HollyTW1997
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2014
- Messages
- 19
Found this article, I'm absolutely gutted
http://www.mouseplanet.com/11154/A_Final_Farewell_to_One_Mans_Dream

That's interesting. It probably went to the Disney archives or something. I do know the Disney family museum has been wanting the office tho.I talked for quite a while to one of the CM working there just 12 days ago. I asked him if he had heard whether the rumors are true that's its closing. He says "It sure seems likely considering the layout of Toy Story land has the entrance at the half-way point of this building". We then talked about what they were going to do with it, and he again said that really they had no knowledge of what was happening, "Cast Members are usually the last to know", but that they were of course hoping that it would be kept in the parks somewhere, one possible suggestion he made was innoventions - though again he didn't seem to "know" this. He actually said that Walt's Office was NOT shipped to the family museum in SF, but was crated off to somewhere else. (He told me where - but I can't remember what he said - a museum of some sort.) It was nice to talk to a CM that wasn't blowing smoke up my you-know-where.
So anyways, as of August 29th, the CMs had not been informed of it closing.
The other thing to point out is that One Man's Dream wraps around the Voyage of the Little Mermaid - so it seems to me that if they are intending to rip out one, they're likely to rip out the other.
No. That one you are talking about was done through the Disney archives.Was this attraction similar to the roving display seen at museums? The Museum of Science and Industry here in Chicago had the display for six months or more, found it really interesting. Took both daughters to see the growth of Disney from Oswald to Mickey to movies.
All I can do is echo PPs here. I think it would be a shame to let this connection go. Even if they come up with a replacement rather than a transplant of this exhibit, I think it's so important to keep Walt Disney in Walt Disney World.
He was a part of my Sunday nights when I was a kid, he was the first person I "knew" to die, and I still feel that loss on a certain level. On our last trip, i walked my daughter through this exhibit, making sure she paid attention to the key points and delineating my personal connections for her, so he would be a part of her experience. It's essential that the corporation continue to provide families with that opportunity to keep the spark alive.
The fact that it was meant to be temporary doesn't really matter.