Neapolitan Ice Cream
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- Mar 18, 2021
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Just following on from my Lion King show thread, I rather fancy that the Lion King film was rather a pinnacle point in Disney's history; that and Fantasia!
They were flying high until Walt's death in 1966 for sure. The decline, IMHO started in 1984 with the Eisner years.If you are talking about the company as a whole, parks and entertainment, I think the biggest peak was around 1960-1964. Disneyland had been open for five years and it was just as Mary Poppins was on the horizon. After Mary Poppins, the company took a bit of a downturn, especially after Walt died, that they really didn’t start to come out of, in my opinion, until the Disney Renaissance which began with The Little Mermaid. WDW was a help in the 70’s, but I don’t feel they hit their stride until the mid 1980’s, after Epcot had been open a few years and the resort began to grow with more parks and resorts.
I agree with this. Disney wasn't slammed busy year round like it is now and you could find for sure slow times of the year to come and enjoy the parks. There was huge value in booking a package with the DDP during this time and like you said disney started cutting back shortly after.I always say Disney parks was at its peak in the early to mid 2000s - basically after the first year of the DDP is when they started the drive to maximize profit and cut quality.
For the studios I'd say the peak was probably when they bought Star Wars - its been pretty much down hill from there.
I always say Disney parks was at its peak in the early to mid 2000s - basically after the first year of the DDP is when they started the drive to maximize profit and cut quality.