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Overnight Castle Stay details released

PKD

Active Member
Original Poster
Details fall into place at Disney
Designers create a suite where some lucky winners will stay as part of the Year of a Million Dreams campaign.


Scott Powers | Sentinel Staff Writer
Posted November 14, 2006

Does Cinderella have a TV?

Curious Walt Disney World fans such as Leny Sou of Chicago want to know.

Of all the prizes Disney is giving away in its big, 15-month "Year of a Million Dreams" campaign, perhaps none is more tantalizing than a night in Cinderella Castle, the signature icon of the Magic Kingdom.

It's also the one prize that seems to have most taxed Disney officials' imaginations.

What's a fictional 17th-century French princess's home like, anyway?

Is it haughty and opulent, or does Cinderella draw on her humble roots to mix luxury with down-home comfort? Is there food? Would a night in her room be boring? Does Cinderella have her own butler -- pardon -- her own comte du cierge? Is there a good view from her castle windows? Would Cinderella herself drop by for a visit?

Sou, visiting Magic Kingdom Monday with husband Tony, son Kyle, 4, and daughter Kayla, 2, loves the idea of staying in the castle. But she's a mom. So she's practical.

"Do they have television? I mean, what is there to do up there, for kids?" she asked. "Especially overnight. That's going to be a long night, you know."

When the Cinderella Castle plan was announced, Disney officials weren't sure how it would work. Only now are some of the details emerging.

Yes, there will be TV. Yes, it looks as if the family will be shut in after the theme park closes for the night. And yes, a butler (known as a comte du cierge in old French), will be at their call.

In June, Disney announced the Year of a Million Dreams campaign. The company is giving away more than 1 million prizes, some worth tens of thousands of dollars apiece, such as time-share contracts and trips halfway around the world.

The plan to give away stays in the Royal Suite of the Cinderella Castle provided a challenge: The suite never existed. There is a roughed-in living space halfway up the castle, which was once envisioned as the Disney family apartment. But it had never been finished.

So since the campaign was announced, planners have been trying to sort out the logistics of putting a family into a single, lonely hotel room in the middle of a closed theme park. And Disney's designers are trying to create a royal suite worthy of a 17th-century princess living in a 21st-century fake castle.

And they're having a ball doing so, insisted Disney Imagineer Stephen Silvestri, who's overseeing much of the design. The project was dropped on Silvestri and his team without much warning in June.

"Exactly. It was about that way. But could you think of a better way to spend your time?" he said. "It's such a pleasure."

He and his team have been researching 17th-century royal French life and trying to create mosaics and other artwork, accoutrements and furnishings, often by hand, to fit in.

The suite, he said, will come with a "traditional" big, flat-screen, high-definition TV. But people won't notice it unless they look for it, just like the complimentary shampoos and lotions in the bathroom, bottled in what will look like old, French glassware.

"You want the fantasy," Silvestri said. "All those things are there, but they're not immediately recognizable to your eye."

Among other details:

Before dinner, the winning family will be escorted to the suite, regaled with the Cinderella story, and shown around the rooms. Disney will arrange transportation for them and their luggage from wherever they were.

They'll be taken to Cinderella's Royal Table Restaurant for dinner, where the actress in Cinderella character will meet with them.

After dinner, they'll go back upstairs to freshen up, then be escorted to the "Wishes" show or other evening Disney entertainment.

In the morning, Cinderella will give them a wake-up call and check on them.

The 650-square-foot suite has a bedchamber, a bathroom and a parlor. The parlor has two sets of three windows: one overlooks Fantasyland; the other, Liberty Square.

Silvestri promised the rooms will be comfortable and luxurious, but not embarrassingly so. Designs call for an elevator inspired by Cinderella's carriage, a foyer with inlaid stone floors, wooden walls, a big stone (though faux) chateau-style fireplace, two big, soft beds and other pieces of faux period artwork and furniture. The princess' glass slippers will be on display.

The grotto-style bathroom will be dominated by three large, handmade mosaics of 17th-century landscapes, designed by Disney artists Katie Roser and Mary Hartwig to match the five 15-foot-tall mosaics that Dorothea Redmond created in 1971 for the castle breezeway.

A half-dozen Disney artists have been tediously selecting, cutting and gluing thousands of imported glass tiles for over a month to create the new mosaics. But given the tight castle conversion schedule they were all handed, that's hurrying, Roser said.

"We think they had over a year and a half to do the originals," she said. "We are in our fifth week, and we have one more week. I think that we've done something that some traditional mosaic artists would think we're crazy."

"But we're good at that," Silvestri insisted.
 

SewIn2Disney

Well-Known Member
Um...hello? You change your flight! Who gives up a night in a castle for some stupid flight?

Or better yet, you call me, and I'll take the room for you. I'll hop the next flight down.

Seriously though, I'm sure they'd offer you something of comparable value....a pin perhaps? Lol
 

Epcot82Guy

Well-Known Member
I think it sounds like a great addition. I wonder about breakfast (although I have a feeling that may be included in some degree - like a French pastry basket or something along those lines). It would be kinda fun to create something that many people have often wondered about - the interior of Cinderella Castle.
 

natalia1681

New Member
That is very cool to hear about.


P.S. I would also change the flight;) While the pin idea sounds lovely:hammer:I"ll probably take a pass on that:lol:
 

nmj91385

New Member
If you wanna get on your flight, I'll take the night in the castle! You just tell them you want to give it to me. Hello! Cancel the flight! There's hundreds of flights a day but only one night in the castle!
 

DisneyMusician2

Well-Known Member
Is anyone else wondering how they keep you from wandering MK at night? Or would it not make a difference if you did? I would be uncomfortable with being locked in for the night, as stupid as that might sound....Is there a concierge in the castle with you for the night?
 

jakeman

Well-Known Member
First off, before I rant, thank you for posting the article. I learned new things about the castle room in it.

Okay, I am not a journalism major, and I realize this is splitting hairs and is going to open a can of worms, but here it goes.

I got half way through this article and started to wonder who wrote it. The impression I got from the article is that the room has been rushed and may not be up to Disney standards.

Furthermore, it appeared, through the use of the word "insisted" that the imagineer is just towing the company line about how great of a project it is.

Upon heading back up to the byline (which I had skipped in the initial reading), it turns out it is the Orlando Sentinel.

The Sentinel, in my opinion, not only regularly bites the hand that feeds it, actually goes out of its way to make Disney look bad.

None of the quotes in the story would leave me to believe that this was a rushed job if they were standalone quotes. I could be completely of base here, because I did not conduct the interview or write the story, but the impression I got was this:

A newsreporter got wind that the Imagineers were notified about the project in June, decided that it must mean that Disney is going to drop the ball. He conducts the interviews, finds out that yes the project is under tight timelines but nothing else is amiss, so he changes the tone of the story to "suggestion" rather than fact. Here are some quotes:

...It's also the one prize that seems to have most taxed Disney officials' imaginations.

..And Disney's designers are trying to create a royal suite worthy of a 17th-century princess living in a 21st-century fake castle.

And they're having a ball doing so, insisted Disney Imagineer Stephen Silvestri, who's overseeing much of the design. The project was dropped on Silvestri and his team without much warning in June.

"Exactly. It was about that way. But could you think of a better way to spend your time?" he said. "It's such a pleasure."

A half-dozen Disney artists have been tediously selecting, cutting and gluing thousands of imported glass tiles for over a month to create the new mosaics. But given the tight castle conversion schedule they were all handed, that's hurrying, Roser said.

"We think they had over a year and a half to do the originals," she said. "We are in our fifth week, and we have one more week. I think that we've done something that some traditional mosaic artists would think we're crazy."

"But we're good at that," Silvestri insisted.
If I am out of line here with the assumption that journalist are aware of their word choice, please someone feel free to correct me.

This issue drives me up the wall with media in general, and the Sentinel in particular with their Disney coverage. Wording is everything in shaping someones opinion, and I feel if you are to present a factual story your wording should be void of speculation.

However, with all that belly aching, thank you again for posting the story as there are new details regarding the inside of the castle!
 

sleepybear

New Member
Yes, you're being nitpicky. When taken alone, the quotes DO make it sound like they didn't have much time. And I don't think the reporter is judging them one way or another. He's stating a fact -- they had since June to do this.

Also, you seem to be forgetting that the Orlando Sentinel does not work for Disney. So not everything they write about Disney World has to be flowers and rainbows. But in this case, I think the story is cute, interesting and, in the end, probably very good free publicity for WDW.
 

jakeman

Well-Known Member
I understand your point but I disagree that the report is stating fact.

In my opinion a fact would not require the word "seem" to qualify it.

For example, it seems to many people that the castle is made of brick. Most of use, however, know that is not the case.

I'm not saying the report is inaccurate in any way, just slanted. He has no other sources to confirm that the 4 (?) months to complete the project is a tight timeline other than the mosaic artist stating that the original mosaic took much longer.

I am not desputing the facts that are in the article, just the way they are presented. Nor do I expect reports from a newpaper to be 100% favorable to Disney, if the situation calls for it. In my opinion, in this case there was no story and the reported syntaxed (yeah I made that up) a story together.

I read the news for facts, not interpretation of events. I read editorials for that.

Again just my opinion.

I would also like to reiterate that I appreciate this information being posted!
 

DiPSU224

Member
This prize, without a doubt, would be my dream. I would give anything to be able to stay up there, even for just a night. I never even thought about the TV thing. I'm sure I could do without it for a night though.

Not sure if anyone's posted this here before, but yesterday I received a newsletter from Disney's Visa and under the YOAMD section they had the estimated value of a stay in the suite for around $580ish if I remember correctly. I thought if maybe one day it was open to the public it would have been a little more pricey.
 

LuLaSue

Well-Known Member
Is anyone else wondering how they keep you from wandering MK at night? Or would it not make a difference if you did? I would be uncomfortable with being locked in for the night, as stupid as that might sound....Is there a concierge in the castle with you for the night?

"And yes, a butler (known as a comte du cierge in old French), will be at their call."

Maybe the butler makes sure you stay inside the castle.:veryconfu
 

PKD

Active Member
Original Poster
Maybe the butler makes sure you stay inside the castle.:veryconfu

That is how I read it. He will be there for your needs AND to make sure you stay inside the castle. I would prob stay up all night looking out each window for an hour at a time. Total Dork, but why would you really want to sleep the entire stay away =)
 

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