Sunday
Feb052012

The Golden Horseshoe - show notes for episode 107

On episode 107 we go back to Disneyland to look at an all time favorite attraction, The Golden Horseshoe.  Wait, is that the name of the building or the show? Who knows.  One thing we do know is that IT is a beloved attraction that actually predates opening day.

The Golden Horseshoe

When Disneyland opened, about a third of the land “on stage” was in Frontierland.  As Sam Gennawey noted on episode 104 of WEDWay Radio, the lands reflected popular society of the 1950’s. Science Fiction was popular and Tomorrowland reflected a practical look at the possibilities.  Different areas of the world were being filmed and televised (some through Disney’s True Life Adventures) and Adventureland reflected our curiosity.  One area that was paid particular attention to in its design was Frontierland.  Walt wanted a Frontierland to celebrate the Western Frontier of America of the 19th century.  And, as such Frontierland is made up of elements from American folklore: Davy Crockett, Tom Sawyer and Pecos Bill

A number of iconic elements were also required to give Frontierland an authentic feel:  a steam ship, a railroad, a stage coach, a western fort, a trading post, and a Wild West Saloon with a saloon show.  This episode of WEDWay Radio is about Disney’s Wild West Saloon.

Origins of the Wild West Saloon

Other Wild West shows became that popular in the 19th century, such as Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show or The Congress of Rough Riders of the World, used real cowboys and animals to put on a show of what the west was supposed to be like.  This was not the case with the Disneyland Wild West Saloon.    The Wild West Saloon was really a stage show with actors, but different from what you might find in a playhouse today

This type of entertainment really evolved over the 19th century because as America expanded into the West the population got thinner and thinner, and civilization became further and further apart.  

Minstrel shows began to spring up, but faded in the 1860’s.  This type of entertainment evolved into Vaudeville: a show with a series of unrelated acts including musicians, dancers, comedians, trained animals, magicians, acrobats, jugglers or lecturing celebrities.  If you take these types of elements and copy the English Music Hall setting you get the Concert Saloon.

Disneylands Concert Saloon

If you think about it, you have the Opera House on Main Street and that’s where traveling performers would perform in a small town.  But they really recreated a more Western version in Frontierland - set around 1870 instead of Main Streets 1900.  Also Fronteirland’s Concert Saloon is set in a more remote area of the US.

The Building is really a copy of the Western Saloon Hall in the film Calamity Jane from 1953 starring Doris Day and Howard Keel.

The story of how this came about surrounds Walt and Harper Goff, and if you remember from episode 104 when we had Sam Gennawey on the show he talked about Walt meeting Harper Goff, who was a set designer for Warner Bros.  He would later probably be best known by Disney fans as the set designer for 20000 Leagues Under the Sea.  

Walt came to him and asked if he thought he could recreate the set of the Western Concert Saloon from Calamity Jane.  Unbeknownst to Walt, Goff had actually designed the set for Calamity Jane as well, and so he used the original blueprints of the set from the film.

The Golden Horseshoe Building

The Golden Horseshoe is in an interesting location really.  It is obscured from the Frontierland entrance from the hub so it isn’t really an icon.  Instead, it sits at the corner of Frontierland and the Rivers of America, kind of echoing its place in American history.

The outside of the building is pretty unremarkable.  It fits in with the other buildings on the south side of the main Frontierland entrance.   One authentic aspect to the Golden Horseshoe is it, like its neighbors has a planked walkway.  This is actually pretty historically accurate because in the West planked walkways were needed to keep the dust off of the clothes of theater patrons.  

Originally, the venue was to be called Pecos Bills Golden Horseshoe.  Instead it opened as the Golden Horseshoe Saloon.

Walt’s Party:

On July 13th, 1955 Walt and Lillian celebrated their 30th anniversary with a party at Disneyland.  The date here is interesting because Disneyland didnt officially open until July 17, 1955, and not to the public until the following day.  This was a Hollywood event with invited guests like Spencer Tracey, Cary Grant and Gary Cooper.  Some of the luckier guests were surreyed down the Main Street on horse drawn carriages into Frontierland.  

Once in Frontierland, they boarded the Mark Twain and then took a trip around the Rivers of America, and sipped mint juleps.  After the cruise, they headed over to the Golden Horseshoe where the party went on and everyone was treated to the first unofficial showing of the Golden Horseshoe Revue.

The Show Itself

You show elements before the show even started.  Advertisements appeared on the backdrop.  

The orchestra began the show and Slue Foot Sue, played by Betty Taylor for most of the duration of the shows run, and four dancing girls meandered through the crowd singing ‘Hello Everybody.’  She then stayed in the audience to flirt with some of the male guests singing ‘A lady has to mind her P’s & Q’s’ and on some days would replace it with ‘Riverboat Blues’ or even ‘The Girl on the Cover of the Police Gazette.’

Sue then introduced the shows’ master of ceremonies, the Irish tenor. The golden toned singer was played by Don Novis, then Fulton Burley after Novis’ health declined in the 1960’s.

Following a couple of numbers by the Irish tenor, the Traveling Salesman, played by the Wally Boag, enters through the back of the theater.  He tells while making his way through the crowd and sings ‘What Have We Here.’  Boag continued the routine on stage.

After Boag’s introduction as the Traveling Salesman, Slue Foot Sue return with the Irish tenor to sing a song together, and then came the introduction of Boag as Pecos Bill with rousing teeth splitting entertainment.  Dancing girls joined the three onstage to end the show.

The 10,000th Show

In 1962 the Wonderful World of Color featured the 10,000th performance of the show.  It was televised to a national audience, and they added some extras to the performance as well.  Annette Funicello was added to the Dancing Girls with a solo performance of “Mr. Piano Man.” Ed Wynn played a scene with Betty Taylor singing “Tea for Two.”  The show ended with an enormous bar room brawl that never would have fit on the stage, but through the magic of television took place within the Golden Horseshoe itself.  

Different Incarnations of the Attraction

July 17, 1955 - October 12, 1986 - The Golden Horseshoe Revue

November 1, 1986 - December 18, 1994 - Golden Horseshoe Jamboree Show

December 22, 1994 - Present - Billy Hill and the Hillbillies

Enjoy this episode as it was fun to research. Thanks to Daveland for the use of the best Boag - Taylor picture I could find.

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Sunday
Jan222012

Man in Space: Disney in Space - Show notes for Episode 106

Episode 106 continues the series we began with Episode 91: Disney in Space.  Inthis installment of the series we take a look at Disneyland television show episode Man in Space which aired in March of 1955.  

Man In Space

The show originally aired in March of 1955, more than two years before Sputnik, the first satellite was launched into space.  It focuses on the possibility of manned space flight.  

Ward Kimball

A few key people were important to the shows production.  It was directed and produced by Ward Kimball, and what makes this choice particularly interesting is Kimball didnt really have any experience with space or rocket technology.  Instead, Ward had been reading about rocket technology in Colliers magazine with articles by leading scientists and suggested that a show about the future of manned space travel would work for their Tomorrowland shows on the Disneyland TV show.  With that, Ward was given the assignment of directing and producing the show.

The Post War 1950's was an exciting time of innovation and investment and ‘space’ seemed like an attainable goal.  However, it is important to know that at this time the US Space program really didn’t exist.  Everything related to space was really under the jurisdiction of the US Air Force.  The Soviet Union, the chief rival to US for global economic and political domination, had been developing its own space program.  They were on their way to developing the first satellite in space, which they would achieve in 1957.  

Walt Disney began the show discussing how science and new technolgies that once seemed like miracles are commonplace today (1955).  He goes on to say, “science has had an influence on our daily lives. Many of the things that seemed impossible now will become realities of tomorrow.”

To discover how man will achieve space travel, the main segment begins by discussing rocket powered ships, after a brief introduction by Ward Kimball.  To understand rockets, the history of the rocket is traced, followed by a brief discussion on physics and propulsion systems.  At times it might feel like you're watching a middle school video but the sequences go pretty quick.  

One question that the show attempts to answers is, "how does a rocket get to the moon."  What means have been explored to attain a lunar landing?  Some in history have hypothesized that a using  gunpowder could launch a man or rocket into the moon (yikes!).  Luckily, the 1920's gave way to a fuel based rocket, and subsequent research followed.  The Germans were really at the forefront of this technology in the 1930's, which served as the basis for a certain film about a Rocket man...(#ahem).

Vanguard Rocket

The Rocket sequence in the show was probably pretty exciting to watch in the 1950's.  Even today the montage of rocket launches is eyte catching.  The US Vanguard rocket was shown several times.  Scientist Willie Ley was then introduced and he discusses how a fueled rocket would work.

 Very funny One of the more humorous sequences of the show discussed how manned space travel might work.  Our cartoon hero in this segment took on such obstacles as space sickness, eating in space, acclimating weigtlessness and the heat and cold of space might affect the body. Our cartoon astronaut had to experince all of these scenarios and so at the end he was pretty beat up.   The actual science of how a rocket works is also examined, and how a space craft will attain orbit. 

 

Wehrner Von Braun

By far the best part of the show is the animated sequence showing the rocket launch and its trip through space.  Instead of showing a cartoonish view of space travel, the show is done with dramatic stills and serious narratives.

On our first episode of the Disney in Space series we looked at an early attraction in Disneyland, Space Station: X-1, and how it attempted to show what the earth might look like from space, or a satellite orbiting the earth.  What made those first few years in Tomorrowland really unique was that the focus was more practical than whimsical, and today that has probably been reversed.  In contrast, the Walt Disney Studio at the time seemed to be producing more science - fantasty films like The Absent Minded Professor.

Probably the most ironic element of this is that Werhner Von Braun, though not embraced by the US government, was actually right all along.  The military passed on his ideas in 1955, in favor of the Navy’s Vanguard rocket system.   Von Braun however would go on to build and successfully launch Explorer 1 (in an 84 days).  The Explorer program led to America’s first successful space launch.   

So, why was Disney at the forefront of practical space?  One thing that I kept comiogn back to while researching for this show was my own affinity for Disney history and why I think that this stuff means so much to me.  I think its important to understand that there was a time when Disney was influential in areas besides pop-culture.  What they were doing had an impact on society.  Perhaps they have gone away from it over the years, but to know that the company was at the forefront of what would become the country’s biggest and most daring endeavours is something to think about.

Another thing that drew us to this subject is that this was truly a different time in American history and Disney's place was significantly different.  Disney was actually educating the public on what could be done in an area that was a hot button issue for US foreign affairs.  

Enjoy this episode as it was fun to create!

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Friday
Jan202012

The President, Exotic Driving and DCA - Wedway NOW! show notes for January 20th

This week on Wedway NOW! we discuss the goings on around the Disney landscape, including:

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Enjoy!

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We want to thank you again for listening! 

 

Sunday
Jan152012

Crescent Lake - Show Notes for episode 105

Thanks for downloading WEDWay Radio a show about Disney history, Disney parks and touring. This is episode #105 - Crescent Lake.

When Walt Disney World opened in 1971 the company knew that they needed to offer fantastically themed resorts for guests to stay.  Most would associate the Grand Floridian, The Contemporary and the Polynesian as the "name" Walt Disney World resorts. However, this past year the Crescent Lake resort area (or the Epcot resorts) marked its 20th year of existence.  

In this episode we explore the story of how the Swan and Dolphin came to be apart of Walt Disney World as well as the other three resorts; The Yacht Club and Beach Club as well as The Boardwalk and our favorite places to go within the resort area.

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Enjoy! 

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We want to thank you again for listening! 

Thursday
Jan122012

Wedway NOW! - News of January 12, 2011

This week on Wedway NOW! we discuss some of the news making the rounds, including:

 - The Matterhorns refurbishment Link

 - The TestTrack Redo Link

 - The new music loop on Disneylands Main Street USA Link

 - The new Mad T Party nighttime entertainment at DCA Link

 - New features of the Art of Animation Resort Link

As a special feature we are also joined by Andy Castro of DatelineDisneyland.com to discuss the new Jolly Holiday Bakery in Disneyland.

Enjoy!

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Check out the show notes for this and every episode of WEDWay Radio at wedwayradio.com

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We want to thank you again for listening!