A cover of WIRED featuring John Lasseter, Ed Catmull, and various characters from features and shorts from some of the projects they've overseen, most of which orginate from what is considered to be Disney's Revival era.
The current era was officially confirmed in 2017 during a special presentation on the Walt Disney Studios lot, celebrating eighty years of Disney animation, courtesy of the Disney Archives and D23.
The Disney Renaissance (1989-1999) is well-known as the era of successful films after arguably twenty-two years of modest successes and disappointments in the wake of Walt Disney's death, with a few exceptions which came close to be considered as memorable as some of Walt Disney's work at the time (the studio declined in successes after Walt Disney's death, more specifically after the release of the monumentally popular The Jungle Book from 1967). However, the studio did have a few successes and brief revivals of popularity during their so-called "Dark Age"; most notably films like The Rescuers[3] and The Great Mouse Detective[4] which are commonly regarded as the best films that came out of that time period.[5] After the release of The Lion King, Disney began to decline in popularity and success again. While Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Hercules, Mulan, and Tarzan all did modestly well at the box office (with lackluster home-video sales) and garnered relatively decent critical acclaim, the latter attribute wasn't overall equivalent to past Renaissance hits, such as The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and The Lion King.
In the early 2000s, often regarded as "Disney's Second Dark Age", Disney released very few successful animated movies, though some did better than others, most notably Lilo & Stitch[6][7] which became their most successful from the early to mid 2000s, for almost an entire decade, mainly because of weak box office results due to the rising popularity of computer-animated movies as well as poor critical and audience reactions. In 2005, the company decided to make their first CGI animated movie Chicken Little, which, despite being financially successful, was jeered by critics and audiences. With John Lasseter renaming the animation division as Walt Disney Animation Studios, the following release, Meet the Robinsons, received better critical reception than Chicken Little, though it made less money. However, Bolt did financially well at the box office and received positive reviews. The success of Bolt was the sign that Walt Disney Animation Studios was on a road to recovery.
Early Revival (2008–2009)[]
With The Princess and the Frog, the studio returned to the traditional hand-drawn musical fairy tale format. Upon release, some critics praised the film for being "a return to form", comparing it to the likes of The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, and Aladdin, soon becoming the first Disney animated feature in nearly a decade to gain such recognition and become a staple in both the Disney legacy and pop culture.
John Lasseter took over the animation division with Disney's purchase of Pixar in 2006, after which Disney announced that they would return to traditional animation with the 2009 release of The Princess and the Frog. Praised for being a "rebirth"[8] and "return to form"[9] for the studio, the film was largely well received by critics and audiences alike, grossing nearly $270 million. However, because the film didn't do as well as Disney had hoped (grossing less than Bolt, which grossed $310 million), Disney changed their marketing drastically for the movies that followed (Rapunzel was re-titled Tangled and The Snow Queen was re-titled Frozen effort to make it more gender-neutral). Tom Sito[10] (a film professor at the University of Southern California) stated that the film's success was equivalent to the major success of The Great Mouse Detective as a step up improvement from Disney's major downfall (in The GreatMouse Detective's case, The Black Cauldron). Due to the modest success of The Princess and the Frog, Disney Animation reestablished the successful animated musical fairy tales, introduced a popular and ground-breaking Disney princess (being the first African-American Disney Princess), and reestablished the classic storytelling formula the studio is famous for, as well as setting the stage for films to follow. Additionally, several renowned film critic associations such as TIME, Forbes, and Screen Rant, mark Frog as the beginning of Disney's new age renaissance.[11][12]The Princess and the Frog was also nominated for several awards and honors, including three Academy Award nominations for Best Animated Feature, and Best Original Song ("Down in New Orleans" and "Almost There"), three Critics Choice Awards, a Grammy Award nomination for Best Song Written for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media ("Down in New Orleans"), and won three Annie Awards.
Peak Revival (2010–2017)[]
Though The Princess and the Frog was a moderate success and revived the studio's relevance in popular culture, Tangled is notably the first film in the Revival Era to succeed both critically and financially, becoming the highest-grossing film the studio released since The Lion King (a record that wouldn't be broken until the 2013 release of Frozen).
After The Princess and the Frog, Disney released the 2010 film Tangled, Disney's 50th Animated Feature, marking a new direction for the studio, blending 3D CGI animation with traditional techniques. Following the tradition of the 1990s animated films, Tangled was a musical fairy tale loosely based on the story of Rapunzel. The film became a huge critical and commercial success, earning $591 million worldwide, and eventually becoming one of the most successful Disney animated features of all time, both critically and financially; proving the studio retained the ability to do so. Tangled also received various award nominations, including an Academy Award for Best Original Song ("I See the Light"), as well as a Grammy Award for Best Song Written for Visual Media ("I See the Light").[13]Tangled's financial success established a new marketing and aesthetic formula that would have an effect on the films to follow.
In 2012, after the releases of Tangled and the 2011 film Winnie the Pooh (which was a financial disappointment, mostly due to the fact that the film was in competition from the final entry in the Harry Potter film series, despite being the best-reviewed animated film of 2011), Disney released Wreck-It Ralph, which garnered huge critical and commercial success similar to that of Tangled. Most notably, for a non-musical, Ralph was their most acclaimed since 1961's One Hundred and One Dalmatians. Ralph also proved to be a successful contender during award season. It was nominated for Best Animated Feature at the Oscars and the Golden Globes, but lost to Disney/Pixar's Brave.[14] Even so, Wreck-It Ralph won the Producers Guild of America Award for Best Animated Motion Picture, as well as the Critics Choice Movie Awards for Best Animated Feature, and five Annie Awards, including that of Best Animated Feature.[15]
With the release of Ralph also came the studio's groundbreaking animated short, Paperman, which won the Academy Award for Best Short, among other critical acclaim.
The release of Frozen solidified Walt Disney Animation Studios' revival. The film became an Academy Award-Winning blockbuster and it eventually became the highest-grossing animated film of all time. Frozen's groundbreaking success transformed the franchise into a cultural phenomenon.
The Revival Era reached new heights in 2013 with the release of Frozen, which won Best Animated Feature at the Golden Globes, Annies and Critics' Choice Movie Awards, as well as Best Song for "Let It Go". The film also became the first in the canon series to earn $1 billion and only the second animated feature to do so (the other being Disney/Pixar's Toy Story 3). The film also won two Academy Awards for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song. It was the first Disney animated film to win the Best Animated Feature Award and the first film to win Best Original Song since Tarzan. Other awards and honors include two Critics Choice Awards, two Grammy Awards, and two Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards, among many others.[16] Some have even praised it as the best Disney musical since The Lion King.[17]
Before Frozen, the studio's third short film in the era was released as a hand-drawn/computer animated hybrid short entitled Get a Horse!; starring Mickey Mouse. The short received an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Short.
The first Disney Animation film that was inspired by a Marvel comic series and characters of the same name, Big Hero 6, premiered in theaters on November 7, 2014. The film received very widespread critical acclaim from critics, receiving an 89% on Rotten Tomatoes, along with an 89% approval from audiences, making it the highest audience-rated film of the era. The film debuted at #1 with $56.2 million, grossing more than Wreck-It Ralph, but less than Frozen. Big Hero 6 would eventually go on to become the highest-grossing animated film of 2014,[18] and the fourth highest-grossing feature Walt Disney Animation Studios has released both domestically and internationally, behind only The Lion King, Zootopia, and Frozen.[19]Big Hero 6 won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award and Annie Award for Best Animated Feature Film.
Along with Big Hero 6 came the animated short Feast, which received critical acclaim similar to that of Paperman, and won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short.
In 2016, the studio released Zootopia to considerable international critical and commercial success not only for its artistic excellence but also for being a timely fable about overcoming prejudice and stereotypes. It also scored the biggest worldwide opening for an animated film. Zootopia became the fourth animated film and second Disney animated film in history to cross the $1 billion mark worldwide. The film would go on to win the Golden Globe and Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
The same year, Moana, a CGI fantasy-adventure musical film, was released. The film was shown in theaters with the animated short Inner Workings. Moana was another commercial and critical success for the studio, grossing over $640 million worldwide and receiving two Academy Award nominations.
Later Revival (2018–2022)[]
In November 2018, the studio released a sequel to Wreck-It Ralph, titled Ralph Breaks the Internet. The film grossed over $500 million worldwide and received nominations for a Golden Globe and an Academy Award, both for Best Animated Feature.
The next film released was Frozen II (November 2019), a sequel to the blockbuster Frozen. It set a new record for the opening of an animated movie with $130 million domestically and $350 million worldwide.
The next film from Disney was Raya and the Last Dragon (March 2021), after a suspension of most productions due to the COVID-19 outbreak.
After the severe critical and commercial failure of Wish (2023) the Disney revival was over.
Success in TV animation (2007–present)[]
Disney Television Animation also saw a significant resurgence during this period, after a few years of setting aside TV Animation for animated features as well as their preteen/teen sitcoms on Disney Channel. In 2007, Phineas and Ferb premiered on Disney Channel, created by Dan Povenmire and Jeff "Swampy" Marsh. The show is often considered a stepping-stone to the Disney TV Renaissance,[20] with its witty humor and appeal to all ages. In 2012, with the success of their revival films, as well as the success of animated shows from other channels such as Cartoon Network, Disney Channel agreed to pitch Alex Hirsch's show, Gravity Falls. The show was both a critical success and a cult phenomenon, containing elements of adventure, mystery, and drama.
Disney expanded their television animation department with shows such as Wander Over Yonder, The Lion Guard, and Paul Rudish's new Mickey Mouse shorts. Disney Channel's sister network Disney XD saw a major success in 2014 with Star vs. the Forces of Evil, created by Daron Nefcy. While Gravity Falls ended in 2016 after just two seasons, Disney rebooted their classic series Ducktales in a new series headed by Matt Youngberg and Francisco Angones.
In April 2014, TimeOut New York ranked the top 100 greatest animated films of all time[21] based on the rankings of over hundreds of experts in the field of animation.[22] Three of the revival films made the list: Frozen ranked at number 67, Wreck-It Ralph ranked at number 56, and Tangled ranked at number 54.
According to the-numbers.com, many of the revival films have become some of the best-selling Blu-ray movies of all time. As of October 2015, Wreck-It Ralph is the 47th highest grossing Blu-ray (1,934,909 units sold), Tangled is the 38th highest grossing Blu-ray (2,187,683 units sold), Big Hero 6 is the 23rd highest grossing Blu-ray (2,675,905 units sold), and Frozen being the highest grossing Blu-ray of all time (7,286,169 units sold).[1]
In 2005, during the opening of Hong Kong Disneyland, Bob Iger, the chairman of the Walt Disney Company, noticed that most of the Disney characters featured in the park's parade were from decade old films, such as The Little Mermaid or Aladdin, while the only characters to have originated from recent projects weren't from Walt Disney Animation Studios, but from Pixar. This was a sign that the studio had lost its strive, as the theme parks are an indication of success in terms of how films and characters resonate with audiences.[23] Since The Princess and the Frog's induction, all of the films of the revival, including Tangled, Wreck-It Ralph, Frozen, Big Hero 6, Zootopia, and Moana, have substantial presence within the parks and vacation chains such as the Disney Cruise Line.
Upcoming:Captain Guido Treasure Tracker: The Movie (2025) • Super Luca Bros: The Movie 4 (2025) • Alberto's Mansion: The Movie 4 (2025) • Luca Mario & Alberto Luigi: The Movie (2025) • The Super Princess Giulia Movie 2: Princess Giulia: Showtime! (2026) • Dr. Luca: The Movie (2026) • Paper Luca: The Movie (2026)
Bolt • Mittens • Rhino • Penny • Penny's Mom • Dr. Calico • Mindy Parker • The Agent • The Director • Joey, Vinnie, and Bobby • Blake, Tom, and Billy • Officer Lloyd • Officer Ester • Officer Martin • Thug Actor
Bayou Boogie:Everyday Princess • Live To See You Smile • Shadow Man • Do What I Wanna Do • When You're In Love You'll Understand • Zippin' To The Zydeco • I Was Born To Blow This Horn • Play With The Band • Night and Day • Life In The Swamp • Love is a Magical Mystery • Sing Away The Blues • Mama Odie's Kitchen Song
Season One: "What the Hair?!" • "Rapunzel's Enemy" • "Fitzherbert P.I." • "Challenge of the Brave" • "Cassandra v. Eugene" • "The Return of Strongbow" • "In Like Flynn" • "Great Expotations" • "Under Raps" • "One Angry Princess" • "Pascal's Story" • "Big Brothers of Corona" • "The Wrath of Ruthless Ruth" • "Max's Enemy" • "The Way of the Willow" • "Queen for a Day" • "Painter's Block" • "Not in the Mood" • "The Quest for Varian" • "The Alchemist Returns" • "Secret of the Sun Drop" Season Two: "Beyond the Corona Walls" • "The Return of Quaid" • "Goodbye and Goodwill" • "Forest of No Return" • "Freebird" • "Vigor the Visionary" • "Keeper of the Spire" • "King Pascal" • "There's Something About Hook Foot" • "Happiness Is..." • "Max and Eugene in Peril on the High Seas" • "Curses!" • "The Eye of Pincosta" • "Rapunzel and the Great Tree" • "The Brothers Hook" • "Rapunzel: Day One" • "Mirror, Mirror" • "You're Kidding Me!" • "Rapunzeltopia" • "Lost and Found" • "Destinies Collide" Season Three: "Rapunzel's Return" • "Return of the King" • "Who's Afraid of the Big, Bad Wolf?" • "The Lost Treasure of Herz Der Sonne" • "No Time Like the Past" • "Beginnings" • "The King and Queen of Hearts" • "Day of the Animals" • "Be Very Afraid" • "Pascal's Dragon" • "Islands Apart" • "Cassandra's Revenge" • "Race to the Spire" • "A Tale of Two Sisters" • "Flynnpostor" • "Once a Handmaiden..." • "Plus Est En Vous"
Locations
Rapunzel's Tower • The Snuggly Duckling • Corona • Corona Castle • Old Corona • The Dark Kingdom • Vardaros • The Spire • Terapi Island • The Great Tree • The House of Yesterday's Tomorrow • Cassandra's Stronghold
Musical:Flower of Gold • Wanted Man • When She Returns TV Series:Life After Happily Ever After • Wind in My Hair • More of Me • Friendship Song • Listen Up • I've Got This • Let Me Make You Proud • Set Yourself Free • Ready As I'll Ever Be • Next Stop, Anywhere • If I Could Take That Moment Back • View From Up Here • Hook Foot's Ballad • Buddy • Waiting in the Wings • Livin' the Dream • With You by My Side • Everything I Ever Thought I Knew • Crossing the Line • Stronger Than Ever Before • Bigger Than That • The Girl Who Has Everything • Nothing Left to Lose • Through It All • I'd Give Anything Deleted:What More Could I Ever Need
Welcome to Pooh Corner:Robert Rabbit • Happy The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh:Mrs. Robin • Birdzilla • Mama Heffalump • Junior Heffalump • Papa Heffalump • Crows • Kessie • Pygmy Piglets • Crud • Smudge • Stan and Heff • Wooster • Bruno • Ted, Pinky & Vacuum Head • Pack Rats • Nasty Jack • Nasty Jack's Gang • Bugs • Jagular • Rabbit's relatives • Long John Cottontail • Dexter • Skippy Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin:Skullasaurus • Butterflies • Tyrannosaurus Rex Winnie the Pooh: A Valentine for You:Winifred The Tigger Movie:Squirrel • Tigger's mom Piglet's Big Movie:Packy the Magic Beltbag Pooh's Heffalump Movie:Lumpy • Mama Heffalump My Friends Tigger & Pooh:Darby • Buster • Beaver • Woodpecker • Opossum Twins Pooh's Super Sleuth Christmas Movie:Santa Claus • Holly Winnie the Pooh:Balloon • The Backson • Rabbit's Friends and Relations Christopher Robin:Evelyn Robin • Madeline Robin • Giles Winslow Jr.
Episodes
Welcome to Pooh Corner "You Need a Friend" • "Doing What I Do Best" • "The Pooh Scouts" • "Brighten Your Corner" • "Safety First" • "Rabbit Learns to Share" • "The Great Outdoors" • "Surprise, Surprise" • "Piglet Pride" • "Roo's Great Adventure" • "Eeyore Talks to Himself" • "Snow Falls on Pooh Corner" • "Hello, Hello There" • "Practice Makes Perfect" • "The Old Swimming Hole" • "Pooh Makes a Trade" • "A Bicycle Built for Five" • "My Echo and I" • "Pooh Learns to Remember" • "Wishing" • "Don't Quit" • "Holiday for Pooh Bear" • "Pooh Builds a Bee House" • "Piglet Lends a Helping Hand" • "Pooh Borrows Trouble" • "Clouds" • "The Fastest Rabbit in the Wood" • "When I Was Younger" • "Eeyore Joins the Band" • "Eeyore's Costume Party" • "A Swing for Eeyore" • "Do it Now" • "Carrots, Carrots, and More Carrots" • "Hi Neighbor" • "Spaghetti, Spaghetti, Spaghetti" • "Rabbit's Cousin" • The Great Kite Race" • "Fine Feathered Friend" • "Piglet's Slumber Party" • "Piglet Learns to Swing" • "Handyman Tigger" • "Pooh Corner Singing Society" • "Pooh Cares for a Carrot" • "Tigger Finds a Hobby" • "Almost Perfect Picnic" • "The Iceboat Cometh" • "It Must Be Summer" • "Song of Eeyore" • "Tale of a Tail" • "Pooh Goes Boom"
The Book of Pooh Season One: "Best Wishes, Winnie the Pooh/Double Time" • "Are You Me?/Rabbit's Happy Birthday Party" • "Circumference Equals Pirate 'Arrr' Squared/Pooh's to Do" • "Pigletry/Dinosnores" • "I Could Have Laughed All Night/X Spots the Mark" • "My Gloomy Valentine/Mr. Narrator" • "Vegetable of Contents/A Welcome to Beat the Band With" • "Owl's Book/The Autobiography of Tigger" • "You Can Lead Eeyore to Books/The Spice of Life" • "The Words Are Out/Brain Drain" Season Two: "Please and Thank-You's/The Rumor Millstone" • "Over the Hill/Tigger's Replacement" • "The Wood Without Pooh/Friends of a Different Stripe" • "Mothers of Invention/Once Upon a Happy Ending" • "Piglet's Perfect Party/A Wood Divided" • "Bravehat/Scaredy Cat" • "Blue Ribbon Bunny/Under the Pig Top" • "The Book of Boo" • "Could it Be Magic?/Diary of a Mad Gardener" • "The Case of the Disappeared Donkey/The Littlest Dinosnore"
Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree: "Winnie the Pooh" • "Up, Down, Touch the Ground" • "Rumbly in My Tumbly" • "Little Black Rain Cloud" • "Mind Over Matter" Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day: "A Rather Blustery Day" • "The Wonderful Thing About Tiggers" • "Heffalumps and Woozles" • "Rain, Rain, Rain Came Down, Down, Down" • "Hip-Hip-Hooray!" Boo to You Too! Winnie the Pooh: "I Am Not Afraid" • "I Wanna Scare Myself" Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin: "Forever & Ever" • "Adventure is a Wonderful Thing" • "If It Says So" • "Wherever You Are" • "Everything is Right" The Many Songs of Winnie the Pooh: "It Really Was a Woozle, Yes it Was" Sing a Song with Pooh Bear: "Kanga Roo Hop" • "You're the One and Only One" • "Harvest What You Grow" • "My Song" Winnie the Pooh: A Valentine for You: "Girls are Like Boys" • "When the Love Bug Bites" • "Places in the Heart" Winnie the Pooh: A Very Merry Pooh Year: "Jingle Bells" • "Snow Snows" • "Merry Pooh Year" • "Hunny, Not for Me" • "Auld Lang Syne" The Tigger Movie: "Someone Like Me" • "Whoop-de-Dooper Bounce" • "Lull-a-Bee" • "Round My Family Tree" • "How to Be a Tigger" • "Your Heart Will Lead You Home" Piglet's Big Movie: "If I Wasn't So Small" • "A Mother's Intuition" • "With a Few Good Friends" • "Sing-Ho (For the Life of a Bear)" • "The More It Snows (Tiddely-Pom)" • "The More I Look Inside" • "Comforting to Know" Springtime With Roo: "We're Huntin' Eggs Today" • "Easter Day With You" • "The Way It Must Be Done" Pooh's Heffalump Movie: "Little Mr. Roo" • "The Horribly Hazardous Heffalumps" • "The Name Game" • "Shoulder to Shoulder" • "In the Name of the Hundred Acre Wood/What Do You Do?" Pooh's Heffalump Halloween Movie: "Trick 'R Treating With Our Friends" • "Brave Together" • "As Long As I'm Here With You" Learning Adventures: "A Word That Sounds Like Autumn" • "Letter Shapes and Sounds" • "Counting" • "Bouncerific" • "The Shape of Things" • "Big Small Wonderful Wood" • "Different as Night and Day" • "Honey Pot" Winnie the Pooh: "The Tummy Song" • "A Very Important Thing to Do" • "The Winner Song" • "The Backson Song" • "It's Gonna Be Great" • "Everything is Honey" • "Pooh's Finale" Christopher Robin: "Goodbye, Farewell" • "Busy Doing Nothing" • "Christopher Robin"
Television Songs Welcome to Pooh Corner: "Welcome to Pooh Corner Theme Song" • "Try a Little Something New" • "The Right Side" • "Yes, I Can" • "You're the Only You" • "I Hum to Myself" • "Please and Thank You" • "Responsible Persons" • "Welcome to Pooh Corner Ending Theme" The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh: "Pooh Bear" • "'Cause It's Make Believe" • "The Floating Song" • "Nothing's Too Good for a Friend" • "Under the Bed" • "I Don't Have A Name" • "King of the Beasties" • "The End" • "Pirates is What We'll Be" • "Tigger, the Private Ear is Here" The Book of Pooh: "Everyone Knows He's Winnie the Pooh" • "Goodbye for Now" • "Your Best Wishes" • "On the Double" • "Who is Me" • "Think, Think, Think" • "What Piglets Are" • "I Watch for Signs" • "We're Making a Cake" • "If I Could Be Big" • "Isn't that Funny?" • "Find the X" • "Everyone Wants a Valentine" • "That's What We Do" • "Keep it Simple" • "Have You Got a Book For Me?" • "Give It a Try" • "On Your Way Back Home" • "The Birdbird Song" • "Nightmare Wranglers" • "Carry On" • "What's Your Name, River" • "Where Do Words Go?" • "Under a Spelling Bee's Spell" • "Adventure" • "Mental Altitude" • "I Want to Know Everything Now" • "Happy Tailiversary" • "Get Growin'" • "Tigger's Lullaby" • "Perfect Party" • "If We Were Talkin'" • "Someone New to Meet" • "My Hero" • "I Want To Be Scary" • "Broken Friendships" • "Do the Roo" • "Call Me Buck-a-Roo" • "At Chez Piglet" • "Nothing Ever Happens" • "Too Much Honey" • "Lost in a Book" My Friends Tigger and Pooh: "A Few Simple Rules" • "Bouncin'" • "The Grass is Greenier" • "The Password Song" • "Underneath the Same Sky" • "One Big Happy Family" • "Think, Think, Think" • "The Question Song" • "Floating in a Cloud" • "Different Can Be Good" • "The Little Things You Do" • "There's a Party" • "No More Fun In the Snow" • "Butterflies" • "What Makes a Pony a Pony" • "When We Work Together" • "Christmas Comes Tomorrow" • "Time to Go (On a Trek Through the Snow)" • "Snowman Song" Miscellaneous: "Luv-a-bye" • "Playtime Song" • "Learning Song" • "Friendship Song"
See Also
Winnie-the-Pooh and His Friends • Winnie the Pooh Discovers the Seasons • The Disney Afternoon • The Many Songs of Winnie the Pooh • Sing a Song with Pooh Bear • Sing a Song with Tigger • Whoopty-Dooper-Loopty-Looper-Alley-Ooper bounce • "Into the Hundred Acre Wood!"
When Can I See You Again? • Celebration • Sugar Rush • Shut Up and Drive • Wreck It, Wreck-It Ralph • March of the Oreos • Zero • A Place Called Slaughter Race • Anything At All • Good Time • Die Young • Love Me • Livin' La Vida Loca • Gypsy Bard (Ember's Theme) • Right Back to Where We've Started From • Sun in My Hand • Centuries • Stay Away • Stayin' Alive • The Middle • Take Me Home Tonight • Sweet But Psycho • New Reality • Let's Groove • Hit the Road Jack • Just Watch Me
Kristoff's Sled • Royal Ship • Elsa's Tiara • Yule Bell • Iduna's Scarf • Runeard's Dam
See also
Musical • The Story of Frozen: Making a Disney Animated Classic • Frozen: The Official Magazine • Disney On Ice • As Told by Emoji • Frozen: Northern Lights • Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II • The Making of Frozen: A Return to Arendelle
Shorts: "Baymax and Fred" • "Baymax and Go Go" • "Baymax and Wasabi" • "Baymax and Hiro" • "Baymax and Mochi" • "Baymax and Honey Lemon" • "Baymax Dreams of Too Many Baymaxes" • "Baymax Dreams of Evil Sheep" • "Baymax Dreams of Bed Bugs" • "Baymax Dreams of Mochizilla" • "Baymax Dreams of Too Many Freds"
Season One: "Baymax Returns" • "Issue 188" • "Big Roommates 2" • "Fred's Bro-Tillion" • "Food Fight" • "Muirahara Woods" • "Failure Mode" • "Aunt Cass Goes Out" • "The Impatient Patient" • "Mr. Sparkles Loses His Sparkle" • "Killer App" • "Small Hiro One" • "Kentucky Kaiju" • "Rivalry Weak" • "Fan Friction" • "Mini-Max" • "Big Hero 7" • "Big Problem" • "Steamer's Revenge" • "The Bot Fighter" • "Obake Yashiki" • "Countdown to Catastrophe" Season Two: "Internabout" • "Seventh Wheel" • "Prey Date" • "Something's Fishy" • "Nega-Globby" • "The Fate of the Roommates" • "Muira-Horror!" • "Something Fluffy" • "Supersonic Sue" • "Lie Detector" • "Write Turn Here" • "City of Monsters" • "Mini-Maximum Trouble" • "El Fuego" • "The Globby Within" • "Hardlight" • "The Present" • "Hiro the Villain" • "Portal Enemy" • "Fred the Fugitive" • "Major Blast" • "Fear Not" • "Legacies" Season Three: "The Hyper-Potamus Pizza-Party-Torium" • "Mayor for a Day/The Dog Craze of Summer" • "Trading Chips/Mini Noodle Burger Max" • "A Friendly Face/Big Chibi 6" • "Cobra and Mongoose/Better Off Fred" • "Big Hero Battle/Go Go the Woweroo" • "The New Nega-Globby/De-Based" • "The MiSFIT/Return To Sycorax" • "A Fresh Sparkles/Noodle Burger Ploy" • "Krei-oke Night/The Mascot Upshot"
The Annex • Country Bear Musical Jamboree • Disney Animation Building • Garden of the Twelve Friends • Happy Circle • PLAY! • Zootopia (Zootopia: Hot Pursuit • Disney Zootopia Comes Alive) • Zootopia: Better Zoogether!
Zootopia:Judy Hopps • Nick Wilde • Finnick • Chief Bogo • Benjamin Clawhauser • Mayor Lionheart • Dawn Bellwether • Yax • Flash • Mr. Big • Koslov • Fru Fru • Emmitt Otterton • Mrs. Otterton • Duke Weaselton • Bonnie and Stu Hopps • Renato Manchas • Gazelle • Peter Moosebridge • Fabienne Growley • Jerry Jumbeaux Jr. • Gideon Grey • Nangi • Doug • Woolter and Jesse • Dr. Badger • Priscilla • Bucky and Pronk Oryx-Antlerson • Zootopia Police Officers • Swinton • Quilda • Stephanie Stalkinew • Dharma Armadillo • Pop-Pop • Cotton • Gerbil Jerks • Gary and Larry • Gram-mama • Lemmings • Tiger Dancers
Zootopia 2:Gary Deleted:Jack Savage • Mr. Wilde • Officer Mabel • Razorbacks • Bat Eyewitness Zootopia+:Molly Hopps • Timmy Hopps • Brianca • Christine • Mandy • Charisma • Tru Tru • Rhino Boss • DJ Stripes, Kitty Claws, and Sir Whiskers • Sam • Gerald
Locations
Zootopia • Sahara Square • Savanna Central • Tundratown • Bunnyburrow • Little Rodentia • Rainforest District • Mystic Springs Oasis • Zootopia Police Department • Department of Mammal Vehicles • Jumbeaux's Café • Zootopia Police Academy • Grand Pangolin Arms • Cliffside Asylum • Wild Times • Lemming Brothers Bank