PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Disney Gallery
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  • The area was originally intended to be the Royal Suite, an area for entertaining. The idea was abandoned. The area was given to Insurance Company of America as a hospitality area, followed by a stint as an office for Disneyland International. Finally, the area was turned into an art gallery in order to shorten the line for Pirates of the Caribbean. The gallery displayed various pieces of art produced by Walt Disney Imagineering. It also provided a service that allowed people to buy reproductions of the art.
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dbkwik:pirates/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • The area was originally intended to be the Royal Suite, an area for entertaining. The idea was abandoned. The area was given to Insurance Company of America as a hospitality area, followed by a stint as an office for Disneyland International. Finally, the area was turned into an art gallery in order to shorten the line for Pirates of the Caribbean. The gallery displayed various pieces of art produced by Walt Disney Imagineering. It also provided a service that allowed people to buy reproductions of the art. In 2003, there was an exhibition based on Pirates of the Caribbean called "A Pirate's Life for Me." Items displayed included concept art by Marc Davis, manquettes by Blaine Gibson, and props from Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. Among the props were Elizabeth Swann and Jack Sparrow's costumes, a piece of Aztec gold, and Jack Sparrow's compass. On July 2006, a room called "Setting Sail For New Adventures" was created to showcase art related to Pirates of the Caribbean. Along with previously displayed concept art from the ride, there was also props from Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest. Among the props were costumes and Jack's throne from the cannibal village.