lurkyloo
The Attic was just perfect!
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2006
- Messages
- 15,682
Waiting for us inside the Archives was none other than Dave Smith, Chief Archivist and founder of the Walt Disney Archives! Like a lot of other Disney nerds, I want to be him when I grow up.
Dave is great! He told us a bit about what was in the cases around the room and then brought out some rare items for us to see and showed them around. Most of them were in archival sleeves, but some hed take out and hold in his hand, and Id think Yikes! Shouldnt he be wearing gloves or something?
Cases full of merchandise from many different decades
Walts personal items
There are maquettes (3-D models used as reference by animators) all along the tops of the bookcases.
I think my favorite artifact we saw was the mechanical bird that inspired Walt to develop Audio-Animatronics.
Dave showed us a postcard Walt drew for his mother, noting that it disproved the theory that Walt couldnt draw:
A complete Disneyland ticket book
Probably the first merchandise licensed by Disney
This script for Steamboat Willie was found in Walts desk drawer after he died, seeming to indicate that he was always mindful of the roots of his success.
Original backgrounds for Steamboat WIllie gack! Only one of them is in plastic!
Walts doodle in a scrapbook
We also saw the very first ticket sold to Disneyland (Roy bought it) and some Opening Day ephemera like the commemorative ticket and an intact parking pass. We were given about 10 minutes to wander around the Archives, and when I saw someone getting their picture with Dave, I jumped on the bandwagon!
Looky! I wear glasses too! I could be the next Chief Archivist!
Original background plate from The Old Mill
Dave recently told a story in one of the Disney publications about how he found this in the office of a Disney janitor, who said hed found it in the trash years ago and pulled it out to keep on his shelf. Its the original snow globe from Mary Poppins!
All too soon, they were shooing us out of the Archives to get ready for the next group. On our way out we got replica Disney Studio security officer patches, which was cool but what am I going to do with all these patches? (They gave us a Disneyland one in the latest issue of the magazine). Its not like I still own an acid-wash Guess jean jacket I can sew them on or anything...

Dave is great! He told us a bit about what was in the cases around the room and then brought out some rare items for us to see and showed them around. Most of them were in archival sleeves, but some hed take out and hold in his hand, and Id think Yikes! Shouldnt he be wearing gloves or something?
Cases full of merchandise from many different decades

Walts personal items

There are maquettes (3-D models used as reference by animators) all along the tops of the bookcases.






I think my favorite artifact we saw was the mechanical bird that inspired Walt to develop Audio-Animatronics.


Dave showed us a postcard Walt drew for his mother, noting that it disproved the theory that Walt couldnt draw:

A complete Disneyland ticket book

Probably the first merchandise licensed by Disney

This script for Steamboat Willie was found in Walts desk drawer after he died, seeming to indicate that he was always mindful of the roots of his success.

Original backgrounds for Steamboat WIllie gack! Only one of them is in plastic!

Walts doodle in a scrapbook

We also saw the very first ticket sold to Disneyland (Roy bought it) and some Opening Day ephemera like the commemorative ticket and an intact parking pass. We were given about 10 minutes to wander around the Archives, and when I saw someone getting their picture with Dave, I jumped on the bandwagon!
Looky! I wear glasses too! I could be the next Chief Archivist!

Original background plate from The Old Mill




Dave recently told a story in one of the Disney publications about how he found this in the office of a Disney janitor, who said hed found it in the trash years ago and pulled it out to keep on his shelf. Its the original snow globe from Mary Poppins!

All too soon, they were shooing us out of the Archives to get ready for the next group. On our way out we got replica Disney Studio security officer patches, which was cool but what am I going to do with all these patches? (They gave us a Disneyland one in the latest issue of the magazine). Its not like I still own an acid-wash Guess jean jacket I can sew them on or anything...
