An Interview With Steven Davison - Part 1
Page 4 of 4
Eureka! at night
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LP: Were they able to do most of what you asked them to do?
SD: Yeah, it took us a couple of weeks after we opened to finish the lighting piece because we were still in day rehearsals or day performances. Holliman would come in every night and hed pull the floats out and they would just go through it again and again and again and really work through the bugs in the system and they finally got it. It all talks to each other now.
LP: How long was the development process for you then?
SD: I started on Eureka about two years ago as an initial thought and which way to go. In fact I developed several different parades for Paul Pressler. There was the character parade which was the epic California where the characters were going to tell you the making of California. Another one was the Latino Community. The third one was a tourist point of view of California where they brought in an artist from Mad Magazine to actually recreate like traffic jams and we had the Miss Natural Disaster Pageant. We did an ocean section about communities being in the oceans. Paul loved the Latino community piece and thought it would fit well but we expanded on that idea. Then moved it past that and developed the Eureka piece. A year ago, we met with Michael Eisner, took Michael through it and Michael liked it and we went into construction. Probably, starting in June, we were officially building steel and we pushed and pushed and pushed and got it through by November.
LP: Did you do one of your famous live pitches?
SD: Actually I did. Eureka is a hard pitch
because - "Believe" is a lot easier because youre going on a single sound
track from A to Z and its a story. Eureka has seven sections and it was always my
goal at the end of that presentation to always get that standing ovation. Can we move
people and get them excited enough to be overwhelmed by the product. Thats the hope.
I try not to say things that arent really in the parade. If people react to it
positively then I feel really good about what were doing and not try to second guess
it.
[Ed. Note: See the Related Links at the end of this article for a link to video of
Davison doing his pitch for "Believe...There's Magic in the Stars".
LP: Is Eureka supposed to run every day?
SD: It runs every day from now on until it doesnt. As of right now its probably going to run for three years. Thats kind of the shelf life of it. Usually after three years - parades are developed not to be like work horses. Attractions are built to last for tens and tens of years. Parades, because of their moving nature and the chassis theyre built on, have a lot of stress problems. Even Lion King Celebration, after the third year, it was really hard to keep it going but they did. I think after that, because of our local guests theyre ready for something new. We move onto something else.
LP: Will it ride in inclement weather?
SD: Depends on the inclement weather. We've played with that for the last month. If its a heavy rain we probably wont run the parade. If its a misty light rain and it just rained and the rain has stopped well do a modified parade. We send it out but we may cut some objects. We have inclement wind problems because some of the pieces do have some wind limitations so we might pull pieces off. Even people that know the parade - things might disappear from it and they dont know because its so impactful visually. Your eye doesnt know.
Eureka!
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In part two of the interview Davison talks specific elements of Eureka! including the potentially controversial ethnic elements and the bikers and skaters. Davison also discusses his hit show "Believe ... There's Magic in the Stars" and the challenges involved in following that up. Look for it in the next few days..
Discuss It
Related Links
- Part Two of this Interview
- January 2, 2001
Forever Magic, Page 4
Includes two video clips of Steven Davison performing his pitch for "Believe...There's Magic in the Stars" at the 2000 NFFC Convention. - DCA Grand
Opening, Interviews and Reviews
All our grand opening reports. interviews and reviews for Disney's California Adventure.
-- Posted June 5, 2001
-- Interview and sidebars by Doobie Moseley
-- Pictures by Rebekah Moseley and Doobie Moseley