Author Rachel Chang discusses her love of Disney and the way the park is making her really feel extra understood now than ever earlier than with significant storytelling—plus, Din Tai Fung soup dumplings and boba.
Whereas some children develop up listening to fairy tales about faraway lands, I grew up with tales a few magical place that is a few five-hour drive from my California hometown of San JosĂ©: Disneyland. We had a youngsters’s ebook concerning the “It’s a Small World” journey and my mother all the time likes to muse on how the attraction is “simply so peaceable,” like “heaven on earth.”
Because the daughter of Taiwanese immigrants, I typically felt like I used to be leaping rope between the 2 sides of my Asian American id. However our visits to Disney all the time felt just like the prototypical all-American expertise. We might not have been outwardly cognizant of it on the time, however maybe we felt a connection because it was the one place the place we noticed characters that appeared like us being represented.
A long time later, we launched into a multigenerational household journey to the park in 2017 with my mother and father and two younger nieces. This journey simply occurred to happen days earlier than Lunar New Yr, and I used to be shocked to see an archway studying “Lunar New Yr” close to Disney California Journey decked out in conventional red-and-gold lanterns and tassels underneath an Asian-inspired, Mickey-shaped brand.
Seems, it was a part of the park’s annual Lunar New Yr festivities, which initially began in 2012 as a week-long occasion, however has since expanded into an almost month-long celebration. We noticed menu gadgets from Korean, Vietnamese, and Chinese language cuisines, and there have been even Mickey and Minnie characters wearing conventional outfits. To see a park that felt so “American” embrace Asian traditions went past simply feeling seen, however like actually being embraced and understood. It felt particularly poignant throughout my nieces’ first go to—understanding they’ll develop up in a extra inclusive society.
Richard Harbaugh/Disneyland Resort
It wasn’t till final month that I used to be lured again to a Disney once more, visiting Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, to take part within the Run Disney Springtime Shock Weekend’s 5K run. And I I started recognizing Asian American influences all around the park: first a mahjong desk within the foyer of The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, and I later noticed collectible pins of characters on Asian-style followers and boba drinks.
Early this month, I visited Disneyland for its seventieth Anniversary Celebration. And as an alternative of looking for hidden Mickeys, I went on a hunt for Asian American influences on the park.
I started my search in Disney California Journey in San Fransokyo Sq., a hybrid of San Francisco and Tokyo impressed by the film “Large Hero 6.” This part was often called Pacific Wharf, and I used to be instantly blown away by the redressing. There have been indicators written with Japanese and Chinese language characters, and tons of conventional Asian motifs, like gold cash, dragons, fortunate cats, and lanterns. It was all definitive proof that Disneyland is making a significant funding in range. It particularly is smart in California, the place 7.1 million individuals (that is about 18 %) establish as Asian, in line with information from the Pew Analysis Middle.
However nothing impressed me greater than the menus. Fortunate Fortune Cookery served up honey walnut shrimp wraps, potstickers, karaage-inspired hen sandwiches, yaki udon, and its buzzed-about beef birria ramen. Aunt Cass Café had soba noodle salad, California roll sandwich, and—my obsession—San Fransokyo Clam Chowder in a sourdough bread bowl. Flavored with white miso, it was all a far cry from the burgers and sizzling canines I had anticipated as theme park fare.
However the Asian American-inspired choices weren’t restricted to San Fransokyo Sq.. Whereas watching the Higher Collectively: A Pixar Buddies Celebration parade (which is returning to Disney California Journey by subsequent summer time), I used to be shocked that the opening float featured Pink Panda Mei, together with different characters from “Turning Pink.”
Later, I stood with a honey lemonade with popping bubbles from Aunt Cass’ on the Disneyland Rejoice Completely satisfied Cavalcade, bemused by the actual fact I used to be watching a Disney parade with a boba drink in hand, one thing I by no means may have imagined throughout my childhood visits.
Wandering down Disneyland’s Important Road U.S.A., I seen that one of many window shows at Emporium, was devoted to Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month. However that wasn’t the one homage to AAPI month. I additionally noticed indicators for particular menu gadgets across the park, together with ardour fruit-orange-guava punch and inexperienced tea lager at Fortunate Fortune Cookery.
Throughout Could, the park’s Disney PhotoPass featured themed MagicShots, with photographs superimposed with Asian Disney characters together with Russell from “Up,” Panda Mei from “Turning Pink,” and the rings from “Shang-Chi and the Ten Rings.” There was even a sketch pad prop possibility showcasing work by Tyrus Wong, a Chinese language American animator who was the lead artist behind “Bambi.”
There have been additionally particular occasions in Could together with autograph signings with Asian Disney artists Stacy Aoyama and Eric Tan, drawing classes with Russell and Mei, film nights showings of “Moana” and “Turning Pink,” and dance classes with Tahitian, Polynesian, Japanese, Indian, and Filipino instructors.
However maybe essentially the most important everlasting Asian addition is the brand new Din Tai Fung, which opened July 2024 at Downtown Disney. Visiting the restaurant’s unique location in Taipei was all the time a serious a part of my journeys to Taiwan, and it was completely mind-boggling that it was now the anchor restaurant at a serious American theme park. As I loved my favourite spicy wontons and sesame xiao lengthy baos, I used to be tickled to be taught the restaurant even had a restricted pin set to rejoice the park’s seventieth anniversary.
Christian Thompson/Disneyland Resort
Stumbling upon all these significant Asian American parts sprinkled all through the half was no accident, however the work of Compass, the park’s Asian American Pacific Islander worker group. Compass “strives to coach our Solid with a larger understanding and appreciation of our AAPI tradition” and “helps advise on tradition consciousness for Disneyland Resort choices,” the group’s co-chair Allie Kawamoto, resort expertise integration supervisor at Disneyland Resort, tells Journey + Leisure.
Kawamoto was born in Anaheim and has all the time beloved Disney. However now she’s paying it ahead to the following era, and was behind the Emporium’s AAPI show. “Seeing this window come to life and having the ability to share the window with my son was a second I used to be very pleased with,” she says.
Like my circle of relatives, she provides that she’s all the time been a fan of “It’s a Small World,” which has been up to date by the years to incorporate “Lilo and Sew” in its Pacific Islands part, and most lately, “Coco'”s Miguel and Dante within the Mexico portion.
“I simply really feel blissful as I journey by and see numerous cultures represented,” Kawamoto says. “We have now friends that go to from around the globe, and I feel nearly everybody can see a mirrored image of their tradition.”