Jump to content

The American Adventure (Epcot)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Voices of Liberty)
The American Adventure
The outer facade of the show building
EPCOT
AreaWorld Showcase
Coordinates28°22′03″N 81°32′58″W / 28.367462°N 81.549454°W / 28.367462; -81.549454
StatusOperating
Opening dateOctober 1, 1982
Ride statistics
Attraction typeTheater Show
DesignerWED Enterprises
ThemeColonial American town
MusicGolden Dream
Audience capacity1024 per show
Duration28:30
HostsBenjamin Franklin and Mark Twain
Audio-animatronics35
SponsorsAmerican Express (1982–early 2000s) and Coca-Cola (1982–1998)[1][2]
Disabled access Wheelchair accessible
Assistive listening available

The American Adventure is the host pavilion of the World Showcase area of EPCOT at the Walt Disney World Resort near Orlando, Florida. It is also the name of the pavilion's main attraction, an Audio-Animatronic stage show of American history. It is located between the Italy and Japan pavilions.

The pavilion includes the Liberty Theater (home of the stage show), an exhibition space called the American Heritage Gallery, the America Gardens Theatre live entertainment venue, and a quick service food location named Regal Eagle Smokehouse—a Muppet-themed barbecue restaurant. Additionally, there is a merchandise location that houses the former Art of Disney store that was located in Future World.[3]

Layout

[edit]
Inside The American Adventure preshow area

The pavilion is a single large building designed in the Colonial style. The building uses forced perspective to make a five-story building appear to be two and a half stories; there is a large ramp inside the attraction that slopes up, then down.[4]

Its main attraction is The American Adventure show. The lobby is a square room that has an oval-shaped area in the middle with a dome-shaped ceiling. The walls contain quotes from famous Americans, which include Walt Disney and Charles Lindbergh, and paintings of American life throughout history representing what America is all about. The Hall of Flags exhibit is a display of the different flags throughout U.S. history that you see as you go upstairs to the theater. In the upstairs lobby there are two more paintings of American life. In the theater, there are 12 statues, six on each side of the theater, that are spirits of American values personified.

List of paintings

[edit]
Title Description
A Lesson for the Future A teacher giving a lesson to her students outside, while men in the background build a school house
Building a Future Together Construction workers building a skyscraper.
Compassion Knows No Boundary A doctor and nurse treating sick people in another country
Defending Freedom A factory making planes for the battle fields of World War II.
Election Day Town's people gathered together to hear the election results
Giving Thanks Family praying at the dinner table for their Thanksgiving meal.
Promise of America Immigrants coming to America and see the Statue of Liberty.
Reaching for the Stars A depiction of the many things happening at NASA's space program.
Seeds of Hope Native American teaching the Plymouth Pilgrims how to plant corn.
Staying the Course Two sailing ships out at sea.
Westward Ho Several wagons crossing over a river, possibly the Mississippi River

List of statues

[edit]
Spirit of Personification
Adventure Seaman
Compassion Doctor
Discovery Mountain man
Freedom Pilgrim
Heritage Native American woman, possibly Sacagawea
Independence American Revolutionary soldier
Individualism Cowboy
Innovation African-American scientist, possibly George Washington Carver
Knowledge School Teacher
Pioneering Early aviation pilot, possibly Charles Lindbergh
Self-Reliance Farmer
Tomorrow Mother and child

The American Adventure attraction

[edit]

The American Adventure takes guests on a trip through America's history. It is narrated by Audio-Animatronic figures of Benjamin Franklin and Mark Twain (who lived almost 100 years apart) with the voices of Dallas McKennon as Benjamin Franklin and John Anderson as Mark Twain. The show is presented in a theater-like auditorium, with sets and characters rising out from the stage floor to represent scenes from different historical periods. The characters provide insight into American life of the past through conversations in which they discuss the current events of their time. Periods include the American Revolutionary War, the Civil War, the Centennial International Exhibition of 1876 (representing American industrialization), and the Great Depression. The presentation culminates with a musical film montage representing famous moments and people in American history from post-World War II to the present.

Changes

[edit]

In 1993, the attraction was updated with all new animatronics and a new version of the theme song. In mid-2007, about 45 seconds of footage were added to the end of the Golden Dreams montage, the first updating of the montage since the 1993 renovation. The most notable addition is the brief footage of New York City Police Department/New York City Fire Department rescue crews after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center in 2001. The Golden Dream montage and theme song were updated again in early 2018 to feature footage of more recent notable figures, including Barack and Michelle Obama, Mark Zuckerberg, Madonna, Simone Biles, and Elon Musk, among others.

Songs

[edit]

Theme song

[edit]

The theme song for The American Adventure is "Golden Dream". The music was written by Robert Moline and the lyrics were written by show producer Randy Bright. Two versions now exist for "Golden Dream." with the original version arranged for choir and full orchestra by Don Mueller in 1980 and the arrangement heard today is a 2018 updated version by producer Harvey Mason Jr.[6] When speaking of the project Mason's goal was to "be respectful of the original arrangement while making it contemporary and relevant to what's going on in music today."[7] The song gets its biggest push at the end of the attraction, during the Montage sequence of famous Americans. The song is also used as the finale to Disneyland's Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln.

The original version can be found on these releases:

  • The Music of Disneyland, Walt Disney World and Epcot Center (1988)
  • The Official Album of Disneyland and Walt Disney World (1991)
  • The Music of Disney: A Legacy in Song (1992)
  • Walt Disney World Resort: The Official Album (1999)
  • Walt Disney World Resort: Official Album (2000)
  • Official Album: Walt Disney World Resort Celebrating 100 Years of Magic (2001)

The 2018 version can be found on iTunes.[8]

Attraction voice cast

[edit]
Actor Role
Charles Aidman Father ("Two Brothers")
John Anderson Mark Twain, Franklin D. Roosevelt
Mic Bell Banjo player ("Great Depression")
Dehl Berti Chief Joseph
Bob Boyd Theodore Roosevelt
Bill Boyles Confederate brother ("Two Brothers")
Tricia Buttrill Susan B. Anthony
Steve Cook Matthew Brady
Robert Easton Thomas Jefferson
Walker Edmiston Andrew Carnegie, man in rocking chair ("Great Depression")
Al Fann Frederick Douglass, apple salesman ("Great Depression")
Bob Holt John Muir, store owner ("Great Depression")
Dallas McKennon Benjamin Franklin, Continental Army soldier ("Valley Forge")
Claudette Nevins Mother ("Two Brothers")
Patricia Parris Jane ("World War II")
Joe Rohde Alexander Graham Bell
Will Rogers Jr. Will Rogers
Mark L. Taylor Union brother ("Two Brothers")
Harvey Vernon Sailor ("World War II")
B.J. Ward Rosie ("World War II")
Frank Welker Continental soldier ("Valley Forge"), additional voices

The Voices of Liberty

[edit]

The Voices of Liberty is an eight-member professional a cappella singing group that hosts patriotic choral performances in the pavilion rotunda throughout the day. The group also performs in year-round events including the Candlelight Processional. The group performs special performances during the holiday season and on the 4th of July. The group has performed for several U.S. presidents including Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter.[9]

When recording or performing outside EPCOT, Voices of Liberty go by the name Liberty Voices. Voices of Liberty evolved from a group called Re'Generation that sang a cappella at Magic Kingdom in the 1970s. The group has released several audio recordings of their music. Derric Johnson is the founder/director/arranger of all the music sung by the Voices of Liberty, Liberty Voices and Re'Generation.[10]

America Gardens Theatre

[edit]

Across from the pavilion is the America Gardens Theatre, an outdoor amphitheater. The America Gardens Theatre hosts concerts, singers, and bands from around the world. Many entertainment acts from around the world perform on this stage.

The America Gardens Theatre has hosted numerous shows since it was built. Over the years some of the more famous shows include Blast! and Barrage. During the park's two major festivals—the International Flower and Garden Festival in the spring, and the International Food and Wine Festival in the fall—musical groups from the 1960s through the 1990s perform as part of each festival's concert series ("Garden Rocks" in the spring, and "Eat to the Beat" in the fall).

In 1999, a revised version of Michael Flatley's Lord of the Dance was performed in the theater over the summer. Even though Flatley himself did not perform in the show, its popularity encouraged Epcot to bring the show back in 2000 for another summer run. Originally designed as an open-air theater, partial cover and backstage dressing and show equipment areas were added during a refurbishment that was completed before the inception of the Magical World of Barbie stage show.

In April 2015, the American Music Machine a cappella group began performing at the America Gardens Theatre using music arranged by Glee's Tim Davis. The group stopped performing on September 29, 2017.[11][12] Their captain, Antonio Fernandez, moved on to join DCappella at the group's founding in 2018 as its vocal percussion.[13]

Candlelight Processional

[edit]

During the holiday season, the theater hosts the Candlelight Processional. This show follows in the footsteps of the show first performed at Disneyland in 1960, and which was duplicated at the Magic Kingdom in 1971. The show relocated to the America Gardens Theater in 1994. The show includes an orchestra and massed choir that perform traditional holiday songs while a guest celebrity retells the nativity story. Some of the celebrities who have taken part in the Processional over the years include Andy Garcia, John Stamos, Marlee Matlin, Edward James Olmos, Haley Joel Osment, Susan Lucci, John O'Hurley, Jim Caviezel, Neil Patrick Harris, Whoopi Goldberg, Jodi Benson, T.D. Jakes, Pat Sajak, and Heather Graham.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Mindsai Productions; Disney Interactive (1996). The Walt Disney World Explorer (Microsoft Windows, Apple Macintosh) (1.0 ed.). Disney Interactive. Scene: The American Adventure slideshow. Topic title display field: "The American Adventure presented by American Express® and Coca-Cola"
  2. ^ Young, Josh (April 9, 2014). "What Happened To Theme Park Sponsorships?". Theme Park University. Archived from the original on April 1, 2018. Retrieved March 30, 2018. A Theme Park University reader recently posed the following on our TPU Facebook wall: 'When did Walt Disney world get away from sponsors of restaurants and attractions? Coca-Cola used to sponsor The American Adventure and Kraft Foods then later Nestle sponsored The Land.'
  3. ^ https://disneyparks.disney.go.com/blog/2019/06/new-barbecue-restaurant-featuring-craft-brews-to-debut-at-the-american-adventure-in-epcot-later-this-year/ Archived 2019-10-08 at the Wayback Machine Disney Parks Blog accessed 10/8/2019
  4. ^ Wright, Alex; The Imagineers (2007). The Imagineering Field Guide to Epcot at Walt Disney World : an Imagineer's-Eye Tour (1st ed.). New York: Disney Editions. p. 103. ISBN 978-0786848867.
  5. ^ "Disney Song #47: New Song Bound". The MacGyver Project. October 5, 2015. Archived from the original on 3 March 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  6. ^ "Hal Leonard Golden Dream SATB Arranged by Don Muller - Woodwind & Brasswind". Archived from the original on 2021-08-01. Retrieved 2020-09-23.
  7. ^ "Behind the Scenes With Walt Disney Imagineering: The Iconic 'Golden Dream' Anthem". Archived from the original on 2021-12-05 – via YouTube.
  8. ^ "New 2018 Update Version of "Golden Dream" from the American Adventure at Epcot Now Available on iTunes - WDW News Today". Archived from the original on 2019-12-18. Retrieved 2020-09-23.
  9. ^ OrlandoSentinel Original Voices of Liberty accessed 08/27/2023
  10. ^ Johnson, Derric. "About Derric Johnson - Musician, Conductor, Speaker and Author". Derricjohnson.com. Archived from the original on 2022-01-03. Retrieved 2022-02-19.
  11. ^ "American Music Machine News". WDWmagic.com. October 3, 2017. Archived from the original on September 24, 2019. Retrieved September 24, 2019.
  12. ^ Burke, Bill (May 17, 2015). "Disney World ushers in upgrades for 'Coolest Summer'". Boston Herald. Archived from the original on September 24, 2019. Retrieved September 24, 2019.
  13. ^ "Who is part of the DCappella cast?". DCappella Live. Disney Music Group. Archived from the original on April 19, 2019. Retrieved September 24, 2019.
[edit]