By Dawn Chmielewski
PORT CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) – Chief Executive Bob Chapek is set to christen Walt Disney Co’s first new cruise ship in a decade on Wednesday, the culmination of the first project the former theme parks executive championed to the company’s board of directors.
The launch of the 4,000-passenger Disney Wish will be a bright spot for Chapek, who became Disney’s CEO in February 2020 and secured a three-year contract extension on Tuesday following recent controversies that prompted questions about his tenure.
The cruise business is part of Disney’s massive theme parks, experiences and products unit, which has rebounded from pandemic closures. Operating income hit $4.2 billion in the first half of fiscal 2022, rebounding from a $535 million loss a year earlier.
Disney does not disclose how much cruise vacations contribute to earnings, but Chapek told investors in November that the business has generated “a double-digit return on investment” given the premium price that Disney charges.
The Wish is the fifth vessel in the growing Disney Cruise Line fleet. Two more ships will be delivered by 2025.
The 144,000-ton Wish is setting sail as the cruise industry works to lure customers back after a 15-month shutdown during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Cruise Lines International Association estimates that it could take until the end of 2023 for passenger volume to surpass the pre-pandemic levels of 2019, when 29.7 million people boarded ships around the world.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention still advises that COVID-19 “spreads easily between people in close quarters on board ships” and that even vaccinated passengers may become infected.
On the Disney Wish, the company will seek to entice vacationers with what it touts as its first attraction at sea, the AquaMouse. The theme-park-like ride incorporates animated short films featuring Mickey Mouse and other Disney characters as guests float through 760 feet (230 meters) of winding tubes suspended above the ship’s upper decks.
New dining experiences place families inside the worlds of Disney’s “Frozen” and Marvel’s Avengers. For adults, Disney created a Star Wars-themed hyperspace lounge that evokes the futuristic look of star cruisers in “Solo: A Star Wars Story.”
The ship also boasts an interactive experience that marries the physical and digital worlds, using the Disney Cruise Line navigator app. The app turns the user’s phone into a virtual “spyglass,” for peering at constellations in the night sky (which appear as Disney and Pixar characters) and embarking on adventures.
The interactive game marks a step toward achieving Chapek’s goal of establishing a presence in the metaverse. The executive has championed virtual experiences as a way to keep Disney’s consumers connected to the characters and stories they love in between movie releases and trips to the theme park.
The Disney Wish will set out on its first voyage on July 14 from Port Canaveral, Florida.
Disney has been embroiled in controversy in the state after the company opposed legislation to limit LGBTQ discussion in schools. That prompted state lawmakers to pass a measure that removes the company’s self-governing status for Walt Disney World in Orlando, though the effort has not yet taken effect.
Employees at Disney had urged the company to speak out against the LGBTQ legislation, which opponents dubbed a “Don’t Say Gay” bill.
(Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski in Port Canaveral, Florida; Additional reporting by Lisa Richwine in Los Angeles; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)