| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 126.1 | Trumpet player | SIMUL::WIEDEMAN |  | Fri Jul 28 1989 11:31 | 10 | 
|  |     
    When we went to the Magic Kingdom 2 years ago the marching band was 
    playing in Liberty square. During a break one of the trumpet players
    came over and  spent about 10 minutes talking to my kids about WDW and
    about them, etc. My kids really enjoyed the fact that he took the time
    to talk to them. They still talk about it today. I think these little
    extras that the entertainers do on their own really makes WDW a special
    place.
    
    Doug
 | 
| 126.2 | romeo, where for art thou? | MASADA::TEMP |  | Mon Jul 30 1990 16:41 | 11 | 
|  |     
    I agree.
    
    My grandparents took me to the MK and Epcot a couple of years ago when
    I was in college.  At Epcot, country was England I think, two street
    performers in Renaissance clothes started calling people around to 
    watch their performance of Romeo & Juliet...and picked people from the
    crowd to help them. What fun!!  They picked my grandfather to be Romeo
    and he enjoyed every minute (what a ham!)  The actual performers were
    GREAT...spontaneous, great at ad-libbing,  Disney must have some expert
    people signing the performers up.  the whole crowd was impressed!   
 | 
| 126.3 | it was in the square | XNOGOV::KAREN | when you wish upon a star... | Tue Jul 31 1990 09:07 | 7 | 
|  |     We saw the street performers in England.  They even had English
    accents!
    
    It was good fun.  A real crowd gathered and they picked people to play
    various parts.
    
    Karen
 | 
| 126.4 | That's because they are English. | WOTVAX::BATTY | The Seaweed is Always Greener... | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:56 | 18 | 
|  |     Karen, 
    	    The majority of cast members, including street performers, 
    in each of the Epcot countries, are recruited from the 
    'sponsoring' country, so it's no wonder they had 
    English/French/Norwegian/Chinese/Mexican etc accents.
    
    	    On the flight back after Christmas, we got talking to a 
    couple who had just been out to visit their daughter who was 
    working in 'England'. She had written to the WDW Recruiting Office 
    several times asking for vacancies without any success, then saw 
    an ad in a London paper looking for young people who could dance 
    or sing. She applied, was accepted for a six(?) month contract, 
    and ended up working in the Pringle Knitwear shop. Despite not 
    using her talents, she was thoroughly enjoying herself. Her 
    parents were also very much relieved when they saw the tight 
    controls that Disney had over her moral and social wellbeing.
    
    Mike in Warrington.
 | 
| 126.5 | Not necessarily | DELREY::STERN_TO | Have TK; Will Travel | Wed Oct 24 1990 15:51 | 29 | 
|  | re: .4
    >>>                     -< That's because they are English. >-
>>>
>>>    Karen, 
>>>    	    The majority of cast members, including street performers, 
>>>    in each of the Epcot countries, are recruited from the 
>>>    'sponsoring' country, so it's no wonder they had 
>>>    English/French/Norwegian/Chinese/Mexican etc accents.
    
    
    	Majority maybe, but not all.  When I was in EPCOT I watched the
    Italian performers (of Il Teatro de Bologna), and was struck by how
    their performers (and act) reminded me of something I had seen at the
    Los Angeles Rennaissance Faire.  Three months later I was in line for
    Space Mountain in Disneyland, and something about one of the busquers
    struck me as being familiar.  
    
    	When I asked her if she had been an Italian in Florida earlier that
    year, she first said "That was me in another life," but off-line
    admitted that in those areas where English proficiency is truly needed
    they have been known to hire actors who SOUND Italian.
    
    	Of course, it probably wasn't hard to get English people to be able
    to meet U.S. proficiency standards:  all they had to do was forget half
    of what they already knew.
    
    
    Tom Stern
    
 | 
| 126.6 | Good accent but... | COEM::SCOPA | MAJOR | Fri Oct 26 1990 13:30 | 6 | 
|  |     Tom,
    
    While in Epcot this year I watched these performers. Two of the three
    were Italian.
    
    Mike_whose_100%_Italian_heritage_cannot be fooled.
 |