1986: An Imagineering Competition - Hub Thread

D Hulk

Well-Known Member
WARNING: LONG!
Also, I HIGHLY recommend you listen to the songs. I put a bit of care into curating them.

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THE
MERRY MARINERS’
MUSICAL MUTINY

It all started with a mutiny!

A motley crew of sea creatures emerged from the oceans, drawn by the joyful sea shanties of Harbortown. Driven by song, these beasts commandeered the merchant sailing ship Singin’ Siren. They mutinied against the vessel’s human deckhands, tossed them to shore…

...and transformed the craft into a musical theater venue!

Now The Singin’ Siren is host to the greatest sea shanty revue in all of Harbortown! A vast cast of animatronic marine critters serenades guests with the world’s very best nautical tunes. These boisterously catchy work songs have survived for centuries. You cannot listen to such jaunty ditties without grinning, tapping your feet and singing along! An incredibly fun experience awaits within The Merry Mariners’ Musical Mutiny!



Guests can find the show located on Harbortown's outer shores close to Sleeping Hollow Chilling Tour. Capstan Stan is an animatronic sea lion, who boasts a comic Marc Davis look like all the show's characters. Stan is a literal “barker.” Perched upon his capstan and shielded from the elements under a relocated mast, Stan simply barks at passersby with true sea lion bravado.

Entering past Stan’s gates, guests reach an outdoors pre-show courtyard in the shadows of The Singin’ Siren. Palm trees and ferns provide shade. Seating is around a terraced garden of exposed coral reefs and tide pools. Gentle flowing waters gurgle. There are interactive urchins and oysters in the shallow pools, which recede or clam up when guests get too close.

The ship's bowsprite is the Singin’ Siren herself, a magical semi-animatronic wench who provides pre-show merriment. In a fine soprano voice she sings a series of sea shanties we weren’t able to fit into the main show, songs such as “
Randy Dandy-Oh,” “The Jolly Roving Tar,” and “Roll the Old Chariot Along.”

When showtime arrives, a scallywag cast member grabs guests' attention with a loud, piercing “ARRRRGHH!” Guests enter The Singin’ Siren ship through a gangway just to the right of the bowsprite.



SHOW

The Singin’ Siren Theater fills the entire wooden hull. Rows of seating all face towards a stage, which is presently hidden behind seaweed curtains. The curtains feature a Jolly Roger version of the drama & comedy masks.

The ship interior has been heavily modified to serve as a theater venue, with several other ship components relocated and modified. The ship’s pulpit is mounted to stage right below a mast, its prow poking out over the audience. Theatrical lighting comes courtesy of Ed, an animatronic anglerfish who hangs in the rafters and shines his lightbulb lure like a spotlight.

Our host appears on the pulpit, lit by Ed. Meet Captain Johnny Bawker, our M.C. - “M.C.” here meaning both “Master of Ceremonies” and “Master & Commander.” Captain Bawker is an animatronic sea turtle regally clad in an admiral’s uniform. With a commanding alto voice, Bawker welcomes guests to his Musical Mutiny. Following a brief lead-in proclaiming the majesty of sea shanties, Bawker bellows “Now, me hearties...on with ye show!




DRUNKEN SAILOR
Captain Johnny Bawker with The Merry Mariners

(0:00 - 2:38)

Curtains open to reveal a forecastle main stage. This platform is set before the captain’s cabin, where large windows span the width of stern. The windows look out onto a projection screen, which changes throughout the revue; for now it views the Harbortown docks.

“Drunken Sailor,” a boisterous, raucous tune, rings out. As voices first sing “Way hey up she rises,” on cue a band of brigands rises from within the forecastle. Meet The Merry Mariners, an engaging animatronic crew of ne’er-do-well sea creatures, all playing their instruments in perfect animated unison. Let’s meet the mateys…

On concertina accordion is Bos’n Bill, a sting ray. Bill is a happy-go-lucky sort who wears a tricorn hat.

Conrad is a fiddler crab, so naturally he plays the fiddle, drawing a bow across the strings with his claw. Conrad’s eyes are comically magnified by a thick pair of goggles.

Accompanying Conrad on the mandolin is Shanghai Sam, a stoic squid with a wool longshoreman’s cap and a corncob pipe. Sam plays his instrument using Slim Jim, a sawfish.

Rising out of a treasure chest are Port and Starboard, a pair of clams who play the rhythm bones.

One-Eyed Rory plays the tin whistle. Rory, a short-tempered blowfish who wears an eyepatch and a pirate’s bandana, constantly inflates and deflates as he plays.

Lastly, R. R. Jones is a hammerhead shark who plays the bodhran drum by just constantly slamming his head against it. Good ol’ R. R. is an oversized simpleton taken to constantly screaming “Arr! Arr!” at random intervals. He is covered in tribal tattoos and bone piercings like Moby-Dick’s Queequeg.

With instrumental intervals in the tune, Bawker seizes the moment to introduce the mutineers. “Drunken Sailor” plays out in its entirety, as audiences are still finding their sea legs. Songs to come will only feature a verse or two each.





BLOW THE MAN DOWN
Captain Johnny Bawker with The Merry Mariners & The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 1:05)

As “Blow the Man Down” begins, the ship begins its journey out to open ocean as witnessed through the captain’s windows. This song is a bit of a cool down after the jaunty opener.

While the Merry Mariners continue to play and sing, they are now joined by The Porthole Trio, three tenors who poke in from three portholes on the right wall. Let’s introduce these salty new miscreants.

Their leader is Benchley, a great white shark. Despite his scars and embedded fishhook “jewelry,” Benchley is really a gentle giant.

Next is Murray the moray eel, who somehow manages to sing despite the cutlass held in his mouth.

Finnegan is a narwhal who likes to wave his pointy horn around wildly mid-song. Finnegan sports gold teeth and a single golden hoop earring.

This song concludes, and Captain Bawker introduces the next act...which he will continue to do throughout the revue.





HAUL AWAY JOE
Haul Away Joe & Baritone Bob with The Barnacle Chorus

(0:00 - 1:11)

Storm clouds gather on the seas outside as the dirgelike “Haul Away Joe” begins. The Merry Mariners descend into their stage, and out rolls Haul Away Joe himself onto the forecastle, strapped to a wheeled cannon. Joe is a barracuda, bound in heavy chains & shackles, who sings a mournful shanty about labors & laments.

Ed shines his spotlights on the rear and side walls. He reveals the accompanying
Barnacle Chorus - dozens upon dozens of tiny barnacles singing as one. Every once in awhile, a tiny clownfish named Baritone Bob pops out from Joe’s cannon to sing a single very, very deep note - which is rather humorous given Bob’s minuscule size.

Clouds outside grow heavier as the song builds. Rains and waves pelt The Singin’ Siren, as lightning bolts cut across the grey skies. Joe’s cannon sways with the ship’s rocking, until finally rolling away stage left. His song is unceremoniously cut short.





ACROSS THE WESTERN SEA
The Merry Mariners with The Barnacle Chorus & Naughty Nate

(0:00 - 0:57)

The Merry Mariners return to elevate spirits with the upbeat “Across the Western Sea,” as the Barnacle Chorus continues to sing along. An anchor swings like a chandelier over the audience. Naughty Nate clings to the anchor. Nate is a manic nautilus in a sailor cap, who belts out a bug-eyed tune with deranged energy.

Visible in the windows, the ship dives underwater! This is a surprising moment for the audience, though the bellowing brigands barely behold it. Leaks spring in the wooden planks, and continue leaking for the show’s remainder (harmlessly emptying into unseen drains).





YO HO (A PIRATE’S LIFE FOR ME)
Kevin the Kraken with Bos’n Bill & The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 1:03)

As a brief, jokey interlude, The Porthole Trio sings this Pirates of the Caribbean favorite while Bos’n Bill plays his accordion. Kevin the Kraken swims past in the cabin, then suddenly, physically bursts through the left side walls! Blue lighting envelops the theater, as the audience is seemingly plunged underwater, not that they mind at all. Cold air vents and bubble machines complete the unconvincing-yet-playful underwater effect.

Kevin’s massive beak joins along in song, booming out a deep baritone. Captain Bawker loudly objects, but he is muffled as the mast sail lowers in front of his pulpit. Lantern-lit projections on the mast feature period sketches of pirate life.





THE COASTS OF HIGH BARBARY
Grumpy Roger & Gus

(0:00 - 1:00)

As the song abruptly ends, Kevin swims off, once again passing the window. Ed redirects his spotlight high up to the crow’s nest above the unfurled mast. Here, Grumpy Roger performs “The Coasts of High Barbary,” with Spanish guitar accompaniment by his sidekick Gus the starfish.

Both Roger and Gus seemingly float in the theater’s watery currents, held aloft by unseen robot arms. Despite his adorable seahorse appearance, Roger is a very grumpy sort, constantly waving around a flintlock pistol. Visuals outside the cabin window show The Singin’ Siren drifting through a shipwreck graveyard. More projections on the mast depict vintage sketches of coastal Barbary.





FIFTEEN MEN ON A DEAD MAN’S CHEST
Melville with The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 0:47)

The mast rises up, and Captain Bawker tries to reassume command...when out of the dark waters outside comes Melville, a gigantic sperm whale dotted with harpoons. Melville is not an animatronic, but entirely screen-based.

With a great, booming voice, Melville bellows his rather creepy shanty. The Porthole Trio accompanies. The deep seas outside get increasingly black as the song plays out.





SPANISH LADIES
Saltwater Sally with The Merry Mariners

(0:00 - 0:53)

Next up, Saltwater Sally’s lilting, elegant “Spanish Ladies” provides a sharp counterpoint to Melville’s dirge. Sally is an animatronic dolphin riding in a lifeboat which swings above the forecastle from cargo netting. The theater gets darker and darker, until the only lights are from dozens of deep sea jellyfish, seen both outside in the window and indoors drifting up and down from the ceiling, their otherworldly pink bioluminescent hues granting Sally’s song a beautiful poetic backdrop.




SHOW ME THE WAY TO GO HOME
Tipsy McGee with The Barnacle Chorus

(0:00 - 0:47)

Suddenly all lights go out, instantly replaced by Ed’s spotlight highlighting a fearsome Gothic pipe organ on stage left. But despite its scary appearances, the instrument sounds like a honkytonk piano, one played by Tipsy McGee the severely intoxicated octopus. Tipsy hammers out “Show Me the Way to Go Home,” which famously featured in Jaws, while the Barnacle Chorus drunkenly joins in.

Tipsy constantly plays to the audience, peeking out from under a slop bucket he wears for a hat. Three of Tipsy’s arms tickle the ivories, while the other arms feature a pegleg, a hook hand, and several bottles of rum. Throughout Tipsy’s sloshed serenade, The Singin’ Siren rises up and reaches the ocean’s surface. The in-theater water effects drain away, and the leaks stop.





THE DUBLIN PUB CRAWL
Full Cast

(0:00 - 1:50)

Sunlight bathes the entire hull theater, revealing the entire cast all at once! Everyone, audience included, joins in together to croon “The Dublin Pub Crawl,” a wonderfully joyous ditty, a delightfully deranged drinking song which serves as our finale. Outside in the cabin window, The Singin’ Siren returns to the Harbortown docks.

Ed’s spotlights shut off on cast members one-by-one, as their voices cut off as well. The rest continue to sing and play as the song lyrics compound in their drunken complexity. Ultimately, 1:30 into the song, the seaweed curtain draws across the rambunctious Merry Mariners, muffling them as the unending song slowly fades away. Captain Johnny Bawker upon his pulpit thanks the audience for setting sail with his crew of unruly misfits, and bids them all a fond shore leave.

Including brief intervals in between songs, the show runs roughly 14 minutes. The performance is now officially over, with exit doors opening to the left, even though a few performers remain...





LEAVE HER JOHNNY
Captain Johnny Bawker with The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 2:12)

Performed entirely acapella as guests depart, “Leave Her Johnny” is a fitting farewell tune full of melancholy and regret. Captain Johnny Bawker leads, with backing by the Porthole Trio.

Guests head out through a wooden side passage. Perched atop the ultimate exit door frame is the final animatronic, Sir Reginald Fitzgerald Raferty Joyce Sporkbottom III (or so states a name placard), a mindless parrot which simply shrieks out “Awk! Fare thee well!” on repeat. Guests emerge back into Harbortown.
 

Mickeynerd17

Well-Known Member
View attachment 509303

Coming to Port Voyage, a new animatronic show that will simultaneously serve as the park thesis statement while mentally scarring everyone unfortunate enough to walk inside.

More Pooh Talk combines Disney characters across mediums into one “original” show. The show lasts thirty minutes and contains nine original songs.


SHOW EXPERIENCE
Guests enter a discrete circular building near the center of the park hub, but once inside, find themselves transported to the large and eccentric Atrium.

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Benches line the walls. A circular firepit rests at the center. Along the walls are four stages (initially enclosed by red curtains) which contain the animatronic characters. Each stage is differently themed: there is a Tiki Bar, a Kitchen, a Forest, and a Beach. These curtains gradually unveil as the story progresses.


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The show beings with the curtain opening on the first stage: a tropical Tiki bar. A Tiki Totem rests at the center of the bar. To the Totem’s left is Mickey Mouse. To the Totem’s left is Goofy. In the back is an original character, the Jokester, a friendly jester resting on piano.

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The Tiki Totem welcomes everyone to More Pooh Talk, an occult cult dedicated to resurrecting Winnie the Pooh from cultural obscurity. Today, they will sacrifice one of their fellow “Pooh-Peas” for the great Pooh God. Tiki introduces his fellow cult members through his tier list (“Welcome / Tiki’s Tier List”).

With Tiki’s tier list finished, it is time for the members of the cult to prove their worth. Whoever offers the least to the cult will be thrown into the Ring of Fire (“Ring of Fire” by Johnny Cash). They will begin with Fozzie Bear, who will teach us how to cook.



NOMINEE ONE: FOZZIE BEAR
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The stage to the right of Tiki opens, revealing a Kitchen with an animatronic Fozzie Bear. Fozzie is an expert on cooking. He explains the most important part of cooking a meal is the presentation. Especially having a unique presentation. As he sings along, he makes sure his cardboard and foam sandwich is as beautiful as can be (“The Presentation Parade”). When he finishes, his plate incredible… if you don’t consider the fact it’s literally cardboard and foam.

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Tiki, Mickey, Goofy, and Jokester love Fozzie’s meal but take issue with his ball pit in the kitchen. To make this known, they sing a song (“Not Found of the Ball Pit”).

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While the others are pleased by Fozzie’s work, Goofy takes issue with Fozzie’s mere presence. He is upset because when he learned a bear would be joining their gang, he had wanted Yogi Bear, the greatest bear of all time. Tiki and Goofy get into a rap battle over whether Yogi Bear is terrible or amazing (“The Yogi Bear Rap”).

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The Yogi rap is suddenly stopped mid-way by… HULK! HULK BURST THROUGH KITCHEN SET! HULK ANGRY AT SILLY SACRIFICE COMPETITION! HULK WANT MUTINY! (“Hulk Want a Mutiny”)



NOMINEE TWO: SONNY ECLIPSE
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It is now time for the second nomination. The stage across Fozzie opens to reveal a forest scene. Sonny Eclipse is resting on a fallen log, surrounded by animals of all kinds. Sonny needed a break from all that hustle-and-bustle of Tomorrowland DJing, so he moved to a wooden shack in Maine and became friendly with all the animals. Sonny sings his animal folk song… unfortunately, he couldn’t cut back any of the folklore so he can only relegate 5 seconds to each song on the banjo (“The Animal Folklore Song”).

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The banjo is halted when the armed and potentially dangerous WolfBot arrives, intent of maybe or maybe not killing Sonny Eclipse. Luckily Sonny happens to be friends with Keanu Reeves, so John Wick inexplicably shows up as scares WolfBot into Windows Error Messages.

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Across the set, Fozzie asks how Sonny got the animals to like him so much. Sonny starts into his long, complex yet interesting backstory when Mickey interrupts and begins the third nomination.



NOMINEE THREE: KERMIT THE FROG
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Satisfied with Sonny’s showing, the Pooh-Peas prepare for the final nomination… Kermit the Frog! But wait… Kermit hasn’t shown up!

As Tiki calls out for Kermit, Kermit shouts down from upstairs that he is in the middle of Cats (2019), which he considers the greatest film of all time. The judges decide to skip this process and get right to the votes.

Tiki votes to sacrifice Fozzie, Mickey votes to sacrifice Sonny, and Jokester votes to sacrifice Kermit. This leaves Goofy the one who has to decide the vote, leading to a song (“Why Am I Always Tiebreaker?”) Eventually Goofy flips a coin and decides to kill Kermit.

But before the sacrifice can begin… the fourth curtain opens!

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If you thought I was high before, think again! For absolutely no apparent reason, a talking Space Mountain with googly eyes and a giant red mouth starts singing about friendship (“Space & Pi’s Friendship Song”). The animatronic Space Mountain is joined by an even weirder talking Pi Symbol resting on a giant cake. The two are trying to convince the Pooh-Peas to not sacrifice Kermit, but the cultists won’t budge: a sacrifice must be made to resurrect the Pooh Gods.

And so, finally, we have reached the moment you have all been waiting for. Kermit the Frog, confused from being pulled from his beloved Cats (2019), is attached to the rope and dangles down the ceiling in the center of the room.

Sonny Eclipse just so happens to be friends with the ghost of Johnny Cash, so they play a reprise of “Ring of Fire” as Kermit slowly descends into the fire.

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But just before Kermit is sacrificed, he reminds Tiki that he has always been a loyal Pooh-Pea, citing many examples from the past. This causes Tiki to mid-sacrifice change his mind and let Kermit live! The rope pulls back up to the ceiling as everyone sighs in disapproval.

Despite everyone’s general sadness that they will not be able to resurrect Winnie the Pooh from cultural obscurity, the Jokester reminds everyone that just because things didn’t seem to go the way we wanted today, there is always another time. What’s important is we learned everyone is special in their own special way. The Jokester then pulls out the piano and plays a finale song, while everyone sings along (“Everything’s Super”).



FINAL SONG LIST
Welcome / Tiki’s Tier List
Ring of Fire
The Presentation Parade
Not Found of the Ball Pit
Yogi Bear Rap
Hulk Want a Mutiny
The Animal Folkore Song
Why Am I Always Tiebreaker
Space & Pi’s Friendship Song
Ring of Fire (Reprise)

Everything’s Super

Coming to Harbortown USA in Disneyland 1986 will be a newly enhanced and plussed clone from Disneyland Shanghai (of the Creator Games Universe). The updated version of this animatronic theater show is being handled by the same imagineer who began his career with this project back in early 2017.

The Symphony of the Strange
(交響樂的奇怪)


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You enter into the mysterious house of Dr. Otto Tiberious, A researcher who has travelled the world uncovering secrets, mysteries, and the arcane. And he has gathered them all here.

You are welcomed into a makeshift theater Dr. Otto T. (Pronounced almost like "Oddity") has set up in his private study. He promises to present to you the Symphony of the Strange. The curtain rises and it appears our host is no where to be seen. Though there are many artifacts and objects scattered about.

The study almost feels like a Museum of the Weird ;)
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"Where is the Doctor?" the audience asks themselves. Then, the chair in the center of the room opens his eyes.

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"Right. So, it appears I have been turned into a chair. No reason to let that stop the show though."

Dr. Otto T. has recently and mysteriously been transformed into a chair. He talks about his metamorphosis as calmly and simply as most people would talk about stubbing their toes. As if being transformed into a chair was nothing more than a mild inconvenience and a common occurrence. Not any reason to stop his show.
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After introducing himself, he explains that he came to Harbortown 13 years ago because of its unusually high concentration of the unusual (As evidenced by the Haunted Lighthouse, the ghost writers in the library, the Headless Horseman nearby, etc). Otto is fascinated by the fantastic and has spent his life seeking it out. He has even written a song about it.

A simple metronome plays as he sings:

-----------SONG-----------
I am curious
About the curious
I wonder
About the wonders all around
If you are curious
And seek out
The fantastic
It can always be found

Some say I'm crazy
Or call me deranged
But I just listen
To the Symphony of the Strange
-------------SONG-------------

It's a bit boring. A bit simple. But the Doctor explains that just like life, sometimes you have to really listen to hear what makes it special. The little details that are out of the norm and make life grand.

He then goes through and introduced a few of the oddities he has found in short vignettes. Each oddity is represented by an animatronic (sometimes enhanced with a projection effect).

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  • A mummy notable for being somehow both thousands of years hold and having a call phone in his pocket.
  • A man made out of candle wax who wails and moans as he is constantly melting for all eternity.
  • An Aquarium with skeletal fish swimming through it.
  • A living plant with monstrous features.
  • A mysterious prism that produces dazzling light shows.
  • A heart belonging to a creature of unimaginable size and shape buried out of sight underneath the floor boards.
Lastly, an enchanted, evil songstress long locked away in a chest in the center of the room. She breaks out and tries to sing her siren song and cast her magic spells in order to subdue the Doctor and take all his oddities as a way to increase her own power. The bat that rests on her head sings harmonies with her.

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Dr. Otto T. was prepared for her attempted escape though. The Crystal ball in the center of the room lights up and acts as a mystical fail safe trapping the songstress back in her chest.

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The Doctor then tells us that since we now know of the weirdness all around, perhaps this time we'll be able to appreciate the Symphony of the Strange. The song plays again, but this time each oddity from the show (and even a few more) plays a part adding to the song.
  • The ringtone from the mummies cellphone providing a nice melody
  • The Candle Man's wailing providing a melodious back up vocal
  • The bubbles popping in the undead fish tank adding to the percussion
  • The monstrous plant shaking its leaves almost like a maraca
  • The prism adding a lightshow to go with the song
  • The heartbeat providing a strong bass beat.
The song now is a full, beautiful, unique, and weird Symphony of the Strange! The Doctor tells us to always look where other don't and to never count out the odd ones out. For as long as we search for it, we will always find that the most beautiful of songs is hidden beneath the surface.


The lobby for guests to wait for the show to start would wind through the Doctor's house.

The theaters would be small to keep the show having an intimate feel, but there would be two theaters for capacity.

The show itself would be done similarly to the Enchanted Tiki Room using audio animatronics and other traditional effects. Occasional projection effects will be used for what is impossible or impractical using practical effects.

The tone would be a dark comedy. Not too serious or scary, but fitting perfectly into the darker, more adult Harbortown USA. The comedy is kept primarily witty and dry, though the occasional clever pun may slip through.

The theater holds about 250 people per show.
The show lasts 8 minutes.
With two theaters and no unexpected delays, it can cycle 3,750 people through per hour.

Ladybugs and grasshoppers, bugs and grubs, 1986 Blue Sky Park proudly presents...

The Ugly Bug Ball
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A new addition to Seasons of Fantasy - specifically, its London Spring section, this attraction is a grand animatronic show with a cast of kooky, cartoony characters a la Country Bear Jamboree and the Enchanted Tiki Room. Guests approaching the theater will feel as though they're shrinking in size, thanks to the plants and fungi getting larger and larger. By the time you walk under the entry sign, the blades of grass towering over your head imply that you're currently no bigger than an ant! Adding to this, said entry sign is actually just the root of a gigantic tree with the words "UGLY BUG BALL" carved into it (perhaps by a termite?).

Once under the root, you've arrived in the theater's holding area. From the looks of it, you've actually crawled into a subterranean tunnel. The walls and floor seem to be made of dirt, with an "earthy" smell pumped through the air vents. If you don't want to stand until the next show begins, just have a seat on a small rock. Roots hang down from the ceiling of the room. Eventually, a "wall" of dirt gives way (actually, a cleverly-disguised door opens), allowing us to head into the theater.

While the theater is held inside a show building, anyone can be fooled into thinking that we're back outside. "Walls" are formed by enormous blades of grass. The "stage" is constructed from discarded candy boxes, tree bark, and rocks. The roof is painted to look like a sunny, cloud-dotted sky. "Benches" are formed from leaves. Even the floor still appears to be made of dirt. After a cast member gives the usual "no food, no drink, no flash photography" spiel, the show begins.


A worm suddenly pokes its head out of the ground in front of the stage. This is our host for the evening, Irving "Irv" Worm, and he fills us in as to why we're here - Spring has finally arrived, and after a long cold winter he and his insect friends have decided to throw a "Music Festival" to celebrate. "Now, I know some of you folks might not be too fond of bugs," Irving admits. "You probably think we're creepy, ugly, irritating pests. But I'll tell you something - we bugs might be small, but we've got big hearts. And we'd like to show you just what we can do. Why don't we get this festival started?"

From there, more and more bugs appear and strut their stuff. The show features a total of nine acts, which each character singing an original song. Irving starts off the show with a musical number of his own, a jazz number called "What's Bugging You?", accompanied by a chorus of scat-singing crickets. From there, he introduces...

- The Beetles, a Beatles-esque band consisting of a stag beetle named Pete, a ground beetle named Jack, a rhinoceros beetle named Ralph, and a sap beetle named Greg. They sing a rock song, "Big Blue Beetle Eyes".
- Polka Dots, a ladybug who squeezes and stretches a discarded bendy straw like an accordion as she sings "The Ladybird Polka".
- The Butterfly Gals, who perform acrobatics and soar over the audience as they sing the operatic "Colors of Spring".
- Jump and Jive, a pair of wisecracking grasshoppers who banter with and pull pranks on each other as they perform a comedic ditty, "Flyswatters and Pesticide".
- Slime-Soaked Sid, a snail with a talent for singing the blues. He performs the song "Slow-Moving".
- Gloria, a sly Spanish spider who tries to lure Irving over via a seductive number, "Web of Love", but Irving isn't fooled - mainly because Gloria doesn't do a very good job of hiding the fact that she really wants to eat the worm.
- An entire colony of army ants who march through the theater (and under the guests' seats!) as they rev up the audience with "The Incredible Ant".
- Moth Goth, a goth band of six dark-colored moths who take the show in a darker direction with their heavy metal-flavored song "Bat Food".
- Apollo and the Sparklers, a quintet of fireflies who light up the theater with the jugband-influenced "Glow in the Dark".

Finally, the bugs all gather together as Irving attempts to lead them all in a reprise of "What's Bugging You?". Alas, just as he can get them to finally stop arguing and join him in song, the clouds darken and rain begins to fall in the theater. The bugs scatter - except for Irving, who tells us that worms love a rainy day and bids the audience farewell before diving back down into the dirt.

Guests exit out into Grasshopper Gifts and Goodies, a combination gift shop and confectionary that seems to be held inside an old box of Animal Crackers. Here they can find a selection of merchandise based on the show and its characters, from stuffed Irvings to amusing t-shirts.


Or, they can visit the shop's candy counter and pick out an insect-related snack. Cake pops that look like ladybugs, caterpillars made from marshmallows, cups of "dirt" (actually crumbled cookies) with gummy worms, cupcakes, and chocolate-covered pretzels are among the sweet treats available.

The Ugly Bug Ball makes for a perfect counterpart to the animatronic shows found at other Disney parks. It has catchy songs, lovable characters, clever special effects, and a refreshing lack of IPs. Guests of all ages are sure to be swarming back to the attraction for more!

WARNING: LONG!
Also, I HIGHLY recommend you listen to the songs. I put a bit of care into curating them.

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THE
MERRY MARINERS’
MUSICAL MUTINY

It all started with a mutiny!

A motley crew of sea creatures emerged from the oceans, drawn by the joyful sea shanties of Harbortown. Driven by song, these beasts commandeered the merchant sailing ship Singin’ Siren. They mutinied against the vessel’s human deckhands, tossed them to shore…

...and transformed the craft into a musical theater venue!

Now The Singin’ Siren is host to the greatest sea shanty revue in all of Harbortown! A vast cast of animatronic marine critters serenades guests with the world’s very best nautical tunes. These boisterously catchy work songs have survived for centuries. You cannot listen to such jaunty ditties without grinning, tapping your feet and singing along! An incredibly fun experience awaits within The Merry Mariners’ Musical Mutiny!



Guests can find the show located on Harbortown's outer shores close to Sleeping Hollow Chilling Tour. Capstan Stan is an animatronic sea lion, who boasts a comic Marc Davis look like all the show's characters. Stan is a literal “barker.” Perched upon his capstan and shielded from the elements under a relocated mast, Stan simply barks at passersby with true sea lion bravado.

Entering past Stan’s gates, guests reach an outdoors pre-show courtyard in the shadows of The Singin’ Siren. Palm trees and ferns provide shade. Seating is around a terraced garden of exposed coral reefs and tide pools. Gentle flowing waters gurgle. There are interactive urchins and oysters in the shallow pools, which recede or clam up when guests get too close.

The ship's bowsprite is the Singin’ Siren herself, a magical semi-animatronic wench who provides pre-show merriment. In a fine soprano voice she sings a series of sea shanties we weren’t able to fit into the main show, songs such as “
Randy Dandy-Oh,” “The Jolly Roving Tar,” and “Roll the Old Chariot Along.”

When showtime arrives, a scallywag cast member grabs guests' attention with a loud, piercing “ARRRRGHH!” Guests enter The Singin’ Siren ship through a gangway just to the right of the bowsprite.



SHOW

The Singin’ Siren Theater fills the entire wooden hull. Rows of seating all face towards a stage, which is presently hidden behind seaweed curtains. The curtains feature a Jolly Roger version of the drama & comedy masks.

The ship interior has been heavily modified to serve as a theater venue, with several other ship components relocated and modified. The ship’s pulpit is mounted to stage right below a mast, its prow poking out over the audience. Theatrical lighting comes courtesy of Ed, an animatronic anglerfish who hangs in the rafters and shines his lightbulb lure like a spotlight.

Our host appears on the pulpit, lit by Ed. Meet Captain Johnny Bawker, our M.C. - “M.C.” here meaning both “Master of Ceremonies” and “Master & Commander.” Captain Bawker is an animatronic sea turtle regally clad in an admiral’s uniform. With a commanding alto voice, Bawker welcomes guests to his Musical Mutiny. Following a brief lead-in proclaiming the majesty of sea shanties, Bawker bellows “Now, me hearties...on with ye show!




DRUNKEN SAILOR
Captain Johnny Bawker with The Merry Mariners

(0:00 - 2:38)

Curtains open to reveal a forecastle main stage. This platform is set before the captain’s cabin, where large windows span the width of stern. The windows look out onto a projection screen, which changes throughout the revue; for now it views the Harbortown docks.

“Drunken Sailor,” a boisterous, raucous tune, rings out. As voices first sing “Way hey up she rises,” on cue a band of brigands rises from within the forecastle. Meet The Merry Mariners, an engaging animatronic crew of ne’er-do-well sea creatures, all playing their instruments in perfect animated unison. Let’s meet the mateys…

On concertina accordion is Bos’n Bill, a sting ray. Bill is a happy-go-lucky sort who wears a tricorn hat.

Conrad is a fiddler crab, so naturally he plays the fiddle, drawing a bow across the strings with his claw. Conrad’s eyes are comically magnified by a thick pair of goggles.

Accompanying Conrad on the mandolin is Shanghai Sam, a stoic squid with a wool longshoreman’s cap and a corncob pipe. Sam plays his instrument using Slim Jim, a sawfish.

Rising out of a treasure chest are Port and Starboard, a pair of clams who play the rhythm bones.

One-Eyed Rory plays the tin whistle. Rory, a short-tempered blowfish who wears an eyepatch and a pirate’s bandana, constantly inflates and deflates as he plays.

Lastly, R. R. Jones is a hammerhead shark who plays the bodhran drum by just constantly slamming his head against it. Good ol’ R. R. is an oversized simpleton taken to constantly screaming “Arr! Arr!” at random intervals. He is covered in tribal tattoos and bone piercings like Moby-Dick’s Queequeg.

With instrumental intervals in the tune, Bawker seizes the moment to introduce the mutineers. “Drunken Sailor” plays out in its entirety, as audiences are still finding their sea legs. Songs to come will only feature a verse or two each.





BLOW THE MAN DOWN
Captain Johnny Bawker with The Merry Mariners & The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 1:05)

As “Blow the Man Down” begins, the ship begins its journey out to open ocean as witnessed through the captain’s windows. This song is a bit of a cool down after the jaunty opener.

While the Merry Mariners continue to play and sing, they are now joined by The Porthole Trio, three tenors who poke in from three portholes on the right wall. Let’s introduce these salty new miscreants.

Their leader is Benchley, a great white shark. Despite his scars and embedded fishhook “jewelry,” Benchley is really a gentle giant.

Next is Murray the moray eel, who somehow manages to sing despite the cutlass held in his mouth.

Finnegan is a narwhal who likes to wave his pointy horn around wildly mid-song. Finnegan sports gold teeth and a single golden hoop earring.

This song concludes, and Captain Bawker introduces the next act...which he will continue to do throughout the revue.





HAUL AWAY JOE
Haul Away Joe & Baritone Bob with The Barnacle Chorus

(0:00 - 1:11)

Storm clouds gather on the seas outside as the dirgelike “Haul Away Joe” begins. The Merry Mariners descend into their stage, and out rolls Haul Away Joe himself onto the forecastle, strapped to a wheeled cannon. Joe is a barracuda, bound in heavy chains & shackles, who sings a mournful shanty about labors & laments.

Ed shines his spotlights on the rear and side walls. He reveals the accompanying
Barnacle Chorus - dozens upon dozens of tiny barnacles singing as one. Every once in awhile, a tiny clownfish named Baritone Bob pops out from Joe’s cannon to sing a single very, very deep note - which is rather humorous given Bob’s minuscule size.

Clouds outside grow heavier as the song builds. Rains and waves pelt The Singin’ Siren, as lightning bolts cut across the grey skies. Joe’s cannon sways with the ship’s rocking, until finally rolling away stage left. His song is unceremoniously cut short.





ACROSS THE WESTERN SEA
The Merry Mariners with The Barnacle Chorus & Naughty Nate

(0:00 - 0:57)

The Merry Mariners return to elevate spirits with the upbeat “Across the Western Sea,” as the Barnacle Chorus continues to sing along. An anchor swings like a chandelier over the audience. Naughty Nate clings to the anchor. Nate is a manic nautilus in a sailor cap, who belts out a bug-eyed tune with deranged energy.

Visible in the windows, the ship dives underwater! This is a surprising moment for the audience, though the bellowing brigands barely behold it. Leaks spring in the wooden planks, and continue leaking for the show’s remainder (harmlessly emptying into unseen drains).





YO HO (A PIRATE’S LIFE FOR ME)
Kevin the Kraken with Bos’n Bill & The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 1:03)

As a brief, jokey interlude, The Porthole Trio sings this Pirates of the Caribbean favorite while Bos’n Bill plays his accordion. Kevin the Kraken swims past in the cabin, then suddenly, physically bursts through the left side walls! Blue lighting envelops the theater, as the audience is seemingly plunged underwater, not that they mind at all. Cold air vents and bubble machines complete the unconvincing-yet-playful underwater effect.

Kevin’s massive beak joins along in song, booming out a deep baritone. Captain Bawker loudly objects, but he is muffled as the mast sail lowers in front of his pulpit. Lantern-lit projections on the mast feature period sketches of pirate life.





THE COASTS OF HIGH BARBARY
Grumpy Roger & Gus

(0:00 - 1:00)

As the song abruptly ends, Kevin swims off, once again passing the window. Ed redirects his spotlight high up to the crow’s nest above the unfurled mast. Here, Grumpy Roger performs “The Coasts of High Barbary,” with Spanish guitar accompaniment by his sidekick Gus the starfish.

Both Roger and Gus seemingly float in the theater’s watery currents, held aloft by unseen robot arms. Despite his adorable seahorse appearance, Roger is a very grumpy sort, constantly waving around a flintlock pistol. Visuals outside the cabin window show The Singin’ Siren drifting through a shipwreck graveyard. More projections on the mast depict vintage sketches of coastal Barbary.





FIFTEEN MEN ON A DEAD MAN’S CHEST
Melville with The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 0:47)

The mast rises up, and Captain Bawker tries to reassume command...when out of the dark waters outside comes Melville, a gigantic sperm whale dotted with harpoons. Melville is not an animatronic, but entirely screen-based.

With a great, booming voice, Melville bellows his rather creepy shanty. The Porthole Trio accompanies. The deep seas outside get increasingly black as the song plays out.





SPANISH LADIES
Saltwater Sally with The Merry Mariners

(0:00 - 0:53)

Next up, Saltwater Sally’s lilting, elegant “Spanish Ladies” provides a sharp counterpoint to Melville’s dirge. Sally is an animatronic dolphin riding in a lifeboat which swings above the forecastle from cargo netting. The theater gets darker and darker, until the only lights are from dozens of deep sea jellyfish, seen both outside in the window and indoors drifting up and down from the ceiling, their otherworldly pink bioluminescent hues granting Sally’s song a beautiful poetic backdrop.




SHOW ME THE WAY TO GO HOME
Tipsy McGee with The Barnacle Chorus

(0:00 - 0:47)

Suddenly all lights go out, instantly replaced by Ed’s spotlight highlighting a fearsome Gothic pipe organ on stage left. But despite its scary appearances, the instrument sounds like a honkytonk piano, one played by Tipsy McGee the severely intoxicated octopus. Tipsy hammers out “Show Me the Way to Go Home,” which famously featured in Jaws, while the Barnacle Chorus drunkenly joins in.

Tipsy constantly plays to the audience, peeking out from under a slop bucket he wears for a hat. Three of Tipsy’s arms tickle the ivories, while the other arms feature a pegleg, a hook hand, and several bottles of rum. Throughout Tipsy’s sloshed serenade, The Singin’ Siren rises up and reaches the ocean’s surface. The in-theater water effects drain away, and the leaks stop.





THE DUBLIN PUB CRAWL
Full Cast

(0:00 - 1:50)

Sunlight bathes the entire hull theater, revealing the entire cast all at once! Everyone, audience included, joins in together to croon “The Dublin Pub Crawl,” a wonderfully joyous ditty, a delightfully deranged drinking song which serves as our finale. Outside in the cabin window, The Singin’ Siren returns to the Harbortown docks.

Ed’s spotlights shut off on cast members one-by-one, as their voices cut off as well. The rest continue to sing and play as the song lyrics compound in their drunken complexity. Ultimately, 1:30 into the song, the seaweed curtain draws across the rambunctious Merry Mariners, muffling them as the unending song slowly fades away. Captain Johnny Bawker upon his pulpit thanks the audience for setting sail with his crew of unruly misfits, and bids them all a fond shore leave.

Including brief intervals in between songs, the show runs roughly 14 minutes. The performance is now officially over, with exit doors opening to the left, even though a few performers remain...





LEAVE HER JOHNNY
Captain Johnny Bawker with The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 2:12)

Performed entirely acapella as guests depart, “Leave Her Johnny” is a fitting farewell tune full of melancholy and regret. Captain Johnny Bawker leads, with backing by the Porthole Trio.

Guests head out through a wooden side passage. Perched atop the ultimate exit door frame is the final animatronic, Sir Reginald Fitzgerald Raferty Joyce Sporkbottom III (or so states a name placard), a mindless parrot which simply shrieks out “Awk! Fare thee well!” on repeat. Guests emerge back into Harbortown.

*me absolutely freaking out because I STILL don't know what to do*
 

Brer Panther

Well-Known Member
WARNING: LONG!
Also, I HIGHLY recommend you listen to the songs. I put a bit of care into curating them.

pirate-ship-nenad-vasic.jpg

THE
MERRY MARINERS’
MUSICAL MUTINY

It all started with a mutiny!

A motley crew of sea creatures emerged from the oceans, drawn by the joyful sea shanties of Harbortown. Driven by song, these beasts commandeered the merchant sailing ship Singin’ Siren. They mutinied against the vessel’s human deckhands, tossed them to shore…

...and transformed the craft into a musical theater venue!

Now The Singin’ Siren is host to the greatest sea shanty revue in all of Harbortown! A vast cast of animatronic marine critters serenades guests with the world’s very best nautical tunes. These boisterously catchy work songs have survived for centuries. You cannot listen to such jaunty ditties without grinning, tapping your feet and singing along! An incredibly fun experience awaits within The Merry Mariners’ Musical Mutiny!



Guests can find the show located on Harbortown's outer shores close to Sleeping Hollow Chilling Tour. Capstan Stan is an animatronic sea lion, who boasts a comic Marc Davis look like all the show's characters. Stan is a literal “barker.” Perched upon his capstan and shielded from the elements under a relocated mast, Stan simply barks at passersby with true sea lion bravado.

Entering past Stan’s gates, guests reach an outdoors pre-show courtyard in the shadows of The Singin’ Siren. Palm trees and ferns provide shade. Seating is around a terraced garden of exposed coral reefs and tide pools. Gentle flowing waters gurgle. There are interactive urchins and oysters in the shallow pools, which recede or clam up when guests get too close.

The ship's bowsprite is the Singin’ Siren herself, a magical semi-animatronic wench who provides pre-show merriment. In a fine soprano voice she sings a series of sea shanties we weren’t able to fit into the main show, songs such as “
Randy Dandy-Oh,” “The Jolly Roving Tar,” and “Roll the Old Chariot Along.”

When showtime arrives, a scallywag cast member grabs guests' attention with a loud, piercing “ARRRRGHH!” Guests enter The Singin’ Siren ship through a gangway just to the right of the bowsprite.



SHOW

The Singin’ Siren Theater fills the entire wooden hull. Rows of seating all face towards a stage, which is presently hidden behind seaweed curtains. The curtains feature a Jolly Roger version of the drama & comedy masks.

The ship interior has been heavily modified to serve as a theater venue, with several other ship components relocated and modified. The ship’s pulpit is mounted to stage right below a mast, its prow poking out over the audience. Theatrical lighting comes courtesy of Ed, an animatronic anglerfish who hangs in the rafters and shines his lightbulb lure like a spotlight.

Our host appears on the pulpit, lit by Ed. Meet Captain Johnny Bawker, our M.C. - “M.C.” here meaning both “Master of Ceremonies” and “Master & Commander.” Captain Bawker is an animatronic sea turtle regally clad in an admiral’s uniform. With a commanding alto voice, Bawker welcomes guests to his Musical Mutiny. Following a brief lead-in proclaiming the majesty of sea shanties, Bawker bellows “Now, me hearties...on with ye show!




DRUNKEN SAILOR
Captain Johnny Bawker with The Merry Mariners

(0:00 - 2:38)

Curtains open to reveal a forecastle main stage. This platform is set before the captain’s cabin, where large windows span the width of stern. The windows look out onto a projection screen, which changes throughout the revue; for now it views the Harbortown docks.

“Drunken Sailor,” a boisterous, raucous tune, rings out. As voices first sing “Way hey up she rises,” on cue a band of brigands rises from within the forecastle. Meet The Merry Mariners, an engaging animatronic crew of ne’er-do-well sea creatures, all playing their instruments in perfect animated unison. Let’s meet the mateys…

On concertina accordion is Bos’n Bill, a sting ray. Bill is a happy-go-lucky sort who wears a tricorn hat.

Conrad is a fiddler crab, so naturally he plays the fiddle, drawing a bow across the strings with his claw. Conrad’s eyes are comically magnified by a thick pair of goggles.

Accompanying Conrad on the mandolin is Shanghai Sam, a stoic squid with a wool longshoreman’s cap and a corncob pipe. Sam plays his instrument using Slim Jim, a sawfish.

Rising out of a treasure chest are Port and Starboard, a pair of clams who play the rhythm bones.

One-Eyed Rory plays the tin whistle. Rory, a short-tempered blowfish who wears an eyepatch and a pirate’s bandana, constantly inflates and deflates as he plays.

Lastly, R. R. Jones is a hammerhead shark who plays the bodhran drum by just constantly slamming his head against it. Good ol’ R. R. is an oversized simpleton taken to constantly screaming “Arr! Arr!” at random intervals. He is covered in tribal tattoos and bone piercings like Moby-Dick’s Queequeg.

With instrumental intervals in the tune, Bawker seizes the moment to introduce the mutineers. “Drunken Sailor” plays out in its entirety, as audiences are still finding their sea legs. Songs to come will only feature a verse or two each.





BLOW THE MAN DOWN
Captain Johnny Bawker with The Merry Mariners & The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 1:05)

As “Blow the Man Down” begins, the ship begins its journey out to open ocean as witnessed through the captain’s windows. This song is a bit of a cool down after the jaunty opener.

While the Merry Mariners continue to play and sing, they are now joined by The Porthole Trio, three tenors who poke in from three portholes on the right wall. Let’s introduce these salty new miscreants.

Their leader is Benchley, a great white shark. Despite his scars and embedded fishhook “jewelry,” Benchley is really a gentle giant.

Next is Murray the moray eel, who somehow manages to sing despite the cutlass held in his mouth.

Finnegan is a narwhal who likes to wave his pointy horn around wildly mid-song. Finnegan sports gold teeth and a single golden hoop earring.

This song concludes, and Captain Bawker introduces the next act...which he will continue to do throughout the revue.





HAUL AWAY JOE
Haul Away Joe & Baritone Bob with The Barnacle Chorus

(0:00 - 1:11)

Storm clouds gather on the seas outside as the dirgelike “Haul Away Joe” begins. The Merry Mariners descend into their stage, and out rolls Haul Away Joe himself onto the forecastle, strapped to a wheeled cannon. Joe is a barracuda, bound in heavy chains & shackles, who sings a mournful shanty about labors & laments.

Ed shines his spotlights on the rear and side walls. He reveals the accompanying
Barnacle Chorus - dozens upon dozens of tiny barnacles singing as one. Every once in awhile, a tiny clownfish named Baritone Bob pops out from Joe’s cannon to sing a single very, very deep note - which is rather humorous given Bob’s minuscule size.

Clouds outside grow heavier as the song builds. Rains and waves pelt The Singin’ Siren, as lightning bolts cut across the grey skies. Joe’s cannon sways with the ship’s rocking, until finally rolling away stage left. His song is unceremoniously cut short.





ACROSS THE WESTERN SEA
The Merry Mariners with The Barnacle Chorus & Naughty Nate

(0:00 - 0:57)

The Merry Mariners return to elevate spirits with the upbeat “Across the Western Sea,” as the Barnacle Chorus continues to sing along. An anchor swings like a chandelier over the audience. Naughty Nate clings to the anchor. Nate is a manic nautilus in a sailor cap, who belts out a bug-eyed tune with deranged energy.

Visible in the windows, the ship dives underwater! This is a surprising moment for the audience, though the bellowing brigands barely behold it. Leaks spring in the wooden planks, and continue leaking for the show’s remainder (harmlessly emptying into unseen drains).





YO HO (A PIRATE’S LIFE FOR ME)
Kevin the Kraken with Bos’n Bill & The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 1:03)

As a brief, jokey interlude, The Porthole Trio sings this Pirates of the Caribbean favorite while Bos’n Bill plays his accordion. Kevin the Kraken swims past in the cabin, then suddenly, physically bursts through the left side walls! Blue lighting envelops the theater, as the audience is seemingly plunged underwater, not that they mind at all. Cold air vents and bubble machines complete the unconvincing-yet-playful underwater effect.

Kevin’s massive beak joins along in song, booming out a deep baritone. Captain Bawker loudly objects, but he is muffled as the mast sail lowers in front of his pulpit. Lantern-lit projections on the mast feature period sketches of pirate life.





THE COASTS OF HIGH BARBARY
Grumpy Roger & Gus

(0:00 - 1:00)

As the song abruptly ends, Kevin swims off, once again passing the window. Ed redirects his spotlight high up to the crow’s nest above the unfurled mast. Here, Grumpy Roger performs “The Coasts of High Barbary,” with Spanish guitar accompaniment by his sidekick Gus the starfish.

Both Roger and Gus seemingly float in the theater’s watery currents, held aloft by unseen robot arms. Despite his adorable seahorse appearance, Roger is a very grumpy sort, constantly waving around a flintlock pistol. Visuals outside the cabin window show The Singin’ Siren drifting through a shipwreck graveyard. More projections on the mast depict vintage sketches of coastal Barbary.





FIFTEEN MEN ON A DEAD MAN’S CHEST
Melville with The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 0:47)

The mast rises up, and Captain Bawker tries to reassume command...when out of the dark waters outside comes Melville, a gigantic sperm whale dotted with harpoons. Melville is not an animatronic, but entirely screen-based.

With a great, booming voice, Melville bellows his rather creepy shanty. The Porthole Trio accompanies. The deep seas outside get increasingly black as the song plays out.





SPANISH LADIES
Saltwater Sally with The Merry Mariners

(0:00 - 0:53)

Next up, Saltwater Sally’s lilting, elegant “Spanish Ladies” provides a sharp counterpoint to Melville’s dirge. Sally is an animatronic dolphin riding in a lifeboat which swings above the forecastle from cargo netting. The theater gets darker and darker, until the only lights are from dozens of deep sea jellyfish, seen both outside in the window and indoors drifting up and down from the ceiling, their otherworldly pink bioluminescent hues granting Sally’s song a beautiful poetic backdrop.




SHOW ME THE WAY TO GO HOME
Tipsy McGee with The Barnacle Chorus

(0:00 - 0:47)

Suddenly all lights go out, instantly replaced by Ed’s spotlight highlighting a fearsome Gothic pipe organ on stage left. But despite its scary appearances, the instrument sounds like a honkytonk piano, one played by Tipsy McGee the severely intoxicated octopus. Tipsy hammers out “Show Me the Way to Go Home,” which famously featured in Jaws, while the Barnacle Chorus drunkenly joins in.

Tipsy constantly plays to the audience, peeking out from under a slop bucket he wears for a hat. Three of Tipsy’s arms tickle the ivories, while the other arms feature a pegleg, a hook hand, and several bottles of rum. Throughout Tipsy’s sloshed serenade, The Singin’ Siren rises up and reaches the ocean’s surface. The in-theater water effects drain away, and the leaks stop.





THE DUBLIN PUB CRAWL
Full Cast

(0:00 - 1:50)

Sunlight bathes the entire hull theater, revealing the entire cast all at once! Everyone, audience included, joins in together to croon “The Dublin Pub Crawl,” a wonderfully joyous ditty, a delightfully deranged drinking song which serves as our finale. Outside in the cabin window, The Singin’ Siren returns to the Harbortown docks.

Ed’s spotlights shut off on cast members one-by-one, as their voices cut off as well. The rest continue to sing and play as the song lyrics compound in their drunken complexity. Ultimately, 1:30 into the song, the seaweed curtain draws across the rambunctious Merry Mariners, muffling them as the unending song slowly fades away. Captain Johnny Bawker upon his pulpit thanks the audience for setting sail with his crew of unruly misfits, and bids them all a fond shore leave.

Including brief intervals in between songs, the show runs roughly 14 minutes. The performance is now officially over, with exit doors opening to the left, even though a few performers remain...





LEAVE HER JOHNNY
Captain Johnny Bawker with The Porthole Trio

(0:00 - 2:12)

Performed entirely acapella as guests depart, “Leave Her Johnny” is a fitting farewell tune full of melancholy and regret. Captain Johnny Bawker leads, with backing by the Porthole Trio.

Guests head out through a wooden side passage. Perched atop the ultimate exit door frame is the final animatronic, Sir Reginald Fitzgerald Raferty Joyce Sporkbottom III (or so states a name placard), a mindless parrot which simply shrieks out “Awk! Fare thee well!” on repeat. Guests emerge back into Harbortown.

You win.

Seriously, you win. You did exactly what I was hoping to do with MY idea, only much better and more thorough. I love this idea.
 

NateD1226

Well-Known Member
NateD1226's Reviews
Love me some entertainment!
joe fails GIF

Age of Magic
What a fun show! It felt unique, but still kept the Disney magic. The story was great and it really translated well into all of the IPs you selected. However, I think the transitions were a little rough with all the sets and stuff. That brings me to my point with how the realistic portion of it all seemed a little off. I haven’t read the full script yet since 30 pages is a lot, but I’ll give my thoughts on it once I am finished.

Despite the realism issues, this was a great show! It had a great message and the IP selections were awesome. I really loved the soundtrack as those are one of my favorite things in an entertainment prompt. Overall, a really solid project!


The Spirit of Invention
Let me start off by saying I absolutely LOVE the concept art. It’s simple but gets the point across. Having Eureka as the main character was great. The name choice and how it plays on all of these events was awesome. The show itself was great. Although, I do think it lacked some things. There were moments in the show that I felt needed a bit more just so it would have the same level of wow factor as the other scenes. There were also some small formatting issues but that doesn’t take away from the great show.

Overall, this show was great! The story and characters are awesome. I think with just a tiny bit more tweaking to some of the scenes, you got a perfect show.

P.S. The “click here to return to the main page” link at the bottom takes me to Four Winds Square lmao
 

NigelChanning

Well-Known Member
NateD1226's Reviews
Love me some entertainment!
joe fails GIF

Age of Magic
What a fun show! It felt unique, but still kept the Disney magic. The story was great and it really translated well into all of the IPs you selected. However, I think the transitions were a little rough with all the sets and stuff. That brings me to my point with how the realistic portion of it all seemed a little off. I haven’t read the full script yet since 30 pages is a lot, but I’ll give my thoughts on it once I am finished.

Despite the realism issues, this was a great show! It had a great message and the IP selections were awesome. I really loved the soundtrack as those are one of my favorite things in an entertainment prompt. Overall, a really solid project!


The Spirit of Invention
Let me start off by saying I absolutely LOVE the concept art. It’s simple but gets the point across. Having Eureka as the main character was great. The name choice and how it plays on all of these events was awesome. The show itself was great. Although, I do think it lacked some things. There were moments in the show that I felt needed a bit more just so it would have the same level of wow factor as the other scenes. There were also some small formatting issues but that doesn’t take away from the great show.

Overall, this show was great! The story and characters are awesome. I think with just a tiny bit more tweaking to some of the scenes, you got a perfect show.

P.S. The “click here to return to the main page” link at the bottom takes me to Four Winds Square lmao
OMG that Gif 😳😂

Looked like it hurt but it was surprisingly in-character.
 

PerGron

Well-Known Member
SEASONS OF CHANGE

Located in Seasons of Fantasy, inside of Garden of Seasons is a brand new animatronic show “Seasons of Change.” Set inside a large tree bearing tons of oversized fruit (lemons, apples, oranges, and mangoes). The tree has a large door-sized cavity where guests can enter a waiting area with benches and air conditioning.

494D20BD-9F42-4DB3-8655-816083760749.jpeg
The interior of the tree teleports guests to the realm of seasons, where all four seasons occur at the same time, each living on the outskirts of the garden. We see four different walls within the waiting room, each depicting a totally different season using paint and a bit of projections to make pieces move.

The spring wall depicts flowers in a meadow with bees pollinating them, a deer with its fawn, and birds flying above. The projections of the bees, deer, and birds, come to life every so often and appear to move across the painting before returning back (think Tree of Life Awakenings at a much smaller scale). The summer depicts the same meadow as the trees are full and the grass and flowers are tall. The deer’s fawn is by itself, losing its spotting and growing antlers, as the birds now have chicks following them. The autumn mural depicts the same deer fawn, now with small, but present, antlers walking around as the tree leaves fall and the grass begins to die. The final mural depicts the meadow in full snow, the birds and insects gone and the lone deer searching for blades of grass that protrude from the snowy coating.

Guests await the show in the waiting area as a voice comes through the room. It is a gentle and kind woman’s voice, pleasant to the ears. She welcomes guests to the Garden of Seasons and tells them they are about to discover the meaning of the seasons and how this garden is able to contain all four at the same time. After some safety instructions, the doors swing open and guests enter into the theater. The theater is a circular theater, much like a larger-scale Tiki Room, in which four animatronics stand.

The lights dim and a cast member welcomes guests to Seasons of Change before telling them the general rules of no flash, no eating, drinking, or smoking, etc. With that, a spotlight turns on the center stage as the animatronics come to life.

The four animatronics are Vita- The Spirit of Spring, Calor- The Spirit of Summer, Interitus- The Spirit of Autumn, and Frigus- The Spirit of Winter. The four awaken and begin stretching, moving fluidly like the Shaman of Songs on Na’vi River Journey.
The four immediately begin bickering, claiming that each of them woke the others, but soon, Calor realizes that all of the guests are sitting there and have awoken them. She welcomes the guests, introducing herself, her two sisters (Calor and Interitus) and her brother (Frigus). She says that they are the children of Gaia and the embodiment of the seasons and that they established these gardens in order to create a realm for each of them to exist neutrally.

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Vita then explains that once upon a time, she and Calor, the guardians of life, were in a great feud with their siblings Interitus and Frigus, the guardians of decay. Because of their opposing viewpoints of life and decay, the four quarreled, attacking the other seasons. There would be snow in summer and heat in autumn and leaves would die in the spring but be born again in the fall. The balance of the four seasons were upset by the quarreling until Gaia stepped in

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Interitus then speaks, saying that Gaia created these gardens and gave a domain to each of her children, creating the gardens as a spot for the four to live together, explaining that both life and decay must exist together. Now, the four live in harmony, each controlling their respective domain within the great garden.

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Frigus speaks then, saying that the four now understand their roles in the natural order and they hope to be able to bestow that unto you.

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The lights go dark and we hear thunder crackling as the lights flash like lightning. We hear Vita’s voice say “In the beginning, there was darkness, but from it, came light.” The lights then rise and the room is colored green as the sounds of birds chirping play. A green spotlight shines on Vita as she sings the original song “From the Dark comes the Light,” this song explains her role as the spirit of spring and as a protector of life. She then tag teams with Calor who is illuminated by a yellow spotlight. The two duet the song “Life,” before the spotlight goes off of Vita and Calor takes her turn. Calor sings the song “Summertime” where she sings about her season and all of the greatness that comes from the summer. The lights go down and the room goes eerie, a gust of wind sounding as bats squeal. The lights raise again as projections of leaves blow by and autumnal-sounding music play (think like the ambiance from Over the Garden Wall) as an orange light illuminated Interitus. She sings the song “The Ballad of Autumn,” before a blue light illuminates her brother, Frigus, as the two sing the song “Decay.” The lights go down and return as blue as the wind from the autumn sequence picks up, blowing something fierce. Frigus sings the song “Brutally cold.”

The room goes dark again as the individual spotlights shine on the four spirits. They all sing the song “Seasons of Change” before thanking guests for stopping by their hollow. They remind everyone that life is a balance and everything has its purpose. The doors then open and guests are ushered back into the park.

The theater seats about 400 people and lasts about 18 minutes which can get around 1200 people in the show per hour.
 

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