guests young and old to a world of winter wonders for the next two months by kicked-off its Enchanted Christmas season.

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This Christmas sees Merida, from Disney Pixar’s Brave, appear at the park for the very first time. Similarly, Disney guests will finally be able to meet Anna and Elsa, Frozen‘s royal sisters, in person.

Disneyland Paris is also debuting a new sugar and spice themed parade called Disney’s Christmas Parade during the two month Christmas season (which lasts until January 7th, 2015) and 3 new scenes from Frozen have been added to the nighttime spectacular show Disney Dreams…of Christmas. The Enchanted Christmas season was launched in style by European celebrities and their families who celebrated Christmas at the park about six weeks early!

There’s plenty to look forward to during the season for adults too as Disneyland Paris’s traditional New Year’s Eve parties, celebrated with Mickey and Co., continue as 2014 becomes 2015!

The entire Enchanted Christmas season sounds pretty magical – an enormous Christmas tree, frosted decorations, encounters with Disney characters in their holiday outfits and, of course, Father Christmas! Also, an essential ingredient for Christmas magic: snow falling every day on Main Street U.S.A.!

Now, I just need to convince my fiancé that we need to celebrate Christmas in the parks!

Disney Twenty-Three: Winter Issue Features “Into The Woods”

To celebrate Disney’s big-screen adaptation of the hit Broadway musical Into the Woods, Disney twenty-three, the publication of D23: The Official Disney Fan Club, got all the thrilling details from the stars and creative team behind the new breathtaking, upcoming film.

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In exclusive interviews with Disney twenty-three, stars Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt, Anna Kendrick and Chris Pine, along with director Rob Marshall and screenplay author James Lapine, detail the excitement and challenges of bringing the Tony® Award-winning musical to the big screen, including explaining how they played a game of hide-and-seek with some (fake) witchy fingernails and how the team gracefully—and sometimes hilariously—handled Blunt’s pregnancy during filming.

Disney twenty-three’s Winter issue, available exclusively to Gold Members of D23, also includes a fascinating look “behind the seas” at Disney Cruise Line, with dazzling photography that reveals places guests never see while on board, as well as interviews with the people who keep everything shipshape.

“It’s Beginning to Look A Lot Like Christmas” unlocks the secrets that enable the creative teams at Disneyland to bring the holidays to life, seemingly overnight. Director Steve Purcell unwraps the newest Disney•Pixar television treasure, Toy Story That Time Forgot, which airs on ABC December 2. Star Hayley Atwell and producer Jeph Loeb unleash the action of Marvel’s Agent Carter, also coming to ABC, which brings one of Captain America: The First Avenger’s most thrilling stars to the small screen.

Also included in the Winter issue of Disney twenty-three:

  • The fascinating tale of Herman J. Schultheis, whose personal notebooks detailing Disney’s first golden age of animation are showcased in a new book by Disney animation scholar John Canemaker
  • A Frozen-influenced Adventures By Disney vacation in Norway
  • Twenty-three reasons fans will love the new Disney Infinity: Marvel Super Heroes game
  • Festive holiday content to kick off D23.com’s “D23 Days of Christmas”
  • Regular columns including A Walk with Walt, D Society, and Ask Dave

All D23 Members are invited to visit D23.com for additional features and members-only content, including our “D23 Days of Christmas” celebration, where members can unwrap stories, videos, printables, and more beginning December 1.

Other features coming to D23.com include:

  • Additional Into the Woods tales including a “character who’s who” and a discussion with James Lapine and Rob Marshall about the changes made in taking the show from stage to screen.
  • A gallery of photos from our backstage exploration of the Disney Dream
  • More about the mysterious tale of Herman Schultheis

Disney twenty-three, which is delivered directly to fans’ doorsteps, is offered exclusively to D23 Gold Members as a benefit of their membership. The publication will begin arriving mid-November.

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VIDEO: “A Frozen Holiday Wish” Debuts at The Magic Kingdom

“A Frozen Holiday Wish” debuted today at The Magic Kingdom and we’ve got it recorded and uploaded to share with you. The show features Elsa, Anna, Kristoff and Olaf as they light up Cinderella Castle in over 200,000 LED DreamLights. Unlike it’s predecessor, A Frozen Holiday Wish utilizes projection mapping (the same found in Celebrate the Magic) prior to the DreamLights turning on. Go ahead and enjoy the full show and leave your thoughts below in the comments.

Dirk Wallen’s 11/3/14 WDW Photo Report (Walls Down at Disney Springs, New Concept Art, Big Hero 6, Christmas Merch, ETC)

WDWNT Reporter Dirk Wallen visited Disney Springs, Disney’s Hollywood Studios, Animal Kingdom, and Epcot this week and he has a ton of newsworthy photos to share with us in this HUGE photo report, so let’s get started:

Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

Plenty of roadwork still to be done for Disney Springs

A new piece of elevated track is rising on the West Side, between Splitsville and Wolfgang Puck

We now know this large building with be the Boathouse

Disney announced this new restaurant concept last week

They wasted no time in adding ads to the walls for the restaurant

Concept art for the façade of the Boathouse

The small waterside park in The Landing opened this weekend

A nice little area for relaxing and live entertainment

Some of the buildings are out from behind construction walls in The Landing

New concept art for the area now on construction walls

There is a giant inflatable Baymax from Big Hero 6 on the West Side…

These storefronts in The Landing are just about done

The bridge in the Marketplace is also nearing completion

Two small, temporary stores operated by Something Silver opened by Fulton’s recently

The Marketplace bridge with the Rainforest Café façade refurbishment in the background

Shifting gears, Christmas merchandise has invaded the resort

Ornaments

Some Star Wars holiday pins were released

Plenty of Big Hero 6 merchandise is available around the resort

2015 calendars available

New “I Conquered” shirt

Iron Man and Captain America shirts

New Star Wars character glasses

New Darth Vader t-shirt

Some new merchandise was released at the Art of Animation Resort

Over at Epcot, walls finally came down around the area that was closed when a water main was hit after the Flower and Garden Festival

No visible progress at Norway’s Frozen attraction

We tweeted these weeks ago, but if you haven’t seen, some new retro EPCOT Center merchandise has been released

A quick stop at Animal Kingdom reveals work walls near Pangani Forest and Kilimanjaro Safaris

No visible changes at AVATAR, it’s impossible to see from inside the park

Moving to Disney’s Hollywood Studios, work continues on Starbucks and the Trolley Car Café

Nah nah nah nah, nah nah nah nah, hey hey hey…

Big Hero 6 merchandise carts replace the Frozen carts

Banners up in the Animation Courtyard

Work has finally begun on the Big Hero 6 meet and greet inside The Magic of Disney Animation

Big Hero 6 billboard by The Legend of Captain Jack Sparrow

Let’s journey inside the new Wandering Oaken’s

Purchase with purchase Frozen bag available

Jim Shore has released some Frozen statues

Osborne Lights are ready to go

No more Backlot Tour…