\
Sorry but not totally correct, she said julie andrews made a nice Poppins but was directed wrong and they decided to dress her up too pretty. Also If you look at her last will in testament she only granted the rights for a stage show of Mary Poppins if there were no american writers involved or anyone from film production either. Clearly she hated that process, and if you were going for complete correctness then after seeing the film at its premiere she went up to Walt Disney after the film had ended and said that he had to get rid of the animated sequences to which he responded word for word "Pamela that ship has sailed" at least according to her. And you should check your facts as Disney did try to pursue other sequels for the film but she rebuffed on every offer. Here is a quote "She would never allow another Disney adaption even though they made many requests for sequels". What you forget is the film came out two years before his death meaning afterwards Walt wasn't in charge anymore so the whole sequel philosophy does not really play out here.
Sorry you may want to go back and reread my posts and fact check!
1. As I stated in my 1st post she liked Julie Andrews as Mary Poppins............I do not know about the dress comment, but one of her problems with the film was is was to cute, which would go along with the dress thing.
2. Her will has nothing legal backing it up as Disney has had Mary Poppins on the Broadway stage for years. Just because she may have put it in her will does not mean it had any legality behind it. I know the play had American playwrights. I do not think any one from the film worked on it.
3. Yes she hated the whole film process, but just because she didn't get her way, doesn't mean Disney or Walt did anything wrong. The contract clearly stated she had some control of content until the film was released. Walt's statement when Mrs. Travers told him all that was wrong with the film, and asked when do they start cutting, (she especially did not like the penguins), Walt said,*we are not changing a thing*, and rightfully so!
4. I never said Disney never wanted to do a sequel, I said part of the reason they never did sequels is Walt did not like doing sequels. They may indeed have asked her to work on another sequel after his death, when he was not there to stop it.
You have to remember this was not some sweet little old lady, she was well known to be hard to work with, very demanding and was not push over. Her books publisher has stated that many times. She signed a contract with Disney, with limited control and became very frustrated when Walt would not just give into her wims.
She did warm up (some) to the film in later years, as she could not argue with the world acclaim of it and the Mary Poppins characters and the increase in book sales. Not to mention it made her a very wealthy woman.
AKK