It's an interview that the Walt Disney Family Foundation recorded circa 2000/2001, as it's the same style as the interviews used in the 2001 documentary Walt: The Man Behind the Myth. Woods is not featured in that documentary, but these clips are part of the interactive offerings at the Walt Disney Family Museum, usually through a scrollable screen of different topics for particular films. I think portions of this are used in the 1950s room, as it has a few booths where you can scroll through video clips for both the animated and live-action films of the decade. There are two more clips posted by the Walt Disney Family Museum account:Disney Duster wrote:I just found, and love, this interview from Ilene Woods. Anyone know when it was recorded? 2012 like the site says it was published?
Ilene Woods Working with Walt
Ilene Woods Talks Cinderella: Walt's Love for the Character
Ilene Woods talks Cinderella: Voice Over Recording
Both my visits to the museum in 2016 and 2018 were unfortunately too brief for my liking (just a couple hours each), so I couldn't peruse through all the clips in each room. Plus, all the artwork and other artifacts in each room are worth the visitors' attention as well.
From fall 2015 to winter 2016, CineMark Theatres offered a special "Disney Screen" programming block where, every week, four Disney films were presented that shared a common theme (stuff like "Princess Week" or "Animal Week" or "Page to Screen Week"). Surprisingly, this programming block was only offered in six cities around the country, but fortunately for me, Orlando was one of those cities. (I suspect being right by Walt Disney World helped.) Across the year-and-a-half that this block was offered, I saw 30 Disney films ranging as early as Dumbo (1941) and as late as Tangled (2010). I went to a screening of Cinderella in October 2015 during the "Page to Screen" week, and its theatrical presentation was the same as the 2005 and 2012 home media releases. Likewise, the theatrical presentation of The Sword in the Stone during another week was the same, smeary transfer that's on the Blu-Ray. Beauty and the Beast wasn't offered on Disney Screen until late in its run, as it had been vaulted until the September 2016 Signature Collection came out. For the two themed weeks that it finally did appear (one week in October and another in November), it was the superior DCP that differed from the Blu-ray.farerb wrote:I have a question - I know that sometimes Disney screen films at local theaters and such and I was wondering if anyone has seen Cinderella and can tell what the DCP looks like and if it resembles the blu ray? I know that Beauty and the Beast has a DCP that looks nothing like the blu ray and I was wondering if Cinderella might be the same case.
Albert