![]() The Be Our Guest sequence from Beauty and the Beast (1991).Two of the three Who Framed Roger Rabbit spinoff cartoons Roller Coaster Rabbit (1990) and Trail Mix-Up (1993).Ink and paint for The Little Mermaid (1989). ![]() Inside the building which housed the attraction were the former production facilities of Walt Disney Animation Orlando. Several original cels from classic Disney films as well as several of the Academy Awards won by Disney films were on display at the attraction. There was also a section called The Animation Academy, where guests could draw their favorite Disney characters, under the guidance of a Disney Animator. After guests left the showroom, they were led to an area with interactive games and a chance to meet characters from the latest Disney animated pictures. The attraction had one main showroom, where a Disney animator showed guests how the characters in Disney animated films were chosen and designed, with the help of Mushu, the dragon from Disney's Mulan (voiced in the show by Eddie Murphy's sound double, Mark Moseley.) Mulan was the first of three films produced by the former Orlando, Florida division of Walt Disney Feature Animation, which was headquartered in the building before being closed in 2004. A finale film entitled "Classic Disney" presented a montage of key moments from classic animated Disney films. The third segment was a short film in which Disney Animators described the joy of the art of animation. Following that introductory film, guest would witness the process of animation, first-hand, from elevated, glass-enclosed walkways within Disney's actual animation studio. ![]() The tour commenced with the short film entitled "Back to Neverland," in which veteran newscaster, Walter Cronkite and comedian Robin Williams guided guests through the different stages in animating a feature-length film by turning Williams into an animated character in the form of one of the "Lost Boys" of Peter Pan. Originally, when the park first opened in 1989, the Feature Animation pavilion of the attraction, designed originally by award winning experience designer Bob Rogers and the design team BRC Imagination Arts, included four connected experiences which explored the legacy of Disney animation. ![]()
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