Club 33
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Location | Anaheim, California, U.S. |
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Coordinates | 33°48′40″N 117°55′16″W / 33.8111217°N 117.9209931°W |
Owner | Disneyland (The Walt Disney Company) |
Type | Private club |
Construction | |
Broke ground | Early 1960s |
Built | JQ Construction |
Opened | May 1967 |
Club 33 is a private club located in the heart of the New Orleans Square section of Disneyland. Originally maintained as a secret feature of the theme park, the entrance of the club was formerly located next to the Blue Bayou Restaurant at "33 Royal Street" with the entrance recognizable by an ornate address plate with the number 33 engraved on it. Following a major remodel in 2014, the entrance was relocated to the intersection of Royal Street and Orleans Street in New Orleans Square opposite the La Mascarade d'Orleans shop [1]
Club 33 members and their guests have exclusive access to the club, which is not open to the public. In addition to beer and wine, Club 33 has a full bar, although patrons must order directly from their server rather than the service bar. Club 33 is the only location within Disneyland Park to offer alcoholic beverages, although the park has a park-wide liquor license and has set up bars for private events—and alcohol is served at several locations within Disney California Adventure (DCA). However, DCA is a separate amusement park with its own admission turnstiles, so the tradition remains that alcohol is not available within Disneyland Park itself during normal operating hours.
Members receive identification cards valid to receive Club 33 benefits and have the ability to designate themselves and/or others to receive Premier Passports valid for Disneyland and Walt Disney World. Gold members receive two Premier Passes and Platinum members receive four Premier passes. In addition, their Club 33 membership card grants them access to early park admission several days each week, as long as they and their (up to three) accompanying guests have an accompanying annual pass or day passport. Members are entitled to complimentary valet parking at the Grand Californian Hotel and access to the Lilly Belle, the Presidential Car on the Disneyland Railroad. Club 33 members receive 12 Immediate Fastpasses for Gold Members and 24 Fastpasses for Platinum Members when they check in with Club 33 services. Members are permitted to join the skipper in the wheelhouse of the Mark Twain and the engineers in the engine compartment of the steam trains. Platinum members also receive Disney Cast Member escorts throughout their day at the parks.
Name
![Club 33 front door](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c2/Club_33%2C_Disney_Land.jpg/220px-Club_33%2C_Disney_Land.jpg)
Of the many stories regarding the origin of the name of Club 33, two stories are the most prominent. The first and official explanation states Club 33 gets its name solely from its address of 33 Royal Street in New Orleans Square at Disneyland. The Building was constructed by Liam Quick & James Jeffs of JQ Construction in the late 1960s.
A second and less well known story speculates the name honors there being 33 corporate sponsors at Disneyland in 1966-1967 when the club was being built and opened. Those sponsors are as follows:[2]
- Eastman Kodak
- Atlantic-Richfield
- Bank of America
- Bell Telephone
- C&H Sugar
- Frito Lay
- General Electric
- Global Van Lines
- Carnation
- Hallmark Cards
- Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
- Douglas Aircraft
- Coca-Cola
- Hills Brothers Coffee
- INA
- Lincoln Savings and Loan
- Monsanto
- Pendleton
- Pepsi-Cola
- Ken-L Ration
- Aunt Jemima
- Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe
- Spice Islands
- Chicken of the Sea
- Sunkist
- Sunsweet Growers
- Swift & Co.
- Timex
- United Air Lines
- Upjohn
- Welch's
- Wurlitzer
- Western Printing and Litho CO
Origin
When Walt Disney was working with various corporate promoters for his attractions at the 1964–1965 New York World's Fair, he noted the various "VIP Lounges" provided as an accommodation for the corporate elite. This gave him the idea that culminated in Club 33. When New Orleans Square was planned, this special area for corporate sponsors and VIPs was included. Disney asked artist Dorothea Redmond to paint renderings and hired Hollywood set director Emile Kuri to decorate the facility.[3] While originally intended for exclusive use by Disneyland's Corporate sponsors and other industry VIPs, when Club 33 opened on June 15, 1967, six months after Disney's death—individual memberships were also offered. As of 2011, there is a 14-year waiting list for new memberships. The membership waiting list was re-opened in May 2012 after being closed for 5 years.[4] Corporate members pay an initiation fee of $40,000, and individual members pay $27,000 in addition to annual dues, which are about $12,000. Initiation and dues may change annually.
Interior
![Main foyer](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/79/Club_33_foyer.jpg/220px-Club_33_foyer.jpg)
To enter Club 33, a guest must press a buzzer on an intercom concealed by a hidden panel in the doorway. (At one time, a member needed only to insert his membership card in a slot near the buzzer and the door would open. However, this process no longer works.) A receptionist will ask for his name over the intercom and, if access is granted, open the door into an open-air courtyard called Court d'Anges. Members and guests are then escorted up a curved staircase, either to dine at The Grand Salon or to lounge at The Salon Nouveau. The Salon Nouveau contains the original antique-style glass lift which was used prior to the 2014 remodel to take guests to Club 33's second level.[1] The lift was an exact replica of one Disney saw during a vacation in Paris, but the owner of the original refused to sell. Undaunted, Disney sent a team of engineers to the Parisian hotel to take exact measurements for use in the creation of a replica. A sample of the original finish was taken to ensure faithful reproduction.
![Club 33 dining room](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7f/Club_33_Dining_Room.jpg/220px-Club_33_Dining_Room.jpg)
![The bar](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/88/Club_33_bar.jpg/220px-Club_33_bar.jpg)
The second level has two rooms. One room (The Salon Nouveau) is entered by passing through a dark wood paneled wine cellar; the other room (The Grand salon) is more formal and exclusively for reserved-seating meals.[1][5][6]
Once upstairs, guests can view antique furniture pieces collected by Lillian Disney.[1] The walls are adorned, in part, with butterflies pinned under glass and hand-painted animation cels from the original Fantasia film. Walt Disney also handpicked much of the Victorian bric-a-brac in New Orleans antique stores.[5][7]
The club is also furnished with props from Disney films. There is a fully functional glass telephone booth just off the restroom balcony that was used in The Happiest Millionaire and an ornate walnut table with white marble top that was used in Mary Poppins. A video capture from the film on display atop the table shows actors Karen Dotrice, Matthew Garber and David Tomlinson standing immediately to its left. A newly installed bar prepares drinks for members and their guests.[1][5][7]
A harpsichord which was rumored to have been an antique was in fact custom-built for Lillian Disney specifically for use in Club 33. The underside of the lid features a Renaissance-style art piece that was hand-painted by Disney artists. Sir Elton John and Sir James Paul McCartney have each played this harpsichord.[5]
Walt Disney also wanted to make use of Audio-Animatronic technology within Club 33. Microphones in overhead lighting fixtures would pick up the sounds of normal conversation while an operator would respond via the characters. Though the system was never fully implemented, it was partially installed and remains so. An Audio-Animatronic vulture is perched in atop a grandfather clock in the club's upstairs lobby.[1] The microphones were clearly visible at the bottom of each of the old Trophy Room's lighting fixtures. [5][7]
In The Grand Salon one may walk through doors leading to the surrounding balconies. The balconies overlook the water in the New Orleans area of the park. The shows often put on there are also very visible from the balcony.
Tokyo Disneyland's Club 33
A second Club 33 is located in Tokyo Disneyland. Rather than being located in New Orleans Square, it is located on Center Street of World Bazaar. Members of Disneyland's Club 33 do not have reciprocal privileges in Tokyo Disneyland's Club 33.[citation needed]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f d23.disney.go.com, D23: Inside Club 33. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
- ^ "Club 33 Name & History". Disneylandclub33.com. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
- ^ Snopes.com, Club 33 Description.
- ^ "Disneyland's Club 33 opens up waitlist | abc7.com". Abclocal.go.com. May 4, 2012. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
- ^ a b c d e Bloomberg News, June 13, 2007, Club 33 Is Disneyland's Haven for Johnny Depp, Chevron, Booze.
- ^ DisneylandClub33.com, Club 33 Trophy Room, site documenting Club 33, with photos.
- ^ a b c Napa Valley Register, March 14, 2007, Napa reporter all ears for Disney’s Club 33.
External links
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
- Official Website - Club 33 Members Only
- Snopes.com - Snopes article on Club 33
- Mickey the Mason - Orange County Weekly review of Club 33