If you attend the Magic of Disney Animation tour, there is a segment about 5-10 minutes in length where an animator instructs many people how to draw a character. This is not a large part of the tour but it is, in my opinion, the most enjoyable. The animator in my session took suggestions about which character to draw, so many people shouted out an idea. Each person is seated at an individual artist's stool and has a slanted table on which to draw. The animator draws at the front of the class and his images are projected onto a screen on the wall large enough for everyone to see and imitate. S/he gives detailed instruction, and at the end, you are instructed to sign your drawing and you get to keep it. ETA: We got to draw Donald Duck, and I was thrilled (as you might guess by my screenname). On the
Disney Cruise Line, we also learned how to draw Mickey in a similar class.
It was fun but by no means long in length. This attraction starts by guests entering a small theater and Mushu, the dragon from Mulan, stars in a brief film about animation with an animator CM talking about this. You then move into the classroom (it's much bigger than that but that's the atmosphere) and after that into a room where you can do meet and greets with characters (the Incredibles were there in 2004 when we did this). There are stations similar to those found in Innoventions or Sounds Dangerous where you can play with images, voice system things, and the like. Again, no part of this tour is fantastic, but it was nice to do once. If he likes animation, he should enjoy the drawing segment and perhaps afterwards can go up and talk to the animator. However, new groups come in as you leave, so this might not happen. It never hurts to try.
The Animation tour to
Disneyland is more extensive, from what I hear, as you can actually view animators working on Disney films currently in production. Enjoy!
For more information, check out:
http://www.allearsnet.com/tp/mgm/m_animation.htm