christmas day parade
The Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade is an American TV extraordinary that affectation on Christmas Day on ABC, taped principally inside the Magic Kingdom amusement stop at Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida, the roughly multi-month preceding Christmas Day. A Spanish simulcast of the procession has publicized on Univision under the titles Desfile de Navidad Disney, (Feliz) Navidad Disney, and Navidad Mágica Disney, and normally affectation Spanish artists who sing Christmas ditties and additionally their most recent hits. Past shows have included portions highlighting other Disney amusement stops in Orlando, Florida; Anaheim, California; and around the globe (in addition to in late releases, the Disney Cruise Line). The program has publicized every year since 1983, except for the year 2000 when Disney broadcast a Christmas Eve "Following Santa" exceptional. In 1999, an evening time rendition of the procession was appeared on Christmas Day.
Substance
1 Description
2 History
3 Hosts and performers
4 See too
5 References
6 External connections
Portrayal
The procession goes down Main Street, U.S.A. It highlights appearances of Disney characters, including Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Goofy, Donald Duck, Daisy Duck, Pluto, Scrooge McDuck, and Chip 'n Dale, and in addition drifts including famous people, melodic exhibitions, walking groups from different schools and local gatherings over the USA, and features of occasions and properties at Disney amusement parks and other Disney creations. The procession finishes up with the entry of Santa Claus. Right now, the majority of the program is taped in November and early December for communicating on Christmas Day. In any case, until the mid-1990s, the motorcade was communicated live on Christmas Day on CBS, with whom Disney had banded together to Thanksgiving and New Year festivities also. In 1996, the program moved to ABC after Disney purchased out the station.
Beginning in 2016, the Disney/ABC group of systems have circulated sidekick specials in the weeks paving the way to the procession. That year, The Wonderful World of Disney: Magical Holiday Celebration and Disney Parks Descendants Magical Holiday Celebration publicized November 24 on ABC and November 25 on Disney Channel separately, including a large number of indistinguishable identities from the Christmas march, with the last intensely integrating with the Descendants establishment. A few portions and exhibitions in that year's Christmas march were even reused from the two before specials. The next year, Freeform reported that they would not just air the second Magical Holiday Celebration after its unique airing on ABC, yet debut another hourlong exceptional entitled Decorating Disney: Holiday Magic, which goes off camera of the Disney parks' vacation merriments. This move agrees with the station's famous 25 Days of Christmas occasion growing to a considerable lot of the other Disney-claimed systems. The Disney Channel uncommon from the parks, now titled Disney Parks Presents a Disney Channel Holiday Celebration, additionally returned for the 2017 occasion season.[1]
The motorcade has been simsubbed in Canada for a long time by CBC Television.
The 2005 release of the procession won Harborlight Entertainment and ABC the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Special Class Special.
History
The procession was the first broadcast, as Walt Disney World's Very Merry Christmas Parade in 1983; Joan Lunden and Mike Douglas were the hosts.[2] Alan Thicke later supplanted Douglas, and Regis Philbin was later included as a road questioner. Inevitably Philbin assumed control as co-host, and Kelly Ripa (his co-host on Live with Regis and Kelly) later gone along with him.
The motorcade has been circulated each year since 1983 with the exception of in the year 2000.[2]
Throughout the years, the program has experienced various name changes. Amid the 1990s, the program was known as The Walt Disney World Very Merry Christmas Parade. The program's name was then changed to Walt Disney World Christmas Day Parade. From 2009 through 2013, the program was alluded to as the Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade. For a couple of years from that point onward, the program's name would change on a yearly premise, being known as Disney Parks Frozen Christmas Celebration in 2014, Disney Parks Unforgettable Christmas Celebration in 2015, Disney Parks Magical Christmas Celebration in 2016 and 2017, lastly Disney Parks Magical Christmas Day Parade in 2018.[3]
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