Now that is just soooooooooooo wrong. You obviously don't know what she wanted done. If Walt had listened to her, the movie would have been a disaster. She didn't much like ANYTHING Walt's artists created, nor did she like the casting, including Julie Andrews, the guy who played Bert, and she didn't like the music, the sets, anything. She even demanded that the color red never be seen in the movie because...well, because she didn't like red. She sure did like the money the movie sale brought in though, and the way the movie revitalized her book sales. She only turned sour after it became clear that there would be no sequel. In point of fact, Travers was messed up as a person. She could write a good book, but she could NOT write a good movie version of her book. Walt was more than fair to her, especially in that, despite her weirdness and interference, he managed to create a huge hit that did more for her books' longevity than Travers ever could have done herself. "Give in to her demands", good grief. If you have an issue with Walt and his writers taking some of the darkness out of the stories they adapted, then one can only assume that you don't like Disney films at all. Because they're ALL like that. The key is knowing how much darkness to take out. Walt let Bambi's mother die, you know, and he let Old Yeller get shot and Lampwick remain a donkey. Just how "happy" is all that?