It is, in a word, "FANTASMIC!" 
FANTASMIC!   is the uncommon title for a most uncommon Disneyland  experience   scheduled for a spring debut: part magic show, part  high-energy musical   theater, and a large part special effects display  featuring lights,   lasers and fireworks. This combination is what led to  the selection of   that uncommon name. 
FANTASMIC! incorporates  properties  of fantasy, "Fantasia," and  phantasmagoria, defined by  Webster as "1.  an early type of magic-lantern  show consisting of  various optical  illusions in which objects rapidly  change size, blend  into one another,  etc.; 2. a rapidly changing series  of things seen or  imagined, as the  figures or events of a dream." 
It  all takes place on  Tom Sawyer Island, long after dark, when guests   have departed and the  Island is empty or is it? Guests gathered along   the Riverfront suddenly  notice lights emanating from the deserted   Island. There, in the midst  of blazing color, appears Mickey as the   Sorcerer's Apprentice, dreaming  up images from 60 years of Disney   animation. And then the fun — or is  it terror? — begins. 
Every  bit as much care and  attention to detail has gone into this   entertainment spectacle as is  put into any new Theme Park attraction. 
"Disneyland  is  made up of a variety of experiences," explains Bob  McTyre, Vice   President of Entertainment at Disneyland, "attractions,  food,   merchandise, characters, live entertainment. We try to make the  whole   work together. 
"As part of that effort, we were   looking at ways to make nighttime at  Disneyland a more exciting place   to be. And we were most interested in  New Orleans Square. Although we   have done shows on the River in the  past, a real show 
experience had never been done there." 
Creating   the environment for the presentation of FANTASMIC! required  months of   construction, not to mention the temporary draining of The  Rivers of   America, the drydocking of the 
Mark Twain Riverboat and the 
Sailing Ship "Columbia," and some extensive overhauling of Tom Sawyer Island. 
When   the dust cleared, the reconstructed Island, the refilled River, and    the restored River traffic all looked much the same as they did    before...by day that is. 
That's just one of   FANTASMIC!'s many illusions. By night, FANTASMIC!  transforms the River   into something wonderful...and sometimes sinister. 
Creating the show that will come to life in this new environment actually took years. 
"We   had been wanting to do a spectacle on the River for at least 10    years," says Mike Davis, Director of Entertainment at Disneyland. "When    we saw 'IllumiNations' at Walt Disney World we started thinking about   it  again. Then, last year, Michael (Eisner, The Walt Disney Company    Chairman and CEO) gave us the go-ahead to try something new, so we said,    'Let's finally do that River spectacular."' 
Through   the high-tech sorcery of FANTASMIC!, Mickey Mouse draws the  audience   into a world of his own vivid and colorful imagination. 
Of   course, Mickey has more than 60 years of spectacular memories stored    up, so it should come as no surprise that, once he turns his  imagination   loose, he can conjure up a sensational array of images —  enormous   blooming flowers, giant dancing marionettes, swashbuckling  "Peter Pan"   pirates (aboard a full-scale pirate ship), and exotic  "Jungle Book"   beasts, including a gigantic Kaa, which slithers its  100-foot-long body   around the tip of Tom Sawyer Island. 
There  are some  malevolent forces at work in FANTASMIC! however. A   formidable array of  Disney villains invades Mickey's imagination for a   thrilling climax,  pitting Mickey against the likes of the Wicked Queen   from "Snow White,"  the demon Chernabog from "Fantasia," Ursula the  Sea  Witch from "The  Little Mermaid," and the towering, fire-breathing  dragon  from "Sleeping  Beauty." It takes all the goodness Mickey can  muster to  end the  nightmare and return Disneyland to its normal state  as The  Happiest  Place on Earth. 
In addition to a  cast of nearly 50  live performers in hundreds of  costumes and a  variety of roles,  FANTASMIC! features lasers, fog  effects, specially  choreographed water  fountains, fireworks,  fiber-optics technology and a  full cast of  creeping, floating,  fire-breathing and generally  intimidating monsters.  
One innovative technique  employed by FANTASMIC! has  never before been  seen in a Disney Theme  Park. As Mickey works his  magic, three massive  mist screens, each one  50 feet wide, 30 feet high  and 6 inches thick,  will appear on the  River alongside Tom Sawyer  Island. These screens are  so dense that  actual film images can be  projected upon them.
Show   Director Barnette Ricci says that the research into entertainment    special effects technology dates back to 1989 when Disneyland was    preparing to celebrate its 35th Anniversary. "I had an idea for an    anniversary show at the Castle that would take special effects    techniques like lasers and mist screens and combine them with live    performers," Ricci recalls, "so there was a lot of research done on the    different technologies available. 
"Of course, the   35th Anniversary show never came to fruition," she says,  "but maybe   that was fate. Because then we were given this opportunity  to do   something 
really unique, on the River, a spectacle of spectacles!" 
The key, Ricci remembers, was the discovery of the new water-screen technology. 
"We   had already gleaned all this information about mist screens on which    we could project light beams and lasers. Then we received a demo reel    from a French company. It showed a water screen with the 
film projected on it. 
"Seeing   it made the whole show just fall into place," she recalls. "What  if   Disney animation was projected on to those screens? It would be    incredible!" 
While Ricci was creating a script which   incorporated the full range of  characters and creatures that could   emerge from Mickey's imagination,  she and others were also finding ways   to present these beings in unique,  sometimes startling ways. 
Some   of the chief illusions of FANTASMIC! are created using specially    prepared versions of scenes from classic Disney animated films, images    which seem to appear in the air above the River as they interact with    the live performers. The action is punctuated by an array of special    effects and by Bruce Healey's dramatic orchestral score. 
This   was not as simple as might first appear. Familiar film footage  could   not just be "plugged into" the presentation. It had to be cleverly    adapted, reedited under Ricci's supervision, and re-scored by Healey. 
"The challenge," Healey notes, "was to reflect all of the different emotions and attitudes in the show." 
In   response to that challenge, he created something akin to a full-scale    movie score. It includes original themes which explore the whimsical    and romantic aspects of Mickey's imagination, and others which provide    heroic emphasis for the action highlights. 
Healey  also  did fresh orchestrations of existing music — ranging from  "Night  on  Bald Mountain" to "Someday My Prince Will Come" to "Pink  Elephants  on  Parade."  
While Healey was occupied with what the   audience would hear, others were  helping to create the things the   audience would see. While many of the  characters seen in FANTASMIC! may   look familiar, costume designer  Marilyn Sotto points out that the   costumes needed an extra dose of  Disney "sparkle" because of the   darkness and distance from the audience.  Mickey and his friends also   needed something their outfits don't  require on Main Street, U.S.A. —   waterproof lining!
A few costumes include fiber-optic   illumination. Many had to be designed  for quick changes — from "Jungle   Book" monkey to "Peter Pan" pirate,  for example. And then there was  the  challenge of creating a costume that  enables a performer to   impersonate one of the fanciful, flexible pink  elephants from Dumbo's   dream. 
Ask art director Tom Butsch what he's been   doing for the past year and  he'll tell you about giant flower petals, a   hundred-foot-long snake  "with search-light eyes," a giant crocodile   and a villainess to whom he  refers as "the 20-foot tall floating Ursula   creature." 
The most spectacular effect on which   Butsch and Co. have had to work is  the one which climaxes the villains'   invasion of Mickey's imagination.  Maleficent, the "Sleeping Beauty"   sorceress, is transformed into a  40-foot dragon, breathing fire which   literally ignites the surface of  the River. 
"We've   been designing that dragon for over a year in various  permutations,"   Butsch recalls. "I don't know how many hundreds of  different ways of   'doing dragons' we considered, but it was plenty. The  trick was to make   it believable and scary and all the things it needed  to be." 
"We   hope to involve the audience emotionally," says Mike Davis.    "FANTASMIC! is visceral; it's scary and exciting. We're using a    'sound-surround' effect that will make you think the villains are right    behind you, lasers shoot over the audience's heads, and you'll even   feel  the heat of the River on fire." 
According to Bob McTyre, FANTASMIC! is expected to be a regular part of Disneyland for years to come. 
"A   lot of time, effort and expense has gone into infrastructure," says    McTyre. "What we've done is build a new theater for Disneyland. The show    can be changed when there are new ideas, new technology. 
"We   built a venue here at the River, a place to put on the kind of show    we've never been able to do before at Disneyland. And we'll have it for a    long time."