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Dates:
6th Nov 2015 to
3rd Jan 2016
Location:
Disney Hollywood Studios
Time:
6pm to Park Closing
Tip:
Avoid weekends if you can, as these tend to be busier.
Best time to visit is after thanksgiving and before christmas eve.
The Osborne Family Spectacle of Lights
The Osborne Lights are no more!...after 20 years the spectacle permanently closed on the 6th January 2016.
2015 was the the final chance for guests to see the amazing Osborne Lights. Soak up the atmosphere of the all-new dancing light sequence to the arrangement of "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas!"
Bask in the glow of one of the most popular Walt Disney World Resort holiday traditions.
The Osborne Family Spectacle of Lights brightens the Streets of America area in Disney's Hollywood Studios, Orlando, Florida, with a dazzling display of trees, spinning carousels, 3-D and motion-based displays.
Delight in the flying angels, toy soldiers and giant Santa Claus light creations all strung along the high rise strewn backlot cityscape.
2014 saw 'Jack Skellington' join the display as 'Sandy Claws', with a new lighting sequence, along with the music from the 'Nightmare Before Christmas" movie.
Some Statistics:
5 million individual lights or 350 miles of lights.
A 70 foot Christmas tree glittering with 58,000 lights and a 30-foot-tall tree with 27,300 lights.
800,000 watts of electricity are used along the park's 760-foot-long New York, Chicago & San Francisco Streets.
More than 350 miles of Christmas lights wrap around the display with 32.2 miles of extension cables.
Disney's christmas elves took 21,000 hours to install the lights.
66 snow machines and 100 gallons of snow fluid are used to create a flurry of snowflakes
More than 40 hidden Mickey images to be found.
music the lights dance to:
A Mad Russian's Christmas, by Trans-Siberian Orchestra
Christmas Eve, by Trans-Siberian Orchestra
Christmas is Starting Now, from the Phineas and Ferb Christmas Special
Feliz Navidad, by José Feliciano
Here Comes Santa Claus, by Elvis Presley
Jingle Bells, by Barbra Streisand
Parade of the Wooden Soldiers, by Arthur Fiedler & Boston Pops Orchestra
I'm Getting' Nuttin' for Christmas, by Plain White T's
The Merry & Bright Dessert Party at Disney's Hollywood Studios will take place from November 6 to December 24, 2015 7pm to 8:30pm (excluding November 17, December 9 and December 18) and December 25 to December 30, 2015, from 8:30pm to 10pm. This event offers guests a special viewing area for the lights and includes desserts and drinks.
Tickets are priced at $69 per adult or $39 for children (ages 3 to 9), tax and gratuity included (park admission required). Also included in the ticket is a custom roll-up stadium blanket.
Reservations can be made online or at 407-WDW-DINE.
Merry and Bright Dinner Reception
This private Dinner Reception features holiday-themed fare, including shrimp, beef and turkey served with wine, beer and other specialty alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages. Each Guest will receive a custom shadow box keepsake featuring their own Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights.
Available from January 1 - 3 2016, priced at $99 per adult, and $54 ages 3-9.
History of the Osborne Lights
Jennings Osborne, a Little Rock, Arkansas, businessman, began putting up lights nearly a decade ago, at the request of his young daughter. Each year, he added to the displays.
When he ran out of room, Osborne bought the two houses on either side of his home so he could continue his creativity. Neighbors complained, however, and the Arkansas Supreme Court ruled in October 1994 that Osborne's house, when adorned with the 3 million lights, was a public nuisance.
Although legally barred from causing a "spectacle", Osborne still lit the display three nights. He was found in contempt of court and fined $1,500. The court suspended a 10-day jail sentence, but ordered him to pay $7,000 in attorneys' fees.
Article by: Pieser
Putting up those millions of lights at the annual Osborne Family Spectacle of Lights takes months to complete, even if they don't screw those bulbs in one light at a time.
The lighting process actually begins in August, said show producer Chris Pieser, at a recent behind-the-scenes look at the dazzling display of lights held annually at the Disney-MGM Studios. There are now so many lights in the display, which originally was part of a huge neighborhood holiday display begun by Jennings Osborne in Arkansas, that Disney officials have given up counting. "We just say millions and millions," said Pieser.
The lights don't officially come on until mid November. And while almost 75 percent of the light show was complete by early October, there is still plenty of behind-the-scenes work to be done, said Pieser.
The elaborate show requires a team of 18 electricians 14 weeks to hang all those lights on the Streets of America backlit at the theme park. Counting the actual number of lights has become practically an impossibility, especially since the lights are hung in thousands of separate strings.
The huge display requires nearly 12 miles of extension cord, he said. And Disney workers start from scratch each year with all new strings of lights from China. "Bulbs burn out and the brightness fades," he said, so it is easier to have an all-new display each year. To get an idea of just how many lights there are at the Osborne display, consider that just one 70-foot tree contains 80,000 lights. Add to that the numerous buildings, a blue night sky and a dazzling 30,000-light red canopy, and the numbers soon become staggering.
It's hard to believe that the whole thing began some 18 years ago when Osborne set up his first display of a couple of thousand lights at home to please his young daughter. He liked the results so much that it soon grew to a million lights and then he bought the homes on both sides of his residence so he could put up more than 3.5 million lights. The display attracted so much attention that other neighbors couldn't even get to their homes so Disney and Osborne decided to move the whole thing to the Disney Studio in 1995.
There are now many more lights at Disney than there ever was in Little Rock, but many of the essential elements from his original displays remain intact, including the large globe, numerous flashing angels and revolving carousels and the red canopy that used to cover his driveway. All those lights continue to stun and delight the thousands and thousands of visitors who view it each year at the theme park.
"We see so many amazed looks on faces," said Pieser, "and some huge wows when the snow starts falling." The snow element is made by using a snow fluid mixture each evening. Pieser said that 66 gallons of snow fluid are required each night to create the snowfall effect. One of the key things to look out for at this year's display, and it will be easy to notice, is the new LED lighting on the town hall building. The new lights burn with a greater intensity and have a bonus effect, even Disney technicians didn't expect — the lights give the building a 3D effect.
Pieser said Osborne still has a lot of input on the light show and offers his suggestions. He and his family — actually it is a whole entourage — spend more than a week at the Disney complex each year to take in the show. Jennings also continues to light up Arkansas on his own. He has donated light displays to some 30 towns across the state. The Osborne Family Spectacle of Lights has been extended to 56 nights this year.
In 1995, the Walt Disney Company brought the Osborne Christmas lights to Walt Disney World! Disney's agreement with Osborne gives it the option of keeping the display for 5 years, possibly longer.
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