The American Adventure (Epcot)

This article is about the Disney theme park pavilion/attraction. For the album by indie rock band The Electric Soft Parade, see The American Adventure (album). For the former English Midlands attraction, see The American Adventure Theme Park.
The American Adventure

The outer facade of the show building
Epcot
Area World Showcase
Coordinates 28°22′03″N 81°32′58″W / 28.367462°N 81.549454°W / 28.367462; -81.549454
Status Operating
Opening date October 1, 1982
General statistics
Attraction type Theater Show
Designer WED Enterprises
Theme Colonial American town
Music Golden Dream
Audience capacity 1024 per show
Duration 28:30
Hosts Benjamin Franklin and Mark Twain
Audio-animatronics 35
Wheelchair accessible
Assistive listening available

The American Adventure is the host pavilion of the World Showcase within Epcot at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida, United States. It is also the name of the pavilion's main attraction, an Audio-Animatronics stage show of American history. It is located between the Italian and Japanese pavilions.

Layout

Inside The American Adventure preshow area

The pavilion is a single large building designed in the Colonial style. The building uses forced perspective to make a five story building appear to be two and a half stories; there is a large ramp inside the attraction that slopes up, then down.[1]

Its main attraction is the American Adventure show. The lobby is a square room that has an oval shaped area in the middle with a dome shaped ceiling. The walls contain quotes from famous Americans, which include Walt Disney and Charles Lindbergh, and paintings of American life throughout history representing what America is all about. The Hall of Flags exhibit, a display of the different flags throughout U.S. history that you see as you go upstairs to the theater. In the upstairs lobby there are two more paintings of American life. In the theater, there are 12 statues, six on each side of the theater, that are spirits of American values personified.

On the left side of the building is the Liberty Inn restaurant. On the right side of the building is a small gift shop, Heritage Manor Gifts.

List of paintings

TitleDescription
A Lesson for the FutureA teacher giving a lesson to her students outside, while men in the background build a school house
Building a Future TogetherConstruction workers building a skyscraper.
Compassion Knows no BoundaryA doctor and nurse treating sick people in another country
Defending FreedomA factory making planes for the battle fields of World War II.
Election DayTown's people gathered together to hear the election results
Giving ThanksFamily praying at the dinner table for their Thanksgiving meal.
Promise of AmericaImmigrants coming to America and see the Statue of Liberty.
Reaching for the StarsA depiction of the many things happening at NASA's space program.
Seeds of HopeNative American teaching the Plymouth Pilgrims how to plant corn.
Staying the CourseTwo sailing ships out at sea.
Westward HoSeveral wagons crossing over a river, possibly the Mississippi River

List of statues

Spirit ofPersonification
AdventureSeaman
CompassionDoctor
DiscoveryMountain Man
FreedomPilgrim
HeritageNative American Woman, possibly Sacagawea
IndependenceAmerican Revolutionary Soldier
IndividualismCowboy
InnovationAfrican-American Scientist, possibly George Washington Carver
KnowledgeSchool Teacher
PioneeringEarly Aviation Pilot, possibly Charles Lindbergh
Self-RelianceFarmer
TomorrowMother and Child

Attraction

The American Adventure takes guests on a trip through America's history. It is narrated by Audio-Animatronic figures of Benjamin Franklin and Mark Twain (who lived almost 100 years apart) with the voices of Dallas McKennon as Benjamin Franklin and John Anderson as Mark Twain. The show is presented in a theater-like auditorium, with sets and characters rising out from the stage floor to represent scenes from different historical periods. The characters provide insight into American life of the past through conversations in which they discuss the current events of their time. Periods include the American Revolutionary War, the Civil War, the Centennial International Exhibition of 1876 (representing American industrialization), and the Great Depression. The presentation culminates with a musical film montage representing famous moments and people in American history from post-World War II to the present.

Changes

In 1993, the attraction was updated with all new animatronics and a new version of the theme song. In mid-2007, about 45 seconds of footage were added to the end of the Golden Dreams montage, the first updating of the montage since the 1993 renovation. The most notable addition is the brief footage of New York City Police Department/New York City Fire Department rescue crews after the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center in 2001.

Songs

Theme song

The theme song for the American Adventure is "Golden Dream". The music was written by Robert Moline and the lyrics were written by show producer Randy Bright. The song gets its biggest push at the end of the attraction, during the Montage sequence of famous Americans. The melody has been heard in Epcot's entrance plaza since opening day.

The original version can be found on these releases:

The updated version of the song has different vocals, a longer chorus after the quotes, and a different ending. It can be found on these releases:

It is also available on later official albums.

The Voices of Liberty

The Voices of Liberty is an eight-member a cappella group that hosts patriotic choral performances in the pavilion rotunda throughout the day, often as a pre-show to the next scheduled performance of the main presentation. The group also performs in year-round events including the Candlelight Processional and other special events.

When recording or performing outside Epcot, Voices of Liberty go by the name "Liberty Voices".

America Gardens Theater

Across from the pavilion is the America Gardens Theatre, an outdoor amphitheater. The America Gardens Theatre hosts concerts, singers, and bands from around the world. Many entertainment acts from around the world perform on this stage.

The America Gardens Theatre has hosted numerous amount of shows since it was built. Over the years some of the more famous shows include Blast! and Barrage. During the park's two major festivals—the International Flower and Garden Festival in the spring, and the International Food and Wine Festival in the fall—musical groups from the 1960s through the 1990s perform as part of each festival's concert series ("Garden Rocks" in the spring, and "Eat to the Beat" in the fall).

In 1999, a revised version of Michael Flatley's Lord of the Dance performed in the theater over the summer. Even though Flatley himself did not perform in the show, its popularity encouraged Epcot to bring the show back in 2000 for another summer run. Originally designed as an open-air theater, partial cover and backstage dressing and show equipment areas were added during a refurbishment that was completed before the inception of the "Magical World of Barbie" stage show.

Candlelight Processional

During the holiday season, the theater hosts the Candlelight Processional. This show follows in the footsteps of the show first performed in Disneyland in 1958, and which was duplicated at the Magic Kingdom in 1971. The show relocated to Epcot's America Gardens Theater in 1994. The show includes an orchestra and massed choir that perform traditional holiday songs while a guest celebrity retells the biblical story of Christmas. Some of the celebrities who have taken part in the Processional over the years include John Stamos, Marlee Matlin, Edward James Olmos, Haley Joel Osment, Susan Lucci, John O'Hurley, Jim Caviezel, Neil Patrick Harris, Whoopi Goldberg and Jodi Benson. The Candlelight Processional is a major part of Epcot's Holidays Around the World celebration, running from the Friday after Thanksgiving until December 30 each year. Drew Tablak, a Disneyland performer and a member of the Dapper Dans, was the show's featured vocal performer in 2012.

See also

References

  1. Wright, Alex; Imagineers, The (2007). The Imagineering Field Guide to Epcot at Walt Disney World : an Imagineer's-Eye Tour. (1st ed.). New York: Disney Editions. p. 103. ISBN 0786848863.
  2. ASCAP ACE database
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