Scale models for Disneyland's Very Merry Christmas Parade, lined up backstage, 1977.
It was the most wonderful time of the year, and the year was 1977. I was eleven, in the 5th grade, and finally man enough to see my first non-"G" rated movie, Star Wars with my Dad!
Our family spent the Christmas holiday at my grandparents' house in California, and on December 27, we all went to Disneyland together. That day we stood in front of Main Street's Penny Arcade to see the Park's newest holiday spectacle, The Very Merry Christmas. With its pop-up book floats, glockenspiel girls, and, yes, silly reindeer, my imagination was inspired!
A decade later, I became a Disneyland parade designer myself, and I never forgot the enchantment I felt with my family that December day in 1977.
In the late 1980s, I worked at the off-site Disney art facility on Olive Street in Anaheim. In our building there was a warehouse aisle of stacked crates containing some of the most beautiful miniature models you've ever seen, some harkening back to the early 1960s and the time of Walt Disney himself. There were parade floats, tiny stage sets, photo locations, miniature puppets and architectural details spanning the entire history of Disneyland's in-Park live entertainment...
...including the original hand-made models for 1977's Very Merry Christmas Parade! At the time, these 3/4 inch-scale works of art were still in marvelous shape, and I photographed them all for reference.
(Note: This turned out to be a very smart thing to do, because now these photographs are the only way to view this body of work. Tragically, due to extreme short-sightedness, Disneyland destroyed and discarded their entire archive of entertainment models to create room in the warehouse for other things. I'm sure someone there regrets this now!)
The iconic Gingerbread house popping out of an open-book would become the symbol of the parade, its image appeared in advertising and on tickets.
The iconic Gingerbread house popping out of an open-book would become the symbol of the parade, its image appeared in advertising and on tickets.
In the final parade, Chip and Dale busied themselves making sweets at the candy kitchen table, while surrounded by happy, dancing gingerbread cookie people.
Meanwhile on the workshop float, toys of all kinds are being manufactured. This toy factory is actually made of toys!
These drum units were rolling stages for various characters and dancers, and were also packed with speakers for the parade's musical soundtrack. Make sure to click on all these photos to appreciate the details.
Some of these environments seem empty without the performers. Here is an implied cottage for the Seven Dwarfs. Grumpy played the pipe organ, while Dopey pumped the giant air bellows.
Incidentally, this seems to be the spot in the parade where I recall the newest Disney animated characters made their appearance. I had seen the film The Rescuers earlier that summer and I was totally obsessed with it - even more than Star Wars, I have to admit. Orville the albatross was my favorite character in the movie, and the Park costume was a nice interpretation. Evinrude the dragonfly looked pretty strange to me as a kid, though, with his huge eyes and shapely feminine legs. Nevertheless, I loved them all.
Disney characters of all kinds, including Pooh, Tigger, the Three Pigs and the Big Bad Wolf, appeared with this unit, carrying prop gifts and decorating the Christmas Tree. Snowmen and Snowladies bopped along behind.
And finally, Santa! Led by his team of reindeer, and surrounded by the famous Disneyland "Glock Girls" Santa wished everyone "a very merry Christmas" from his sleigh above a landscape of snowy rooftops! If you'd like to see a GREAT BIG photograph of this very float in the final 1977 parade, check out "Disney on Parole's" fascinating blog here!
To all of you who follow this blog throughout the year, thanks! I hope it's been as enjoyable for you, as it's been for me putting it together. Here's wishing you a very merry 2009! And more merriment to come!