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You are here: Home / Walt Disney World History / Walt Disney World’s Maelstrom, Part 4

Walt Disney World’s Maelstrom, Part 4

March 30, 2005 by Paul Torrigino

Paul Torrigino’s stories last fall about the never-built Dragon

Tower attraction (read part 1 |

part 2) were very well received

and prompted many questions about his work on the Maelstrom attraction at

Epcot’s Norway pavilion. Paul returns with a multi-part series about his experiences

with the Maelstrom.

In part 1 of this series (link),

Paul described the origins of the Maelstrom attraction and how it became its

current format of a time-travel ride. In Part 2, (link)

he looked deeper into the design and early construction of the attraction.

In Part 3 (link), Paul looked the

construction and assembly of the attraction on site at Walt Disney World.

Today, Paul completes the series by discussing the construction and assembly

of the attraction on site at Walt Disney World. – Mark Goldhaber

Getting started in Florida

After the sets and figures were finished they sent me off

to Florida to art direct the installation. I was the only one of the team

they sent out. Randy Carter flew in from time to time, but other than

that I was the only one from the show team there in Florida. Dave Van

Wyk was in Florida also, overseeing the construction and installation

of the track and vehicles. On the exterior, Ron Bowman, the architectural

designer, was there directing the exterior construction. He did amazing

work on it.


Paul poses in front of the under-construction Norway pavilion. Photo courtesy

of Paul Torrigino.

Since I had previously only done work in the model shop and at Tujunga,

this was all new to me, and a great new learning experience. When I got

there, the building was under construction and it was a great tangle of

concrete, steel and pipes. You could just make out where the track was

and where all the rooms would be.

One of the first people I met there was John Olson (one of the greatest

rockwork and themed plaster guys in the world; he had just finished the

great Morocco pavilion there at EPCOT), and he showed me the ropes and

introduced me to the people in the ‘rock yard’ behind the Magic Kingdom

who were working out the calculations to make all the rebar shapes for

the rockwork in the attraction.

The main two guys I worked with in the rock yard were Patrick Brennan

(who went on to work for Show Quality Standards at Disney World) and John

Mazzella (who worked on many other Disney projects over the years). They

were very knowledgeable with what they were doing and I caught on pretty

fast.

After that, I went into the show building and basically stayed there

for nine months, art directing the construction workers on every bit of

the show. We built the fishing village scene from scratch right there

in the building using the scale model as a guide. That was a lot of fun,

trying to get the little buildings to look old and slightly warped. It

came out nice.

The fishing village incident


The fishing village is under construction. Imagineering inside tidbit:

Paul says, “I just noticed there are address numbers above the door

of the building there. ‘129’ That’s my birthday! January 29th! I

forgot I did that!” Photo courtesy of Paul Torrigino.

I remember one little incident in particular when I was directing the

painting of the fishing village. In Norway, it is very typical for them

to paint a bright color on the windowsill and window trim as an accent

to their clean white painted buildings. In every bit of research I did,

I found that they always painted the accent color on the faces of the

trim only, never on the returns (the side edges of the frame). I thought

that was kind of odd, that it would look better to paint the returns,

but we were going for authenticity so we were going to paint them the

way the Norwegians do. I was directing a small crew of four or five people

and specifically told them about how the returns were to be handled.

One morning I came in as usual and the painters had gone in and painted

all the returns with the accent color. I asked them why they did that.

They said John Hench and Bob Jolley had come walking through the night

before after I left and didn’t like the way the windows were painted and

they directed the paint crew to repaint them. Well I was mad! Not about

the change they made, I actually agreed with them; but about them coming

into the building and directing the crew to do something without consulting

me! After all, I was the designer and it was MY little scene! So I was

throwing a fit later in the office and asking everyone, “Who the

@$#%! is this Bob Jolley guy and where is he and where is John Hench?”


Paul works with plasterers carving petroglyphs into the rockwork on the

up ramp. Photo courtesy of Paul Torrigino.

Well John had already flown back out to California that morning, but

I found out where Bob Jolley’s office was and drove over there to see

him. I was outraged and told him so and told him he had a lot of nerve,

etc., and to ask me first if they wanted to change anything in the ride—I

really went off on him. He just sat there stone-faced and shocked and

hardly said anything.

Later I found out that Bob was like THE great paint art director at Disney

World at the time and had a great history with motion picture set painting

including the Elizabeth Taylor Cleopatra set, among many other

things. Somebody should have warned me. Anyway, he never apologized, but

he never said anything else about the ride. He retired soon after, I think.

So when you go into the fishing village at the end of the ride, you can

see the trim color is painted on the returns, and now you know the story

of it.

Mickeys and film

It’s funny about the hidden Mickey phenomenon. Terry, the scenic painter,

put mouse ears on one of the Vikings in the ship in the mural in the load

area, but that was it. We all thought it was funny and no one would notice

it. Also, he used himself for a model of one of the people in the mural.

I think Bill Anderson (head Disney mural painter) is the guy at the ship’s

wheel, and his daughter is the nurse. There’s no other intentional hidden

Mickeys in there or anywhere else on the ride, but people sure find them

everywhere!


The first ride vehicle arrives in the unfinished load area. Photo courtesy

of Paul Torrigino.

The film at the end of the attraction was part of the design early on

because the Norwegians wanted it, and the village was designed as a holding

area. I never liked the idea of being trapped there so we tried to make

the village as charming and authentic as we could so people wouldn’t mind

being there for a few minutes.

The film was okay, but like anything it gets boring after you’ve seen

it a couple of times. Early on during tests, I found that the theater

doors remained open long enough at the exit side of the theater so that

you could walk right through the theater from the village and get out

before the doors shut for the next film. Not many people know there is

enough time to just walk out if you want to. But that was back when it

first opened. It may be different now.

Attraction films are tough because people will see them more than once,

and they can get boring when they are seen multiple times. For the new

film that they’re currently shooting, I would probably stick with some

awesome scenery and nice classic music, kind of along the lines of that

beautiful film over at the France pavilion. I could watch that over and

over. The country of Norway has breathtaking scenery, beautiful fjords,

historic towns, pretty coastal villages, and lots more. I would definitely

avoid any kind of hard-hitting celebrity-of-the-moment schlock like they

tend to do so often now, or any attempt to be too funny.

Enjoying fruits of hard work


The Norway pavilion is almost completed. Photo courtesy of Paul Torrigino.

After I finished my part of the installation, they sent me back home

and I was back in the model shop. It was still about a month from opening

when one day I got an invitation in my mailbox—an official-looking

thing inviting me to the grand opening of the pavilion in Florida.

Very nice, I thought, but I didn’t even think about going. I made very

little money back then and couldn’t afford the trip, not to mention taking

the time off. Well, my boss at the time, Michael Morris, came up to me

later that day and asked if I had received the invitation. I said, “Yes,

that was really nice of them to invite me. Too bad I won’t be able to

go.”

He said to me, “Pack your bags! That invitation is good for the

whole trip and it’s on the company!” And they even let me take a

guest along. I was really surprised! So they flew me and my sister out

first class for a week and we got to go to the opening and play all over

Walt Disney World. They treated us employees so great back then!

I think the attraction is pretty full as it is now. I think it’s an OK

little ride. I just wish it could have been longer. I think if you wanted

to improve it, you’d have to make it longer and then add some bigger scenes.

Then again, I think the original troll ride idea with a Sherman Brothers

song would have been way cool.

Author

  • Paul Torrigino
    Paul Torrigino

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Filed Under: Walt Disney World History

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