lazyboy97o
Well-Known Member
A simple image search for "Mary Poppins" brings up a lot more images of her in her standard attire. Where exactly does wearing a costume for a portion end as to making a character to fit? Do Doc Brown and Marty McFly fit in Frontierland because they spent the better part of a movie in 1885?But those costumes provide you with an answer to the question you posed: they enable Mary Poppins to evoke a grandeur befitting the Grand Floridian. That they appear only in the animated sequences doesn't mean they can't shape people's general perception of the character, just as Cinderella has becomes associated with sumptuous ballroom settings despite wearing rags for most of the film.
Let's not forget that Mary Poppins always appears in her iconic holiday garb at Walt Disney Word.
Cinderella may not have worn her gown for most of the movie(s), but it is the climax and then conclusion to her story. It is not a daydream while she is working towards a different goal. It is the end, not a means.