Showing posts with label Disney's Hollywood Studios. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disney's Hollywood Studios. Show all posts

Thursday, February 28, 2019

Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge News From 2/28/2019



Disney recently invited quite a few media outlets to visit Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge in Anaheim and in the process shared quite a few details about what the new land will look like in Disneyland and Disney's Hollywood Studios. We're working to consolidate that information into some easy to understand videos about what you'll find when you visit the new lands, but in the meantime, if you want to have a look at some of these reports, here's some of what's been written (with a bunch of new photos).


We'll keep this up to date as we find more articles.
Last Updated: March 7, 2019

Disney's Press Releases

We'll start with Disney's official releases.

From D23


From Disney Parks Blog


From StarWars.com


From Walt Disney Imagineering


From Other Media Outlets

This is a list of the firsthand accounts of visits to Galaxy's Edge during the recent media previews.

Enjoy + let us know if you come across any other firsthand accounts from the recent press visit that aren't listed above!

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

How much will I really miss recently closed attractions


One popular pastime among many Disney aficionados seems to be generating outrage whenever changes are announced. In recent years, some attraction closures have drawn the ire of many of those fans. While it certainly would be more socially acceptable, at least among the average Disney devotee, to join the crowd and pile on the criticism I chose to look at just how often I actually visited some of these supposedly beloved attractions. I realize my personal tastes are different than other guests, but suspect quite a few people would find similar results if they were inclined to keep the sort of (arguably pedantic) records that I do.

The numbers I will cite here reflect 24 different trips to Walt Disney World since 2010, during which time I spent 114 nights on or near Disney property. I've ridden 854 Disney World attractions over the course of those visits. Given that information, let's take a look at how often I actually chose to ride three of the most recently closed attractions that seemed to cause the most vocal angst in the Disney fan community.

Ellen's Energy Adventure (3)

It was tough to make the case that this attraction was not in need and and overhaul, so when considering whether or not you want to devote 45 minutes to an attraction that is well past its prime, the answer tends to be, "no." Clearly, that sort of thinking affected my choices, as I rode the attraction three times in the last seven years. By comparison, over the same time period I rode Soarin (35) and Spaceship Earth (32) ten times more often and even sat through the Circle of Life film as many times (3) as I traveled back in time with Ellen. If that isn't already striking enough, then perhaps this is. I haven't ridden Ellen's Energy Adventure at all since September, 2012, when I was traveling with a friend's family and one of his son's really enjoyed seeing dinosaurs (which meant that we also had to endure a meal at T-Rex Cafe during the same trip).

While I share some fans concern about the spirit of EPCOT Center being lost, I think that ship sailed long ago. Universe of Energy was a technically impressive pavilion that rarely made anyone's list of favorite original EPCOT Center attractions. Ellen's Energy Adventure didn't substantially improve on the original. Given it's length and our shortening attention spans it's no surprise that more folks chose to skip this pavilion. Whether or not you believe Guardians of the Galaxy will teach us about energy and inspire us to learn more about the topic (I think it's possible, but that's a separate topic), there's no doubt that most Epcot visitors weren't learning anything about the topic, because they weren't riding. I was no exception here.


Great Movie Ride (10)

I go through phases when I take an active interest in movie history. I was in high school when Disney-MGM Studios opened and by the end of my high school tenure I took in a year long film production/film history class, so as far as impressionable kids go, I was certainly in the target market for Disney World's third theme park.Years before we all carried around cameras in our pockets and iMovie made video editing accessible to nearly anyone, a peak behind the scenes of how movies were made was fascinating. The Great Movie Ride was a marvelous celebration of cinema, with tie-ins from classic films of the distant and relatively recent past.

After college I didn't visit any Disney theme parks again until 2010. When I returned to what was now Disney's Hollywood Studios the world had changed and the park was a shell of its former self. Movie and television production had long ceased in the park, the Backlot Tour had been gutted, there wasn't any animation production to tour (and even if there were, watching someone animate on their computer wasn't going to be nearly as compelling as seeing the process of hand-drawn animation), and the Great Movie Ride had lost its luster. I rode Great Movie Ride pretty regularly during my first few forays into the second generation of the Studios theme park, totally ten times in recent years. I rode the attraction on my last trip, in May of this year, but prior to that it had been more than two years since I last made time to see the attraction, skipping the ride nine consecutive trips. To be fair, I've found myself spending a lot less time in the Studios while most of the park's attractions have closed while the park metamorphosizes into Disney's attempt to recycle Universal's old "Ride the Movies" slogan. However, during the same time I've made a point to see Muppet*Vision 3D nearly twice as often  (19 times) as my ten Great Movie Rides, while riding Star Tours more than three times as often (36).

I loved what the Great Movie Ride once was, but over time the attraction lost much of its relevance and some scenes stopped being maintained. There were still considerable lines, sometimes stretching outside the Chinese Theater, but I think that was in part because there were so few other things to do in the Studios in recent years. I understand those who lament it's closing, as the attraction represented the last nail in the coffin of the original vision for the Disney-MGM Studios, but the truth is that original concept was long gone, and unlike EPCOT Center's original vision (which, I believe can be reinvigorated), a working studio in central Florida wasn't coming back. Given that I chose to abandon this attraction a couple years ago, I can't fault Disney for doing the same.







Maelstrom (8)

This is going back a couple years, but few attraction closure announcements generated quite the fury as did the closing on Maelstrom in Epcot's Norway pavilion. To be fair, a lot of the criticism was directed at the decision to theme its replacement to another popular target of Disney fans, the film Frozen. The name of that film seems to have a polarizing effect on many people, either eliciting joy or a reflexive need to express anger at something that became more popular than it may have deserved, with the latter being the expected response in most cases. I can make the argument that the characters from Frozen actually fit quite well with Epcot's intended purpose (I'm working on a more in-depth article addressing that topic), but for now let's focus on how popular the attraction Frozen Ever After actually replaced really was.

I actually rode Maelstrom pretty regularly up through September, 2014, my last visit to Epcot before the attraction sailed off forever, taking eight boat rides past bears, trolls, and oil rigs to learn what life is like in Norway. [NOTE: From 2010 through September, 2014 I rode 451 attractions across all four Disney World theme parks]. This lagged behind the number of times I visited Spaceship Earth (18), Test Track (14), Soarin (13), but was more often than I went on Living with the Land (7) or sat down to watch the American Adventure (3), so I didn't dislike Maelstrom, but I didn't really love it either.

Most of my visits were motivated by convenience and the lack of other moving attractions in World Showcase. The attraction itself was short, less than five minutes long, and there was just about never a line for Maelstrom in its final years. It was rare that I couldn't spare a few minutes to sit down in air conditioning and think back to when the Norway pavilion was new. I somehow managed to wait 11 minutes in line for the boat ride in March, 2012, getting in line at 12:45 PM and not finishing the ride until just after 1:00 PM, but after that I never again waited more than seven minutes for Maelstrom. Did any of those visits inspire me to consider visiting Norway or studying its history? No, it was a choice I made to pass the time in between snacks and drinks while touring World Showcase. In the short time since Frozen Ever After has been open I've already ridden that attraction nearly as many times (7) as I rode it's predecessor in recent years and have stepped off the boat with a smile on my face far more frequently than when I was walking away from Maelstrom.


Summing it Up

As I noted above, these numbers only reflect one person's choices (mine) about how often I chose to experience these attractions, but as I also noted I believe my choices were far more common than some of the loudest critics of these attraction closures would have you believe. There are reasons that I will miss having the chance to trigger memories of the era when these attractions were relevant and vibrant additions to Walt Disney World, but frankly, I won't miss that very much. Seeing as how I already drifted away from riding these attractions very often, it's hard to look back after the fact and argue the spaces they occupy couldn't be put to better use. In the case of Frozen Ever After, we can see that's already happened, so let's hope the same will be true for the new versions of the Energy pavilion and the centerpiece attraction of whatever Disney's Hollywood Studios will be named in the future.

Thursday, May 25, 2017

Why do I go to WDW? A Place Where People Look Out for Each Other

People often ask me why I go to Disney World so frequently and I've never been satisfied with the answers I've been able to articulate. It is a comfortable place, with a variety of fun activities, I know my way around, there is great food on property along with excellent cocktails served in beautiful seeings, and there are ample opportunities to practice different photographic techniques. So, the Disney parks and resorts fit well with some of my favorite hobbies and there's even a part of me that likes trying to outsmart the crowds and figure out how see and do more in a single day than most other guests would think possible. However, I could accomplish much of this without straying far from where I live, so there's more to why I choose to spend so much time in Central Florida and I will endeavor to answer that question for myself and for curious friends and readers in this series of blog posts.

Before leaving Disney's Hollywood Studios this past Tuesday I saw a sweet moment that I was able to capture with my camera. Goofy had just finished meeting with guests and was setting off on a break, when he looked over and saw a little girl with her father. I did not observe whether the little girl may have been agitated with someone that went wrong in her day or really excited to see Goofy walking past, but I did see that Goofy took her hand and started walking with her on his way to his break.

There are a couple ways to look at this. The most common is to say this was a moment of Disney "magic." However, I don't buy that explanation. What I do believe is that the environment inside the Disney World "bubble" is one where everyone is expected to behave differently than in other places. It is a world in which everyone is expected to be courteous and to look out for each other's safety and well-being. Those expectations are explicitly stated to Disney Cast Member's and [Spoiler Alert] there is an actual human being inside that Goofy costume who not only has been trained to try to make other people's days a little better, but has also been surrounded by other people trying to make other people happy. This Cast Member, who just spent half an hour picked kicked, grabbed, pushed, and shoved in 90 degree heat and humidity, while wearing an unwieldy costume he can barely see out of, could easily have rushed off for his air conditioned break and few people would have faulted him for doing so, but he instead chose to create a moment that this little girl and many of her family and friends will remember for a lifetime.






For the most part Disney Cast Members take great pride in fostering an environment where people look for ways to create joy and inspiration for each other, but it is not Cast Members alone that may Disney parks that happy places that they are. I can't claim to be an expert on human behavior, but it seems that we generally understand that there are different expectations for us in different places. I'm not talking about a set of rules posted on a wall someone, but rather that when we see other people giving gifts to other guests, checking to see if we can help a stranger who looks distraught, or just striking up a conversation with people we've never met before, then we seem more likely to emulate that behavior. We don't do this because someone said we would be thrown out of the park for failing to comply with a rule, but because we feel safe to do so and maybe because we think that if other guests are treated each other with this sort of kindness and respect that we should do the same.

I've experienced many examples of special guest behavior over the years, but one that stood out from my most recent trip was this past Monday night standing near the Partners statue in the Magic Kingdom Hub, waiting for the new Once Upon a Time fireworks show to start. Shortly before the show was scheduled to begin we heard a P.A. announcement that the evening's show was delayed. During the delay, a couple guests and I started talking about how the show wasn't likely to be canceled and speculating why the show wasn't starting when it appeared that rainstorms from earlier in the evening had passed out of the area. A little bit after the show's scheduled 9:00 PM start we found out why we were waiting for the show to start, when the skies opened up and rain began pouring down on us. I had my camera setup on a tripod to photograph the show and a couple thousand people stood between me and the nearest shelter, so there wasn't much choice other than to ride out the storm in place. I had ponchos for me and for my camera, but didn't have time to take either of those out of my backpack before this particular storm arrived. While I was scrambling to keep my camera (and eventually, myself) dry two people who I had never met before decided they needed to protect my camera and hold their umbrellas over top of it. I didn't ask them to do this, but I didn't need to. They understood that in Disney World we look out for each other.

Some people dismiss Disney parks as "fake" and contrived environments. Buildings are, indeed, often just facades and I realize I'm not seeing the original Eiffel Tower when I visit Epcot, but the parks are more than just buildings and attractions. The real Disney "world" is one in which people want to make a little girl's day better or where they don't want to see a stranger lose his camera to a surprise rain shower. We can do these things in the "real" world, too, but too often we don't, so until the rest of the world catches up, I'll still spend some of my time in Disney World.

Friday, March 27, 2015

A (Last?) Look at Echo Lake

As rumors persist that Echo Lake in Disney's Hollywood Studios may not last much longer I made a point to take a long, maybe last, look at that part of the park this past March. (A WDW News Today article a month before my trip articulates the most recent rumor before my visit.)


Will Echo lake meet the same fate as Gertie's dinosaur brethren?

Before we say goodbye, let's have a look at one of the roles Echo Lake played in the history of Disney's Hollywood Studios (and Disney-MGM Studios). Here's a look at a park map from 1989. Take a look at the giant hidden Mickey in the middle. Echo Lake formed one of his ears.

Here's an artist rendering of the Disney-MGM Studios from an early publication, Disney-MGM Studios: A Pictorial Souvenir. The Indiana Jones stunt show and Echo Lake are in the foreground.






Not sure who Dinosaur Gertie is? Well that's explained here





Min and Bill's is a conveniently located and often under-appreciated counter service location that will be missed if Echo Lake goes away. So will views like this.






Disney will be giving up this source of income, but suspect Star Wars Land will make up for that

So, how much longer before Echo Lake is also extinct?

Even if it isn't clear exactly what the future holds for Disney's Hollywood Studios (or, even what the new name of the park will be), it is apparent that some big plans are in the works. It will be exciting to see what is new, but always sad to lose a part of  a park's history. That is the nature of a theme park that seeks to remain relevant in a changing world, but doesn't mean we shouldn't stop to appreciate details that may be lost.
Do you think Echo Lake will be filled in to become the road to Tatooine? Would you rather Star Wars Land go somewhere else in the park? What if it meant losing the Osborne Lights and MuppetVision?

Monday, June 2, 2014

Star Wars Dine-In Galactic Breakfast! at Sci-Fi Dine-In Theater Restaurant (2014)


Starting with the May the Fourth celebration and running through Star Wars Weekends in 2014, Disney's Hollywood Studios offered two Star Wars character dining experiences and I had the opportunity to visit both. This article covers my visit to Star Wars Dine-In Galactic Breakfast! at Sci-Fi Dine-In Theater Restaurant.

I'm usually not a big breakfast eater, but when Disney offers something new I'm often tempted to try it out. It's not that I don't like breakfast, but a big meal first thing in the morning usually makes me want to go back to sleep rather than give me the energy to keep moving through a theme park all day. Additionally, a banana, cereal bar, and orange juice in my hotel room costs a small fraction of what I would pay for Disney to feed me. Nonetheless, an occasional character breakfast can still be a lot of fun and I wanted to see as much as possible on my first trip to Star Wars Weekends. With that in mind, I set out to try the Star Wars Dine-In Galactic Breakfast.

PLUSES AND MINUSES

+ -
- Star Wars themed film and video throughout the meal (some rarely seen, some original)
- Brief photo op with Darth Vader and Boba Fett together
- too dark for most pictures
- poorly laid out for character meals
- no interaction with Vader or Boba Fett
- only lesser characters visited tables
- expensive
 - no Tables in Wonderland, 2 DDP credits






CHARACTERS

Seeing the characters is why you choose a character meal, right? So, let's start there. We were called by the greeter outside the Sci-Fi Dine-In Theater and lined up, then after a short wait we met Darth Vader and Boba Fett. With the rush to get people seated there was no time for interaction, and this was among the more rushed character meets that I've ever participated in. A couple PhotoPass pictures and then a couple more photos with my camera and we were shooed off. The PhotoPass pictures are included with the cost of your meal, and your PhotoPass card also included some generic Star Wars images.

My last meal in the Sci-Fi Dine-In Theater was in 1994, almost exactly twenty years before my Star Wars breakfast, so I had forgotten how the restaurant was laid out. The seating is a little odd, as you don't face the other people in your party, but rather you sit on a bench seat of a "car" with a small counter in front of you. I should emphasize the smallness of your "table". I usually have somewhere to put my camera and notepad on a restaurant table, along with my food, but at Sci-Fi that is not the case. You may not be carrying a digital SLR camera (though you may need to here, as I'll note shortly), but there was barely room for the plates of food and our drinks. Kids may appreciate the novelty of this seating arrangement, as may adults who are tired of looking at their traveling companions after a long trip, but those who want to converse may find it somewhat bothersome. However, the orientation of the tables is necessary to ensure everyone can see the movie screens at the front of the theater/restaurant.

For me, the movie screens were the best part of the meal. While not a character encounter, the Star Wars themed video and movie clips that ran throughout the meal were funny, nostalgic, and tapped into the energy and excitement of a Star Wars Weekend. Reliving favorite moments from the six Star Wars feature films was good, but the short clips that ran in between offered the most entertainment. Hearing the original Star Wars theme, with captions like "Bommm Bommm Bom Bom Bom" was amusing, then hearing some sort of Imperial Officer searching for a rebel spy address the crowd was entertaining, and other clips were informative, explaining who the Jawas and stormtroopers were and what else you could do during Star Wars Weekends. Even people who weren't familiar with the movies could know what was going on. The walk-around characters occasionally interacted with the video on the screen, with stormtroopers shaking their heads in embarrassment and disgust as their brethren consistently failed to capture those rebelling against the Empire or just stopping to listen intently when an Imperial officer appeared on screen.

Here's a look at some of the footage from the drive-in screen:



While the video presentation was entertaining and amusing, the character encounters during the meal left something to be desired. The characters did arrive promptly, perhaps too promptly, as it was fifteen minutes after we arrived before we were able to eat the food that had been dropped off on our table. There are advantages and disadvantages to a full-service restaurant versus a buffet for a character meal. Having servers bring your food to you means not risking missing a character encounter while getting food from a buffet, but it also means food piles up on your table if characters visit in a "clump". Since that was exactly what happened when we first sat down, we ended up rushing through the beginning of the meal to make sure there was room on the tiny tables for our entrées. Had our hot entrées arrived during the cluster of characters, we would either have had to told them to move along or let our food get cold.
As for the characters that did visit, it's not so much that the Storm Troopers or Jawas weren't entertaining, but both were present in other locations throughout Star Wars Weekends, where they could be seen with little or no wait. Trading with the Jawas can be cute, especially for children and childlike adults, though that can be done just as easily on the Streets of America most times of the day and stormtroopers are everywhere in the Studios during Star Wars Weekends. Thus, Greedo was the biggest star of this Star Wars breakfast and that wasn't enough to impress me. Further complicating the character interactions is the relative darkness needed for people to be able to see the video screen at the front of the restaurant. Since a big part of a character meal is taking photos with the characters, darkness is not your friend. A have a camera and flash that facilitate low light photos, but had I used my point and shoot camera or my cell phone my photos would have been grainy or blurry. The darkness and the somewhat haphazard patterns in which the characters wandered the restaurant also made it difficult to know when someone was coming to your table. Overall, featuring mostly easy to find characters and the challenge of taking usable photographs during the meal somewhat diminished the value of my experience.

FOOD

The Star Wars Dine-In Galactic Breakfast includes a few extras before your entrée. Each table receives a plate of pastries, including a vanilla cream turnover, almond pastry, and double chocolate muffin. These were generally light and full of flavor, adorned with Star Wars logos, and served on Star Wars plates. We were also offered a choice of a Greek yogurt parfait or fresh fruit. I chose the fruit, which featured a Yoda-shaped melon as edible garnish. I've had better fruit from most Disney buffets and had to wait awhile to get a second helping of this pre-prepared appetizer, but the pastries were very good.
My breakfast tastes are relatively pedestrian, usually scrambled eggs, sausage, and bacon when I do eat a morning meal in a restaurant. The entrées for the Galactic Breakfast were varied and generally not what I look for in a Disney breakfast, though these choices may appeal to many people and could work well if you treat the meal as a brunch. I opted for the Tatooine Sunrise, with the aforementioned scrambled eggs, bacon, and sausage, since it was the only ordinary breakfast choice (no pancakes or Mickey waffles). The eggs and meet were ok, though nothing special, but the breakfast potatoes were unusually seasoned. I can't explain exactly what I didn't like, but they weren't exactly what I was looking for. Wanting to get the most out of the experience, I asked for a second entrée. With shrimp and grits being one of my favorite food items from the last two Flower & Garden Festival outdoor kitchens, I wanted to try Sci-Fi's version of this dish, the Ackbar Surprise. That turned out to be a disappointment, as the shrimp was missing the rich flavor I was expecting and the grits weren't all that flavorful. After not seeing our server from when our entrées were dropped off until he was ready to drop off the check, asking for a second entrée probably added twenty minutes to our meal. For those interested in the other options for your main course, they were as follows:
  • The Dune Sea - salmon, eggs, potato hash, and toast
  • The Kessel Run - steak, bacon and cheddar custard, cheesy horseradish potatoes
  • Imperial Delight - French toast
  • Mos Eisleys Morning - omelet, potatoes, greek yogurt
  • Kids Menu - scrambled eggs, bacon, sausage, and potatoes or French toast

    Beverage selections included coffee, lemonade, ice tea, hot tea, hot cocoa, apple juice, orange juice, milk, or blue milk. Having forgotten to try the blue milk throughout the rest of my Star Wars Weekend, I made sure to have some with this meal and was glad that I did. A hint of fruit flavor (I think people said it was blue raspberry) with the cold milk was refreshing and something I would look forward to drinking again.  For an extra charge, you could order a Mimosa or peach flavored version of the Mimosa, both served with Prosecco, rather than Champagne, in case you're the sort that knows your sparkling beverages well enough to tell the difference.

    The last part of our meal (had I not asked for the second entrée) was the Galactic Sendoff. While eating and greeting it was hard not to notice servers walked around with a cart with a bowl of some sort of smoky dish. Not smoky flavor, but rather actual smoke (dry ice, I assume). It turned out the cart contained our dessert, a fruit flavored concoction with a consistency somewhat like yogurt with small pieces of soft sweet fruity candy with liquid inside. If it sounds strange, it was, but I liked it. I really have no need for dessert with my breakfast, but this was a refreshing end to the meal. I wouldn't have paid for it were I ordering a la carte, but if it were included in the meal, then I'd enjoy it again.






    COST

    The meal was expensive, costing $51.11 per adult with tax, but not including tip. Further adding to the cost was that the restaurant did not accept my Tables in Wonderland discount and had we been on the Disney Dining Plan, the meal would have cost two table service credits. I'll leave it to you to decide whether you think any breakfast (not a Sunday champagne brunch, mind you) is worth $51, but consider that my most recent Disney World breakfast, at Chef Mickey's, cost $29.81 per person (also with tax and without tip, but with my Tables in Wonderland discount), so even by Disney character breakfast standards you pay a considerable premium for this meal.

    TIMING

    I dined with a friend as a party of two with a 9:45 AM reservation.  We arrived at the check-in desk outside the Sci-Fi restaurant at 9:34 AM, and then were called to get in line for our pre-meal photo at 9:40 AM. We were seated at 9:48 AM. The restaurant was busy, but there were a noticeable number of empty seats and the Cast Members outside the restaurant appeared to be taking walk-up reservations the morning we dined there (though it should be noted that we visited on a Monday, rather than during the Star Wars Weekend activities). We left the restaurant at 10:55 AM, though our meal would have finished sooner had I not asked for a second entrée.

    SUMMARY

    I was glad that I tried this new character dining experience in 2014, but it is unlikely that I will return in 2015 or beyond. The Star Wars movie clips were great, but that alone wasn't enough to justify paying more than $50 for breakfast. The food was decent, but not outstanding and not as ubiquitous as a buffet. Character interactions weren't bad, but other than the picture with Vader and Boba Fett together, could have been easily replicated throughout the Studios elsewhere during Star Wars Weekends without spending too much time. And, while most people are interacting with those characters they will be challenged to photograph those encounters in the dark and peculiarly laid out Sci-Fi restaurant. If money is not a concern, then consider trying this meal once, but otherwise I'd suggest spending your time and money elsewhere to satisfy your Star Wars fix.

    Saturday, May 31, 2014

    Star Wars Weekends: Legends of the Force Motorcade - 5/30/2014

    In 2014 I attended my first Star Wars Weekend at Disney's Hollywood Studios. One of the featured events during each Friday, Saturday, and Sunday of each Weekend is the Legends of the Force Motorcade, which features Disney characters in Star Wars costumes, a variety of characters from the Star Wars movies, and several visiting celebrities. I saw this parade and accompanying stage from from a VIP viewing area as part of the Feel the Force Premium Package.

    Prior to the show Boba Fett and stormtroopers patrol the event stage

    Your hosts for the motorcade announce each character as they take to the street (though their commentary was out of sync with what I was seeing, since my viewing spot was near the end of the parade route)







    An X-wing pilot led off the parade

    The Disney stars were on hand




    Jedi Training Academy padawan got to march down the street and watch the parade from right in front of the stage










    The Empire was well represented


    And, the Dark Side made its presence felt








    Quite a variety of stormtroopers and other Imperial forces were part of the parade












    This character turned the tables on the many photographers in the crowd

    The sand people didn't appear to be walking in single to conceal their numbers


    Jawas could also be found on the Streets of America and the Star Wars Din-In Galactic Breakfast






    This Wookie (I believe the announcers said it was female), led the procession of "good guys"

    Assorted Jedi


    More Rebel Forces







    R2-D2 rolled down the parade root






    Ahsoka Tano ...

    ... followed by the voice of Ahsoka Tano, Ashley Eckstein, a participant in each 2014 Star Wars Weekend



    Taylor Gray, voice of Ezra Bridger in Star Wars Rebels

    Sabine Wren, from Star Wars Rebels

    Chopper, from Star Wars Rebels






    Ray Park, who played Darth Maul in Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace and also appeared in A Visit to the Maul during the weekend



    John Ratzenberger, best known as Cliff Clavin in Cheers and for his appearances in many Pixar films, also had a small role in The Empire Strikes Back









    James Arnold Taylor hosted the brief stage show following the Motorcade and most of the other events of the weekend. In addition to his numerous Star Wars hosting duties and other voiceover work, Taylor is know as the voice of Obi-Wan Kenobi in several animated forms.

    Still the most recognizable character in the Star Wars universe, Darth Vader was last to appear in the parade






    On stage for the brief post-parade stage show

    Despite my VIP location for the Motorcade, I was still behind quite a few people when the stage show began

    Scenes around the stage













    A photo opportunity, with the stars of the Motorcade

    Show's over when this guy says it is