Current:Home > ScamsAttraction starring Disney’s first Black princess replaces ride based on film many viewed as racist -WealthRoots Academy
Attraction starring Disney’s first Black princess replaces ride based on film many viewed as racist
View
Date:2025-04-13 22:39:04
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — A new attraction starring the first Black Disney princess is opening at the company’s U.S. theme park resorts, and some Disney followers see it as a fitting replacement to a former ride based on a movie that contained racist tropes.
The new theme park attraction updates Tiana’s storyline from the 2009 animated film, “The Princess and the Frog” and is opening this year in the space previously occupied by Splash Mountain. The water ride had been themed to “Song of the South,” a 1946 Disney movie filled with racist cliches about African Americans and plantation life.
Tiana’s Bayou Adventure keeps Splash Mountain’s DNA as a log-flume ride, but it’s infused with music, scenery and animatronic characters inspired by the film set in 1920s New Orleans. It opens to the public later this month at Walt Disney World in Florida and at Disneyland in California later this year.
“For little Black girls, Tiana has meant a lot. When a little child can see somebody who looks like them, that matters,” said Neal Lester, an English professor at Arizona State University, who has written about Tiana.
Disney’s announcement that it would transform its longstanding Splash Mountain ride into Tiana’s Bayou Adventure was made in June 2020 following the social justice protests sparked by the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody. At the time, Disney said the change had already been in the works. But it came as companies across the U.S. were reconsidering or renaming decades-old brands amid worldwide protests.
The “Song of the South” film is a mix of live action, cartoons and music featuring an older Black man who works at a plantation and tells fables about talking animals to a white city boy. The film has been criticized for its racist stereotypes, and hasn’t been released in theaters in decades and isn’t available on the company’s streaming service Disney+.
Disney has been criticized for racist tropes in films made in earlier decades. The crow characters from the 1941 film, “Dumbo” and the King Louie character from 1967’s “The Jungle Book” were viewed as African American caricatures. The depiction of Native Americans in the 1953 movie, “Peter Pan,” and the Siamese cats — often deemed as Asian stereotypes — from the 1955 film, “Lady and the Tramp,” also have been derided.
Not everyone is sold on the belief that opening a ride based on Tiana’s story solves Disney’s past problematic racial depictions.
By refurbishing Splash Mountain into Tiana’s Bayou Adventure instead of dismantling the attraction completely, Disney has linked “Song of the South” with “The Princess and the Frog.” Both are fantasies that are silent, for the most part, on the racial realities of the segregated eras they depict, said Katie Kapurch, an English professor at Texas State University who has written widely about Disney.
“We might see the impulse to replace rather than dismantle or build anew as a metaphor for structural racism, too,” Kapurch said. “Again, this is unintentional on Disney’s part, but the observation gets to the heart of how Disney reflects America back to itself.”
Imagineers who design the Disney rides are always attempting to look at the attractions with fresh eyes and ways to tell new stories “so that everybody feels included,” said Carmen Smith, a senior vice president for Disney Parks, Experiences and Products.
“We never want to perpetuate stereotypes or misconceptions,” Smith said Monday. “Our intention is to tell great stories.”
It’s also important for the Imagineers to tell a variety of stories for its global audience, said Charita Carter, a senior creative producer at Walt Disney Imagineering.
“Society does change, and we develop different sensibilities,” Carter said. “We focus our stories differently depending what our society needs.”
The transformation from Splash Mountain to Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is one of several recalibrations at the entertainment giant’s theme parks for rides whose storylines are considered antiquated or offensive.
In 2021, Disney announced it would remodel Jungle Cruise, one of the original Disney parks’ rides, which had been been criticized in years past for being racially insensitive because of its depiction of animatronic Indigenous people as savages or headhunters. Three years before that, Disney eliminated a “Bride Auction” scene, deemed offensive since it depicted women lining up for auction, from its “Pirates of the Caribbean” ride.
It’s a positive step for Disney to have a ride based on a character from a background not seen in previous versions of Disney princesses replacing an attraction from a film steeped in racist tropes since “representation matters,” Lester said.
“Disney is first and foremost about money and getting people into the park, and you can make money, still have representation and be aware of social justice history and make everyone feel like they belong there,” Lester said.
___
Mike Schneider’s book, “Mickey and the Teamsters: A Fight for Fair Unions at Disney,” was published in October by the University Press of Florida. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter.
veryGood! (7861)
Related
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Sam Altman leaving OpenAI, with its board saying it no longer has confidence in his leadership
- Albania’s former health minister accused by prosecutors of corruption in government project
- Israeli drone fires missiles at aluminum plant in south Lebanon
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Why Americans feel gloomy about the economy despite falling inflation and low unemployment
- A French senator is accused of drugging another lawmaker to rape or sexually assault her
- 'Hunger Games' burning questions: What happened in the end? Why was 'Ballad' salute cut?
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Sean 'Diddy' Combs, Cassie settle bombshell lawsuit alleging rape, abuse, sex trafficking
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Former Disney star Mitchel Musso's charges dismissed after arrest for theft, intoxication
- Horoscopes Today, November 17, 2023
- Russell Wilson's new chapter has helped spark Broncos' resurgence from early-season fiasco
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Police shoot armed woman at Arizona mall and charge her with assault
- Winning numbers for Mega Millions Friday drawing, with jackpot at $267 million
- NCAA president says he feels bad for James Madison football players, but rules are rules
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
A large metal gate falls onto and kills a 9-year-old child at an elementary school
Russian doctors call for release of imprisoned artist who protested Ukraine war
'Hunger Games' burning questions: What happened in the end? Why was 'Ballad' salute cut?
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
SpaceX is preparing its mega rocket for a second test flight
The Truth About Those Slaps and More: 15 Secrets About Monster-In-Law
In barely getting past Maryland, Michigan raises questions for upcoming Ohio State clash