Splash Mountain have just days to take the plunge at Walt Disney World in Florida. The iconic attraction will close Jan. 23 at Magic Kingdom.
Closing details have not yet been announced for Disneyland in California. However, last month, Disney Imagineers further pulled back the curtain on the ride’s replacement, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, which is set to open in 2024 at both Disneyland and Disney World. The new attraction will continue the story started in Disney’s beloved animated film, “The Princess and the Frog.”
Here’s what fans planning their trips should know.
Disneyland vs. Disney World:What is the difference? How to choose.
Disney World is raising ticket prices:And that’s not the only change
The ride’s last day of operation will be Jan. 22 at Disney World.
Guests can check Splash Mountain’s daily availability on both Disney World and DIsneyland’s websites and apps.
There are currently no plans to change Splash Mountain at Tokyo Disney Resort, which is owned by Oriental Land Company, which licenses from Disney.
With Iger back, DeSantis says ‘a plan is in the works.’
Disney previously announced the attraction would open at both Disneyland and Disney World in late 2024.
However fans may not have to wait that long. Disney World told USA TODAY there was no need to say “late” anymore for Florida’s attraction, but simply 2024.
“This is not a retelling of ‘The Princess and the Frog,’ ” Ted Robledo, executive creative director at Walt Disney Imagineering, said in December.
Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is set a year after the animated film ends, they explained.
Having realized her own dream of opening her own restaurant, Tiana now wants to help her community succeed too, as guests will learn in the ride’s queue. To do so, she opens Tiana’s Foods, an employee-owned co-op built into a new incarnation of Splash Mountain’s mountain.
The mountain will be reimagined as a salt dome, like one imagineers visited on Louisiana’s Avery Island during one of their many research trips for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure.
“It’s a perfect in for us to explain the elevation,” Robledo smiled.
Charita Carter, executive creative producer for Walt Disney Imagineering, stressed the importance of preserving authenticity while giving dimension to Tiana’s world.
“She’s fantastical, but she came from a very real place,” Carter said. She hopes guests from Louisiana will ride Tiana’s Bayou Adventure and say, “Yeah, this feels right.”
Tiana, Prince Naveen, Louis the alligator and several other characters from “The Princess and the Frog” will star in Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, and their original voice actors will reprise their roles, according to Carter.
Guests will also meet new friends: an otter, rabbit, raccoon, turtle, beaver and opossum.
Robledo said Imagineers looked for animals that lived in the bayou and imagined what kinds of found objects they might use to make instruments. Music will play a big part in the ride, just like in the film and history of New Orleans.
Splash Mountain’s current Br’er Rabbit story is tied to “Song of the South,” a 1946 Disney film, which has been criticized for its idyllic portrayal of plantation life.
“I’ve felt, as long as I’ve been CEO, that ‘Song of the South’ was – even with a disclaimer – was just not appropriate in today’s world,” Disney CEO Bob Iger said at a March 2020 shareholders meeting.
A petition to change Splash Mountain’s theme went viral the same year and Disney announced plans to do so, noting the change had been in the works since 2019.