Anc96
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2005
- Messages
- 986
SO much of this is false.
Want to tell me what, exactly? I'm going off reports from people who've been through the process and/or worked as face characters.
Edit: Here's (some) of the stuff I've been reading today:
http://ablondespointofview.com/fashion/disney-princess-auditions-my-first-attempt-experience/
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2307280/Secrets-Disneyland-princess-revealed-Snow-White.html
Maybe I'm missing it, but it gives a general height (5'4"-5'7" for general princesses, shorter for tink and wendy), and does not indicate if they are 10lbs over or under it's a deal breaker. Also all the other extreme specifics are not mentioned.. no freckles? Most foundation covers those anyway..lol. I've seen many prominate noses. I see no bra sizes mentioned.
They teach you an 8 step dance, very easy, basically to see if you are comfortable adapting and moving (unless your character is expected to actually dance). Princesses usually, but not always, play the same character. They don't need to wait until the perfect actress comes along to play the character. The usual age is 18-23.. and not usually over 27 or 28.
SO.. it seems you need to be about average height, weight and age...
sounds very hard

Once you're chosen, you have about 5 days of training. Brutal.
Anyway. As many have said there are many Mickey's, Minnie's and other characters around. Put more A&E in different parks. Kids won't notice. Do it for a while until the mad rush is over... why? To help the crowds. To help the kids see their beloved characters.
Yes, it's the parents choice to wait, but most of them are there to try to make as many of their kids dreams come true as possible. For some it's a one time deal. And as for FP+... just like the legendary FP, a lot of people don't know about it and don't use it.
I don't think OP was unreasonable... but SOME will always make anyone that says something anti-Disney (or something they perceive to be anti-Disney) seem unreasonable.
As for "how many parents are willing to tell their kids that they won't get to see the characters they had their heart set on?" I would hope the answer is "Plenty!" Part of being a good parent is teaching your child that sometimes we don't get what we want, the moment we want it. I'm not saying that if you do choose to spend hours in line, you're a bad parent. Far from it. But it's a choice you make, and make freely. Your child is not holding a gun to your head. Real parents don't fall apart like a soggy tissue at the prospect of a disappointed child.


