Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Entertainment
Julie Makinen

Shanghai Disney theme park trading Main Street for the Garden of the Twelve Friends

July 15--Walt Disney Co. will roll out attractions based on "Star Wars" and Marvel superheroes at its new Shanghai theme park when the $5.5-billion facility opens next year, Chairman and Chief Executive Bob Iger said here Wednesday as the company kicked its publicity efforts for the long-in-the-making resort into high gear.

After stumbling with the launches of California Adventure in Anaheim in 2001 and Hong Kong Disneyland in 2005, the company is out to prove that it has learned from past mistakes such as building less ambitious parks and failing to understand the cultural and culinary habits of its customers. Disney has spent handsomely to expand and upgrade Hong Kong Disneyland and California Adventure since their openings.

"We are building something truly special here in Shanghai that not only showcases the best of Disney's storytelling but also celebrates and incorporates China's incredibly rich heritage to create a one-of-a-kind destination," Iger said in a statement. "We are taking everything we've learned from our six decades of exceeding expectations, along with our relentless innovation and famous creativity, to create a truly magical place that is both authentically Disney and distinctly Chinese."

The appeal of China is obvious: The most populous country -- with roughly 1.3 billion people -- is home to an expanding class of consumers that relishes the slick, splashy products that Disney generates.

It wasn't always that way. Disney films were briefly banned in China in the mid-1990s after the company distributed a film about the Dalai Lama. But that changed in 1999 with the release of "Mulan," which was based on a Chinese tale. Now Disney's superhero and action films do massive business here. "Avengers: Age of Ultron," which was released in China in May, grossed about $240 million here.

When Shanghai Disney finally opens next year, it will be after years of negotiations and delays. In spring 2014, Disney said it would spend an additional $800 million to add attractions; earlier this year, it said it would delay the opening until 2016. No specific date has been set.

Three employees of companies working on site said extra time was also necessary to remedy construction problems caused by Chinese contractors who cut corners and didn't meet Disney's standards; Disney representatives declined to comment.

Gary Goddard, a former Disney Imagineer who runs his own entertainment design firm and has worked extensively in China, said he thinks the delays are a positive sign.

"I don't think Mr. Iger wants to open Shanghai and then have to fix things for the next 10 years as had to be done with parks of the last decade and a half," Goddard said. "Hopes are high."

Shanghai Disney, which is 57% owned by the state-owned investment consortium Shanghai Shendi and 43% by Disney, represents a huge potential new revenue source for the Burbank-based entertainment giant, complementing and enhancing its film, TV and merchandising businesses. Although the Chinese government remains cautious about "foreign cultural influences," Disney has managed to gain a substantial foothold in the country.

Disney movies including "Avengers: Age of Ultron" and "Big Hero 6" earned more than $400 million in Chinese theaters in the first half of this year alone, and its cartoons are among the few foreign animations aired on state-run television. The company has a chain of language-training centers called Disney English, and last month it opened a flagship Disney store in Shanghai's financial district -- the largest in the world at 54,000 square feet.

Although Shanghai Disney has not disclosed target attendance figures or ticket prices, about 330 million of China's 1.3 billion people live within a three-hour drive or train ride from Shanghai, a metropolis of 24 million, giving the resort a huge potential audience for years to come.

Walt Disney World in Florida, the world's most-attended theme park, attracted 19 million visitors last year, according to the Themed Entertainment Assn. Disney parks worldwide attracted 148 million visitors; nine of the top 10 most-visited parks were Disney properties.

Jeffrey Towson, a professor of investment at Peking University and author of the "One Hour China Consumer Book," noted that the Shanghai Expo, a world's-fair-type event in 2010, attracted 73 million visitors in just six months.

"Demand for Shanghai Disneyland is going to be overwhelming," he said. "Usually in emerging markets, you never quite know if the demand is there before you start selling, but this is a rare exception to that rule -- the demand is so abundantly clear."

Towson said pricing will be crucial in managing visitor flow. A one-day Hong Kong Disneyland ticket costs about $64. It is unclear whether the opening of Shanghai Disney might diminish crowds at Hong Kong Disneyland, which finally began turning a profit in 2012. Last year, 48% of visitors to that park were from mainland China.

The 2016 opening of Shanghai Disney will come as China is in the midst of a wave of theme-park building. China is expected to add 59 theme parks by 2020, according to a report last year by industry analyst Aecom. Universal Parks Resorts announced last fall that it would build a $3.3-billion, 300-acre theme park in Beijing to open around 2019.

But many Chinese theme parks tend to be modestly budgeted facilities underpinned with weak or no intellectual property and little lasting appeal. Wei Xiaoan of the Tourism Research Center at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said last year that just 10% of the 300 largest Chinese theme parks were turning a profit, 20% were breaking even and 70% were losing money.

In Shanghai, Disney is jettisoning Main Street and some of the strongly American features of its other parks and adopting concepts unique to China, such as the Garden of the Twelve Friends, with popular Disney characters representing the dozen signs of the Chinese zodiac amid cherry trees.

Chinese cultural elements will also be expressed during live entertainment coordinated to Chinese holidays and traditions. Although a Chinese-tiled roof for the Enchanted Storybook Castle was rejected in early planning stages, subtle Chinese flourishes are in evidence -- the finial is topped with a peony, the national Chinese flower. The castle is billed as the "tallest, biggest and most complex" of any Disney castle, an important bragging right for the Chinese market.

Stefan Zwanzger, a Singapore-based theme park expert, said one difficulty might be maintaining Disney's traditional practice of visually isolating visitors from the outside world because the park is situated not far from some of the world's tallest skyscrapers. "I hope you won't see a Chuansha village office tower from the Dumbo the Flying Elephant" ride, he said.

Pollution and weather also could be challenging factors for Shanghai Disney; a recent spate of torrential rains has affected the resort's round-the-clock construction schedules and turned the site into what one worker described as a "big mud pit."

Shanghai Disney will have six distinct "lands," including the pirate-themed Treasure Cove, anchored by an all-new, high-tech "Pirates of the Caribbean: Battle for the Sunken Treasure" attraction. Other lands include Tomorrowland and Fantasyland.

Outside the main park, a theater situated in a shopping, dining and entertainment district will present a Mandarin-language version of the Broadway production "The Lion King." The resort will include two hotels.

"We know about the new Shanghai Disney Resort and we plan to visit," said Li Jinping, a 16-year-old student from China's Guangxi province who was spending Tuesday afternoon at a "Frozen"-themed ice show in Beijing. "I want it to be more thrilling than the one in Hong Kong, where the rides were a bit naive for us," Li said.

julie.makinen@latimes.com

Tommy Yang and Harvard Zhang in The Times' Beijing bureau contributed to this report.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.