Disneyland fans hail 'greatest feeling ever' as theme park finally reopens | Inquirer News

Disneyland fans hail ‘greatest feeling ever’ as theme park finally reopens

/ 03:39 AM May 01, 2021

ANAHEIM, CA - APRIL 30: People pose for selfies at Disneyland Park as it reopens for the first time since the COVID 19 pandemic forced the park to shut down last year on April 30, 2021 in Anaheim, California. California saw some of the highest infection rates in the nation over the winter but now enjoys some of the lowest. Los Angeles County, for example, is now expected to move from the orange tier of the states economic reopening system based on COVID-19 metrics to the least restrictive yellow tier, which would allow greater reopening freedoms, as early as next week.   David McNew/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by DAVID MCNEW / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

People pose for selfies at Disneyland Park as it reopens for the first time since the COVID 19 pandemic forced the park to shut down last year in Anaheim, California. (Getty Images via AFP)

ANAHEIM, United States – Fans wearing Mickey Mouse ears lined up as Disneyland in California finally reopened Friday, more than 400 days after the pandemic forced an unprecedented closure for the self-styled “Happiest Place on Earth.”

“It is the greatest feeling ever!” said Momi, a woman in her forties as she brought her children to the world-famous park near Los Angeles.

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“I promised my daughters we would be back here on opening day, and I made it happen.”

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Disneyland Park — the world’s second-most visited theme park — and neighboring Disney California Adventure Park have been closed the longest of all the Mouse House’s globe-spanning parks, delayed by California’s sharp winter Covid spike and tough restrictions.

But with the Golden State now boasting the nation’s lowest per capita infection rate, the sprawling resort flung open its gates Friday to the delight of many of its most obsessive devotees.

Sisters Carla and Jasmine, 23 and 17, who preferred not to give their last name, used to visit “pretty much every day” before the pandemic.

“We would go after school, after work, and just go on rides, even if it was for a couple hours,” said Carla, as they eagerly waited to re-enter.

“We’ve been excited for this opening day… it’s very exciting and emotional!”

Inside the park, attendance is capped at 25 percent capacity, and only California residents who have reservations can enter in groups restricted to three households.

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Face masks are mandatory, temperatures are checked before admission, and Disneyland’s famed parades and “nighttime spectaculars” are on hold for fear of encouraging tightly massed crowds.

Staff in Disney costumes — known as “cast members” in the theme park’s lingo — can no longer hug visitors, but were on hand Friday to wave from a safe distance and “pop up posing in the background of selfies,” according to an official press release.

‘Honeymoon’

One resort hotel reopened Thursday with plexiglass barriers at reception and socially distanced check-in lines, with the others to follow from Sunday in a phased reopening.

Disneyland president Ken Potrock called the park’s reopening Friday a “very, very big deal,” with the lengthy closure used to make some “wonderful enhancements” including additions to the Snow White’s Enchanted Wish, King Arthur Carousel and Haunted Mansion attractions.

A Marvel superhero-themed Avengers Campus is due to open at Disney California Adventure in June.

Disneyland Park is already sold out for the entire first seven weeks.

Some rides remain shut for pandemic safety reasons, including the Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage and the resort’s monorail, while others such as Jungle Cruise are closed for maintenance and upgrades.

For visitor Momi, who told AFP she aimed to set a new personal record of riding an attraction themed on the movie “Cars” 50 times in a row, the park has a special signficance.

“I came here on my honeymoon, I came here and got pregnant right inside this park,” she said.

“And my daughter’s been coming here for 17 years since she was born — so it’s like a family memory.

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“We always feel like this is the happiest place for our family to be.”

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TAGS: Disneyland, pandemic, reopen

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