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Journey into Imagination

World of Motion. Body Wars. Kitchen Kabaret. Universe of Energy. The Living Seas. Horizons... For Disney World fans, there's no park as marked by nostalgia, change, and loss as Epcot. And yet, among its staggering collection of closed classics, there's one particular attraction that most fills fans with both immense sadness and glowing hope...

"One little spark of inspiration is at the heart of all creation! Right at the start of everything that's new, one still spark lights up for you!"

Journey into Imagination was one of the most beloved attractions ever conceived by Disney’s Imagineers. Among the grounded, industrious, scientific studies of Future World's other pavilions, this generation-defining Disney classic dared to carried guests away from our world on a flight of fancy alongside two of the most beloved and enigmatic characters ever created for Disney Parks. Alight with optimism, this magnificent celebration of creativity and inspiration was an icon of EPCOT Center. 

Art by Tom Morris. Image: Disney

Journey into Imagination is long gone. That means that a generation of Disney Parks fans never had the chance to take flight with Dreamfinder and Figment, or to sail through realms of art and science on a quest for "sparks." But that's where our library of Lost Legends comes in... Today, we'll soar through the clouds as we preserve this timeless experience for good, crystalizing the creation of this spectacular closed classic, our memories (and yours!) of the experience on board, and its unfortunate history since...

Ready to set sail for the Dreamport? Let's start at the beginning.

World Innovation

Image: Disney

It's well known among fans of Disney history that Walt Disney was an innovator. Never satisfied with standing still, the opening of Disneyland in 1955 only inspired Walt to improve, expand, and reimagine. In fact, the most major milestone in the development of Disney Parks in the 1960s didn't happen in Anaheim or even Orlando, but at the 1964-65 New York World's Fair in Queens.

For literally centuries, World's Fairs have been iconic international expos inviting governments (and later, corporations) from around the world to come together in a chosen host country to celebrate their cultures, cuisines, innovations, and ideas. 1889's Exposition Universelle, for example, was hosted in Paris, with the "temporary" Eiffel Tower constructed as its icon; see also, San Francisco's 1915 hosting with the Palace of the Fine Arts, or 1962's event in Seattle, comissioning the central Space Needle. 

Notice the size of the people standing around the Unisphere. Image: PLCjr, Flickr (license)

The New York World's Fair is perhaps one of the most well-known in history. By its 1964 opening, these international expos had evolved into their definitive form: massive, monumental pavilions constructed and filled by states, countries, and corporations eager to share their message and brand with visitors from around the globe. And in the spirit of these showcases of optimism, collaboration, and futurism, each corporation wanted something magnficent for their pavilion.

Take the UNICEF (United Nations Children's Fund) pavilion, sponsored by Pepsi-Cola. As the story goes, Pepsi's Board of Directors debated for months about what kind of attraction they should develop to both bolster Pepsi's brand as well as to complement the unifying message of UNICEF. As luck would have it, board member Joan Crawford (widow of Pepsi's former president) was fed up with the debate and asked her personal friend Walt Disney if he'd get involved and design an attraction for the pavilion.

Image: Disney

The result was "it's a small world," an Imagineering masterpiece made of all the right ingredients: a Sherman Brothers song, the incredible artistic vision of Imagineer Mary Blair, and an innovative, high-capacity new ride system! And so it went for attractions developed for the State of Illinois, Ford Motor Company, and General Electric, each funding the testing, development, and prototyping of new technologies that, at the close of the Fair, were relocated along with "small world" back to Disneyland (as Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln and the Lost Legends: The Peoplemover and Carousel of Progress, respectively).

Remember the lessons learned through Disney's sponsored participation and innovation in the 1964-65 New York World's Fair... it'll be important.

"The Blessing of Size"

Tap for a larger and more detailed view. Image: Disney

Disney's innovations at the World's Fair propelled Disneyland forward. The groundbreaking advances made in Audio-Animatronics and ride systems in the era aren't just responsible for the World's Fair attractions themselves, but for Pirates of the Caribbean, Haunted Mansion, and Walt's New Tomorrowland.

But it's also true that, hemmed in by the urban sprawl that developed around Disneyland in the '50s and '60s, Walt set his sights on acquiring a much larger parcel of land in Central Florida, gifting his designers with "the blessing of size" in creating something new. But the "Florida Project" wasn't about building a new Disneyland. In fact, Walt was unapologetically determined to change modern living as we know it.

Image: Disney

In 1966, Walt revealed his plans for the "Florida Project" and its centerpiece: E.P.C.O.T. - the Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow. Walt planned for EPCOT to be a real, living, functioning showcase of future living; an urban and residential town that would apply the transportation technologies he'd merely prototyped at Disneyland - the Peoplemover and Monorail. In fact, it's said that, as Walt lay in his hospital bed just before his death in 1966, he was still looking up, using the squared ceiling tiles as a grid to explain the layout of his EPCOT city.

Walt didn't live to see the "Florida Project" come to life. Without his visionary guidance and zeal, the new leadership at Walt Disney Productions decided they couldn't be in the business of building a city from scratch. Instead, the centerpiece of Walt Disney World's 1971 opening was, of course, Magic Kingdom – an evolution of the original Disneyland.

Image: Disney

However, the core concepts of Walt's EPCOT – among them, futurism, Americana, and the power of industry – did inform Walt Disney World. And when it came time to open a second theme park on the property, then-CEO Card Walker returned to the principles of EPCOT in the design of the new gate; one that would do away with all that people expected of Disney (like princess, pirates, castles, and cartoons). 

In a radical shift from the Magic Kingdoms that preceeded it, EPCOT Center would be grounded in celebrations of industry, innovation, culture, and (most startling of all) reality – a permanent World's Fair showcasing human achievements with a lofty mission to shape the world.

Not like the others

Image: Disney

EPCOT Center would open with two massive "realms" pressed together like a figure eight a cultural World Showcase of corporate-sponsored pavilions of international countries, and Future World, comprised of monumental pavilions, each dedicated to areas of science and industry.

But it was more than just the park's "pavilion" structure that served as a World's Fair connection; it was also its finances. EPCOT Center relied on corporate sponsors to adopt the park's pavilions. At least at first, it must've seemed like a win-win scenario. In exchange for their ongoing financial support, corporations would play a role in shaping the messaging of Disney-designed attractions, earning the "good will" of having their brand name presented alongside Walt Disney World. And since those corporations wouldn't want their brands presented alongside outdated information, they'd be inherently motivated to supply the pavilion's with their cutting edge research and most forward-thinking products.

At Future World's height, it contained eight pavilions (each with its own related corporate sponsor!) dedicated to communication (Spaceship Earth), ocean exploration (The Living Seas), agriculture (The Land), transportation (World of Motion), health (Wonders of Life), energy resources (Universe of Energy), innovation (Communicore), and a capstone pavilion bringing them all together to dream of humanity's future (Horizons).

Image: Disney

But if Horizons is where our path forward leads, then Imagination is where it begins. Spectacularly, Future World's Imagination pavilion was identified by its two interlaced glass pyramids (constructed seven years before I. M. Pei's famed Pyramide du Louvre in Paris, by the way). This shimmering Imagination pavilion looked quite unlike the colder, concrete structures that defined the monumental Future World... Waterfalls, fountains, glowing towers, and gardens... This outlier was indeed something special; warmer; gentler.

And think about it: while the concept of “imagination” hardly fits with the "harder" industries and technologies of the rest of EPCOT, its inclusion is genius! Without it, there would be no advances in communication for Spaceship Earth to showcase; no emerging technology in Communicore; no culinary wonders in The Land… Imagination is the root of science, industry, and civilization; the first ingredient in creating "the future." 

Image: Disney

While the concept and the building were indeed novel, it’s what – and who – they found inside the two glass pyramids that Disney Fans recall so fondly. How did Disney designers decide on the iconic Dreamfinder and Figment? On the next page, we'll see how Journey into Imagination pavilion came to be...

 
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Comments

Great find in the library! I worked on Figment 2011 (summer programme) and I miss it so much! I would love more than anything for this pavilion to get a much needed investment. It needs modernisation more than anything, we all love nostalgia - but the way the ride operates needs a swift update.

This whole thing with Disney turning Journey into Imagination into the way it is now is a joke. The original version is tons better compared to what they did to it. They should never have change something that didn't need to be fixed. It was already bad enough that Dreamfinder had been missing for almost 20 years, but the concept of what imagination is truly about being diminished just pushes my buttons.

Inside Out should not enter the Imagination Pavilion with even a teeny tiny step. Their story is based on the emotions that happen in the human mind. With the exception having an Imagination Land with Figment there as a cameo, the human mind cannot react to their emotions without imagination. If anything, it should either be placed in one of the other Future World buildings, get discarded COMPLETELY, or if it must stay in Epcot just build a new building to house it.

I have to agree with the writer of this article about Journey Into YOUR Imagination. The idea of having the ride show you that you don't have imagination at the beginning of the ride is just insulting. EVERYONE has imagination. As Dreamfinder said, "Imagination is something that belongs to ALL of us." and that "We all have sparks: Imagination!" The way that JIYI is made is NOTHING like how Dreamfinder would have envisioned this pavilion to be. But I think he of all people would be more pissed off of what Disney has made Figment into. Skunk sprays? Smelling armpits? Really? It's true Figment has a sort of mischievous side in him, but THIS is just sick. It's too much! Still, it makes me happy about showing Figment's true colors in the comic books series, which I have in hard book covers and LOVE VERY MUCH! I can't wait for the third on to come out as a trilogy! :D

Also, another thing about Journey Into Your Imagination as well as Journey Into Imagination with Figment, the Anti-Gravity room is a real bust! I'll admit, it's a nice touch. It's just not used in a way that would make the guests and fans get wild about. In JIYI, the room looks boring enough it might as well be you going home so quick from vacation. I mean, what's so imaginative about what they had showcased in that version? They basically just dressed up the house at to what it had looked like within the past 30-40 years. LAME! Still, the design would be kinda nice to actually have in your own home. I'm game to that decision. And then in JIIWF today, the dark light colors where they have Figment living is is way to vibrant. It would have been better if they had made those Figment figure be animatronic and move around a bit. It'd be creepy, still, but hey, it's something.

I've only come to love both Dreamfinder and Figment for about 8 months now after reading both the Marvel comics. And since then, I've come to understand the upmost relativity and importance these two have had in serving their role on behalf of Epcot. When the song says "One Little Spark of inspiration is at the heart of all creation," they REALLY MEAN IT! It's not only the ideology of what the Imagineers at Disney go by, it goes that way for everyone! That's what makes Dreamfinder, Figment and Journey Into Imagintion represent. They are the true soul of the park. Without them, what good is every mechanical innovation or every great idea for to create the world as it could be. For 20 years now, the Disney company today has been misinterpreting the ideas and the concepts of what imagination is used for and they need to fix it soon and bring back Dreamfinder with Figment in the process. Otherwise, Epcot is going to go down to straight to hell and thereby putting Walt Disney's dreams of this park into shame (and on the 50th anniversary of his death, too. >:( ).

Pull yourself together, Disney and return what was rightfully everyone's!

I took my family three times to WDW starting around 2006. And never had the chance to view the original ride. By the time we went it was the latest version which I see now went through some pretty drastic changes.

A couple of years after JIYI opened, there was some Figment merchandise in the after-ride store. People would look at it and say "What's a Figment?".... ouch.

I love Figment!! My first trip to DisneyWorld was 1988 I was only 4 so my memory of it isn't great except a few very vivid memories of Epcot especially Figment

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