Saturday, January 15, 2011

Goodbye Cypress Gardens



Cypress Gardens opened  in 1936 as Florida's first tourist attraction when Dick Pope, Sr and his wife showcased their botanical gardens. It became famous for its beautiful gardens, Southern Belles and water ski shows and was called the "Water Ski Capital of the World" because over 50 world water skiing records were broken there.

Sadly, its demise, like many other original Florida tourist attractions, began in the 1970s when it had to compete with Disney. Once the Popes retired and transferred the park to their son, successive owners would unsuccessfully keep the park at the necessary attendance levels. The first owner outside the Pope family was book publisher, Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich who bought the park in the early 1980s and operated it until it sold the park to Anheuser-Busch in 1989. A group of the park managers, led by Bill Reynolds, then bought the property in April 1995 from Anheuser-Busch and operated it until April 2003 when the park closed suddenly, putting 529 people out of work with three days' notice.

The Friends of Cypress Gardens, founded by Burma Davis Posey, immediately incorporated and saved the park by enlisting the help of members in the United States and 27 other countries and raising 13,500,000 dollars in three and a half months. This group then sold the property to The Trust for Public Land, a national conservation organization, who sold a conservation easement over the entire property to the state of Florida with the 30-acres gardens portion sold to Polk County.

Adventure Parks Group bought the balance of the property subject to the conservation easement and reopened the park as Cypress Gardens Adventure Park in November 2004 complete with a wooden roller coaster and other midway-style rides and  the adjacent Splash Island water park followed in 2005. Unfortunately, the estimated $30 million in damages from the horrific 2004 hurricane season led Adventure Parks Group to file for bankruptcy in September 2006.

Land South Adventures bought Cypress Gardens at a bankruptcy auction October 16, 2007, temporarily closed the park in November 2008, then reopened in March 2009 as two separate parks.Splash Island was expanded but the animals and many of the midway rides were gone from Cypress Gardens. Sadly, on September 23, 2009, the company announced the park was closing because they were unable to "keep the park running in its traditional form."

Merlin Entertainments, the world's second largest them park and attraction operator, bought the park in 2010 and announced it would become Legoland Florida with an October 2011 opening. It has been reported that the gardens will be incorporated into the new park ... this Florida native and history lover certainly hopes so.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Disney's Hollywood Studios

A trip to see the Osborne Family Spectacle of Lights in December included the day's admission to Disney's Hollywood Studios.

This Disney theme park has an interesting history and began in 1985 when Disney and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) entered into a contract that gave Disney the rights to use the MGM name and logo for a back lot studio. Disney planned the theme park around a working production facilities for movies and television, as well as, a satellite animation studio. However, MGM filed a lawsuit in 1988 against Disney stating that it violated the original agreement. Thus, when the theme park opened adjacent to the production facilities as Disney-MGM Studios in 1989, the only connection to MGM was the original licensing agreement that allowed Disney to use the MGM brand name, lion logo and specific MGM content in The Great Movie Ride attraction. Disney later filed a counter suit and won the right to continue using the Disney-MGM Studios name on film product produced at the facility, but was prohibited from using the Disney-MGM Studios name in marketing pieces promoting it as part of the Walt Disney World Resorts.
 
The theme park was re-branded as Disney's Hollywood Studios in January 2008, while keeping the glamor of the 1930s and 1940s Hollywood, including The Great Movie Ride, as part of its persona. Hollywood history buffs will also enjoy The Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Hall of Fame, The American Film Institute Showcase and Walt Disney: One Man's Dream.

Like all Disney parks, this one offers something for everyone and is focused on Disney magic and entertainment. Live action and stunt shows, thrill rides, backstage tours and parades are all based on familiar movies and television shows in this unique park designed to look like a giant movie set.