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Photo by Tony ’WiseBearAZ” Moore, 2001 |
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A luminaria is usually a kraft paper bag weighted down by sand and containing a lit candle. Rows of warmly glowing luminarias line streets, walkways, walls, and even rooftops on Christmas Eve. This Hispanic tradition began as a way to guide the spirit of the Christ child. |
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It’s the Holiday Season here at Yester California Adventure. We don’t have luminarias, we have Disney’s LuminAria—a Holiday Spectacular with an upper-case L and an upper-case A. LuminAria has nothing to do with luminarias. The official press release calls LuminAria “a spectacular celebration of dazzling lights, low level pyrotechnics and favorite holiday music performed on the waters of Paradise Pier Lagoon.” |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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LuminAria is a nighttime show, but the fun begins in the daytime. Go to the festively decorated Bay Area district of the park’s Golden State section. Look for the giant LuminAria banners opposite the Golden Dreams rotunda. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Well, you won’t personally be a star, but your artwork can be. Bring your kids, but that’s not a requirement. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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What do the holidays mean to you? What images come to your mind? What are your religious or secular holiday traditions? Be creative. Perhaps you or your kids will be inspired by the giant Christmas cards in the room. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Be sure to finish your artwork at least two hours before showtime. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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As nighttime approaches, show elements are moved to their positions in Paradise Bay. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Before it’s too late, take in all the rides in this part of the park, including the Sun Wheel, Maliboomer, and Orange Stinger. They’re closing early tonight. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Now it’s night. The time has arrived. The lights dim around Paradise Bay. The voice of LuminAria offers a message of peace for the holidays. “Dream of a wintery world where imagination swirls like falling snow,” she tells us. “Share in the warmth of the holidays and let your heart shine with joy. This is the season of light.” Low-level fireworks leap from the lagoon. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Do you remember those large gift packages? Large screens rise from those packages. The artwork that you, your children, and other guests produced during the day are part of the show. Keep your eyes open for your artwork. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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A variety of low-level fireworks, choreographed to a soundtrack of familiar and not-so-familiar holiday music, dance above the lagoon. |
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Photo by Tony ’WiseBearAZ” Moore, 2001 |
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The music consists of “Shine,” “Snow Transition,” “Snowfall,” “White Christmas,” “Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies,” “My Favorite Things,” “Toyland,” “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town,” “We Wish You a Merry Christmas,” “Holiday Wonder,” “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” “Holiday Fanfare,” “Live the Light Inside,” “Winter’s Light,” and “Disney’s LuminAria Finale.” |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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Just when you think it’s all over, “Disney’s LuminAria Finale” begins. |
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Photo by Tony ’WiseBearAZ” Moore, 2001 |
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As the show reaches its end, the narrator intones, “Share your light. Share it with the world.” And one more blast of fireworks erupts above the waters of Paradise Bay. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2001 |
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You paid attention to which way the wind was blowing, didn’t you? You picked a good spot upwind from the low-level fireworks, right? Otherwise, you were watching the show from within a cloud of thick, acrid smoke. |
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Disney’s LuminAria premiered at Disney’s California Adventure on November 9, 2001. It was the new park’s first Christmas. Reaction to the show online tended to be lukewarm—not as negative as for Light Magic, but not as positive as for Fantasmic! or Disneyland’s various fireworks spectaculars over the years. The virtues of the colorful pyrotechnics were outweighed by the smoke. The holiday music lacked the energy to match the fountains of fire. The video screens that showed the “cards” were too small and provided a lackluster show. Columnist Sue Kruse wrote, “LuminAria, it contains neither luminarias nor an aria, so why is it called LuminAria?” Walt Disney Creative Entertainment had to deal with a lack of permanent show infrastructure in the lagoon, a short development cycle, and a budget only appropriate for an eight-week holiday show. The guest reaction to LuminAria also wasn’t helped by closing the Paradise Pier rides early—at a park that already had a reputation for too few attractions. LuminAria ran nightly until January 6, 2002, as scheduled. Then it never returned. The idea of having a nighttime spectacular on Paradise Bay was a good one, but LuminAria was not the right show. More than eight years after the final performance of LuminAria, and after a huge construction project lasting through most of 2009 and halfway into 2010, Disney California Adventure now has the most spectacular water show in the world—World of Color. World of Color premiered June 11, 2010. Guests viewing World of Color are treated to music, 1,200 fountain nozzles (each with an individually controlled underwater LED), state-of-the-art digital projection on water-spray backdrop screens, lasers, and fire—but not the continuous low-level pyrotechnics that made the acrid smoke of LuminAria. If the wind is blowing, guests get a bit wet. But they don’t get coughs and burning eyes from smoke. Unlike LuminAria, World of Color is a year-round show—but it can also be a holiday show. Designing an infrastructure that could easily switch to a holiday version was a smart move, given the success of Disneyland’s holiday shows and attraction overlays. In an interview published at the D23 website (July 21, 2009), Steven Davison, vice president, Parades & Spectaculars, Walt Disney Imagineering Creative Entertainment, explained, “We will do a holiday show and probably a Halloween show. World of Color is as endless as your imagination. We have some great ideas for Christmas that will surprise everybody, that will totally do new things.” |
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Photo by Paul Hiffmeyer/Disneyland Resort © Disney |
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For the first two holiday seasons of World of Color, 2010 and 2011, there was just the regular show. For the 2012 holiday season, World of Color added a segment based on Disney’s Prep & Landing television special. Finally, in 2013, a holiday spectacular temporarily replaced the regular show. World of Color - Winter Dreams premiered November 15, 2013. Borrowing a page from the LuminAria playbook, one segment featured reproductions of greeting cards created by guests. Versions of World of Color - Winter Dreams also ran in 2014 and 2015. |
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Photo by Scott Brinegar/Disneyland Resort © Disney |
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For 2016, a new holiday version, World of Color - Season of Light, featured well-known holiday tunes recorded by popular artists, such as “Let it Snow” by Dean Martin and “Baby, It’s Cold Outside” by Michael Bublé and Idina Menzel, and “Feliz Navidad” by José Feliciano. |
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Photo by Richard Harbaugh/Disneyland Resort © 2023 Disney |
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For 2017, World of Color - Season of Light returned. In April 2018, World of Color stopped operating under mysterious circumstances and was closed for maintenance the rest of the year. After returning in 2019, Season of Light missed the next two years. In 2020, it was because Disney California Adventure was closed due to COVID-19. Although the park reopened at the end of April 2021 after its 412-day closure, Season of Light did return that year. Finally, in 2022, it was back. For 2023, World of Color - Season of Light is preceded by a six-minute pre-show featuring Asha and Star from Disney Animation’s newest film, Wish. LuminAria is now just a distant memory—from long before Frozen (2013), and even before Lilo & Stitch (2002). |
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Click here to post comments at MiceChat about this article. © 2023 Werner Weiss — Disclaimers, Copyright, and Trademarks Updated December 15, 2023 |