Studio Tram Tour: Behind the Magic

Studio Tram Tour: Behind the Magic was an attraction at Walt Disney Studios Park, Disneyland Paris. The attraction premiered with the grand opening of Walt Disney Studios Park on March 16, 2002.[1] The attraction closed on the 5th of January 2020, to be replaced by a new Cars themed attraction and make way for the 2 billion euro multi-year expansion plan at Walt Disney Studios Park.

Studio Tram Tour: Behind the Magic
Walt Disney Studios Park
AreaHollywood Boulevard
StatusClosed
Opening dateMarch 16, 2002
Closing dateJanuary 5, 2020
Replaced byCars: Route 66 Road Trip
General statistics
Attraction typeTram Tour
DesignerWalt Disney Imagineering
ThemeBacklot tour of a working film studio
Vehicle typeTrams
Must transfer from wheelchair
Assistive listening available
Closed captioning available

Guests enter the attraction via the Hollywood Boulevard section of the park, under a false facade of the Hollywood sign. The tram ride portion of the attraction features highlights such as the Catastrophe Canyon scene and a look into the set of London in ruins from the film Reign of Fire. Imagineers wanted to create a studio tour at the Walt Disney Studios Park, similar to the former Studio Backlot Tour at Disney's Hollywood Studios in Florida, where the tour was once the park's signature attraction. The bilingual video that accompanies the tour features Jeremy Irons and Irène Jacob.

The site of the ride will be used for the upcoming Star Wars and Frozen area expansions to the 'Walt Disney Studios Park', as announced by Bob Iger in February 2018.

As part of the park's major expansion, much of the Tram Tour is to be removed for the new lands. Catastrophe Canyon is to be retained and incorporated into a new abridged Cars-based attraction, Cars: Route 66 Road Trip.[2]

References

  1. Geryak, Cole (February 6, 2020). "Extinct Attractions – Disneyland Paris' Studio Tram Tour". The Laughing Place. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  2. "Walt Disney Studios Park's Studio Tram Tour to Become "Cars Route 66" in Summer 2020". The Laughing Place. October 14, 2019. Retrieved 17 July 2020.

See also


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