
‘It's a Small World' ride gets update to celebrate Disneyland's 70th birthday
A new verse to the 'It's a Small World' song will debut on the ride Thursday, July 17, the official Disney Parks blog announced in February.
The updated lyrics will also be included the same day in Florida's Walt Disney World.
The new lyrics were written by original composer Richard Sherman for the song's 60th anniversary, the blog said. Sherman died in 2024.
The new lyrics are, 'Mother earth unites us in heart and mind, And the love we give makes us humankind, Through our vast wondrous land, When we stand hand in hand, It's a small world after all.'
A film about the creation of the new lyrics also will play at the Main Street Cinema in Disneyland, the blog said.
The ride debuted at the 1964 World's Fair in New York as a tribute to the United Nations Children's Fund and can now be found at multiple Disney parks, according to Walt Disney World News Today.
It opened at Disneyland in 1966 as part of Fantasyland. Visitors ride slow-moving boats through a pavilion populated with audio-animatronic children from around the world singing 'It's a Small World' in a variety of languages.
A new audio-animatronic exhibit featuring Walt Disney himself also debuts at the Main Street Opera House as part of the anniversary of the park, which opened in 1955, Disney said.
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An electric figure doesn't move the entire weight as smoothly, even if the performance is more fluid and quieter, without loud puffs of air. 'But the team did such amazing work on establishing new technologies in this figure that we now have our first all-electric figure that has that lean-to-stand motion,' Shaver-Moskowitz said. Disney said their creative team achieved many innovations never done before in a humanoid figure, including new methods to create more realistic skin and an actual 'twinkle' in his eye. Disney Imagineers also studied muscle structure and nuances of speaking and gesturing, to mimic Walt Disney's mannerisms and movements. One of Walt Disney's granddaughters, Joanna Miller, strongly objected to the project in a post on Facebook in November. In that post, she said that her grandfather never wanted to be in robotic form. 'They are dehumanizing him,' she wrote. 'People are not replaceable. 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