30 min

Episode 17: Lost Lands of Disneyland Paris: A 1920's Main Street Fastpass to the Past: The Theme Park History Podcast

    • Places & Travel

Since Disneyland's opening in 1955, every designer who has been tasked with creating a new Main Street for a new Disney park has had to live up to that first nostalgic thoroughfare, the only one Walt actually had a hand in designing, while also setting the scene for the rest of the park. For Disneyland Paris, this task fell to a young brand-new Imagineer and self-proclaimed Disneytologist, Eddie Sotto, who envisioned a very different Main Street USA.
Eddie spent over a year working on a Main Street inspired by the stories of the Roaring '20s, and the jazz, cinema, art deco, and gangsters that populated the decade. His design included a hidden restaurant in a locomotive, a speakeasy jazz club, and police raids. Unfortunately, due to creative and financial reasons, his plans never saw the light of day in Paris. In this new part of the 'Lost Lands of Disneyland' series, we go back to the drawing board, deep in the Walt Disney Company archive, to see what this Roaring 20's entrance sequence would have looked like.
Links:
Pre-Order Our New Book! Fastpass to the Past: The Jr. Historian's Guide to DisneylandThe How of Wow! | Eddie Sotto | TEDxBermuda - YouTubeDisney and More - Main Street 1920's Early DraftDisney and More - The Disneyland Paris That Never WasDisney and More - Disneyland Paris That Never Was, Part 2Disney and More - Why Disneyland Paris Book Is Great Yesterland.com: Disneyland Paris, From Sketch To RealityEddie Sotto (@boss_angeles) / TwitterDisney and More - Disneyland Paris That Never Was, Part 3The Disneyland Paris That Could Have Been: Speakeasies, Gangsters, and a 1920s Jazz Club — No time to listen? Read my article on the topic, which is filled with concept art.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Since Disneyland's opening in 1955, every designer who has been tasked with creating a new Main Street for a new Disney park has had to live up to that first nostalgic thoroughfare, the only one Walt actually had a hand in designing, while also setting the scene for the rest of the park. For Disneyland Paris, this task fell to a young brand-new Imagineer and self-proclaimed Disneytologist, Eddie Sotto, who envisioned a very different Main Street USA.
Eddie spent over a year working on a Main Street inspired by the stories of the Roaring '20s, and the jazz, cinema, art deco, and gangsters that populated the decade. His design included a hidden restaurant in a locomotive, a speakeasy jazz club, and police raids. Unfortunately, due to creative and financial reasons, his plans never saw the light of day in Paris. In this new part of the 'Lost Lands of Disneyland' series, we go back to the drawing board, deep in the Walt Disney Company archive, to see what this Roaring 20's entrance sequence would have looked like.
Links:
Pre-Order Our New Book! Fastpass to the Past: The Jr. Historian's Guide to DisneylandThe How of Wow! | Eddie Sotto | TEDxBermuda - YouTubeDisney and More - Main Street 1920's Early DraftDisney and More - The Disneyland Paris That Never WasDisney and More - Disneyland Paris That Never Was, Part 2Disney and More - Why Disneyland Paris Book Is Great Yesterland.com: Disneyland Paris, From Sketch To RealityEddie Sotto (@boss_angeles) / TwitterDisney and More - Disneyland Paris That Never Was, Part 3The Disneyland Paris That Could Have Been: Speakeasies, Gangsters, and a 1920s Jazz Club — No time to listen? Read my article on the topic, which is filled with concept art.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

30 min