• A woman takes a selfie in front of the Enchanted Storybook Castle at Shanghai Disney Resort in Shanghai. Disney opens its first theme park in mainland China on Thursday. Johannes Eisele/AFP
    A woman takes a selfie in front of the Enchanted Storybook Castle at Shanghai Disney Resort in Shanghai. Disney opens its first theme park in mainland China on Thursday. Johannes Eisele/AFP
  • People visit Shanghai Disney Resort during a three-day Grand Opening event in Shanghai. Aly Song/Reuters
    People visit Shanghai Disney Resort during a three-day Grand Opening event in Shanghai. Aly Song/Reuters
  • Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse plush toys for sale in a gift shop at the Toy Story Hotel at Walt Disney's Shanghai Disney Resort. With the new U$5.5 billion resort, Disney will have six resorts globally. Bloomberg/Oilai Shen
    Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse plush toys for sale in a gift shop at the Toy Story Hotel at Walt Disney's Shanghai Disney Resort. With the new U$5.5 billion resort, Disney will have six resorts globally. Bloomberg/Oilai Shen
  • Visitors at Shanghai Disney Resort during a three-day Grand Opening event in Shanghai. Aly Song/Reuters
    Visitors at Shanghai Disney Resort during a three-day Grand Opening event in Shanghai. Aly Song/Reuters
  • An actress dressed as Snow White in front of the Enchanted Storybook Castle. Disney is betting the growing middle class will spend big on leisure despite a slowing economy. Johannes Eisele/AFP
    An actress dressed as Snow White in front of the Enchanted Storybook Castle. Disney is betting the growing middle class will spend big on leisure despite a slowing economy. Johannes Eisele/AFP
  • Children touring at Shanghai Disney Resort during its trial operation. The themed resort is planned to open its doors to visitors on 16 June. Courtesy EPA
    Children touring at Shanghai Disney Resort during its trial operation. The themed resort is planned to open its doors to visitors on 16 June. Courtesy EPA
  • A Disney character takes part in a parade on the eve of the opening of the Disney Resorts in Shanghai. The debut of Shanghai Disneyland offers Walt Disney "incredible potential" for boosting its brand in the world's most populous market, said Disney's chief executive. Ng Han Guan/AP
    A Disney character takes part in a parade on the eve of the opening of the Disney Resorts in Shanghai. The debut of Shanghai Disneyland offers Walt Disney "incredible potential" for boosting its brand in the world's most populous market, said Disney's chief executive. Ng Han Guan/AP

Disney’s Shanghai theme park opens with hopes pinned on Mickey and Minnie


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Boasting the Magic Kingdom’s tallest fairytale castle and longest musical parade, Walt Disney’s Shanghai park is already its biggest overseas outpost. But even as gates open to the public this week, it is still building to keep customers keen.

Disney’s largest overseas investment at US$5.5 billion, the park is a bet on China’s middle class and its booming domestic tourism. The US firm hopes it will offset an otherwise lacklustre international theme park business, better known for cash-burning sites such as Euro Disney.

Calling Shanghai Disney the firm’s greatest business opportunity since Walt Disney bought land in the central Florida in the 1960s, the company has been at pains to woo the home crowd in a country where competition from a plethora of local theme parks promises to be fierce.

Main Street has been replaced by Mickey Avenue to reduce the feel of Americana while attractions include a Chinese-style Wandering Moon tea house, a Chinese Zodiac-themed garden and a Tarzan musical featuring Chinese acrobats.

The park’s seven square kilometre plot of land means there is plenty of space to expand, the Disney chief executive Bob Iger said ahead of the official opening tomorrow.

“There is actually construction going on this week. When we open we will continue the construction to expand what’s on the opening day menu,” he said.

“We have plenty of space to do that and we believe we’ve got willing partners … We think we will probably do that sooner rather than later.”

Mr Iger, who scouted the Shanghai site in 1999, said China had incredible potential given its size. Disney estimates there are 330 million people within a three-hour radius of Shanghai, the country’s financial centre, who would be able to afford to come to the park.

Shanghai Disney could also help lure more consumers to its films. Zootopia, Captain America: Civil War, The Jungle Book and Star Wars: the Force Awakens are among the 10 most-watched movies in China of 2016, reaping more than $690 million in ticket sales, according to Box Office Mojo. Characters from those films will feature at the Shanghai resort.

Disney, though, is facing intense competition from billionaire developers building homegrown parks and from domestic cartoon characters. It also faces a deeply ambivalent attitude to its products in China.

On one hand, Mr Iger received a presidential welcome from Xi Jinping in May, and Disney has been granted "special" trademark protection. But China's main military newspaper has also warned that Zootopia, a story about a rabbit police officer in an animal city, was a tool for spreading US propaganda and ideals.

Disney is also not set to reap all the rewards. The resort is a joint venture with state-owned Shendi Group, which has a 57 per cent stake – a concession agreed during lengthy negotiations.

Shendi is a consortium controlled by four large government-owned companies: Shanghai Media Group; hotelier Jin Jiang International, controlled by the city of Shanghai; the supermarket-to-department store operator Bailian Group; and the property developer Lujiazui Development Group.

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