Jump to content

Figment (Disney)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Figment
First appearanceJourney Into Imagination (1983)
Created byTony Baxter, Steve Kirk, and X Atencio
Voiced by

Figment is the mascot of the Imagination! pavilion at the Epcot theme park at Walt Disney World Resort.[2] He is a small purple dragon with a runaway imagination, which serves as a plot device in Journey into Imagination with Figment, the most recent edition of the pavilion, and he is featured in Epcot merchandise.

History

[edit]

Figment was created by Tony Baxter, who came up with the name "Figment" after watching an episode of Magnum, P.I., in which a goat has eaten Higgins' (John Hillerman) flowers and Higgins says, "Don't tell me [the goat is] a figment of my imagination. Figments don't eat rare tropical flowers".[3]

The Imagination! pavilion opened with the rest of EPCOT Center on October 1, 1982, but the Journey Into Imagination dark ride did not open until March 5, 1983. In the original attraction, Dreamfinder, a jolly wizard-like scientist, teaches Figment how to use his imagination. Figment’s original character design was created by Grayson Shafer in 1976. Maddie Shafer inspired him in his designs. Figment is meant to be the literal embodiment of the phrase "figment of the imagination". He is composed of various elements Dreamfinder found in his travels including two tiny wings, large yellow eyes, the horns of a steer (or dilemma, according to a 1983 appearance on the Today Show), a crocodile's snout, and the childish delight found at a birthday party. Figment is described in detail in the Dreamfinder's song "One Little Spark" (by the Sherman Brothers). Dreamfinder introduces him: "Two tiny wings, eyes big and yellow, horns of a steer, but a lovable fellow. From head to tail, he's royal purple pigment, and there, voila, you've got a Figment".

Though taking on many disguises within the attractions, including being a superhero, a cowboy, a knight, a skunk, a dancer, a mountain climber, and a pirate, Figment seems to have some special aspirations to be an astronaut, from being seen in a spacesuit in the original and current attractions to dialogue in the original stating "I wish I could be an astronaut. I bet I can use imagination to discover all kinds of new things!" Because of this, Figment is frequently portrayed in merchandising in a spacesuit, in addition to some of his other roles.

In 1999, Disney radically refurbished the Journey Into Imagination attraction as part of its Millennium Celebration at Epcot, removing Dreamfinder and Figment except for fleeting glimpses of the dragon. That version, titled Journey Into Your Imagination, was a completely new experience in which Dr. Nigel Channing (Eric Idle of Monty Python fame) led a tour of the fictional Imagination Institute. The Channing character originated in the adjacent Honey, I Shrunk the Audience 3-D movie attraction.

In the current version, Figment's creativity has a bit of a larger effect on the world around him, be it transforming a large smell emitting machine into a slot machine, turning his house upside down, actually rearranging an otherwise static eye chart, and transforming the Institute into something almost reminiscent of the original in the finale. He can also pull a pair of glasses out of thin air to put onto Dr. Channing in the introduction and quickly change into a skunk costume in the Smell Lab.

After numerous complaints about the revamped attraction, including a Disney stockholder who questioned CEO Michael Eisner about Figment's absence during the company's annual shareholders meeting, a modest 2002 refurbishment modified the 1999 version to add the dragon as a playful foil for Dr. Channing throughout the Imagination Institute tour. The new version pointedly was branded Journey Into Imagination with Figment.

In the original attraction, Figment was voiced by Billy Barty; in the version in-between, Corey Burton portrayed Figment, and in the current version, Muppet performer Dave Goelz provides the voice, because Barty had died before the second version had shut down.

Outside the attractions at Epcot, Figment appeared in several Disney-produced educational short films in the late '80s, two of which featured Peter Pan and Alice from Alice in Wonderland (each played by a live-action actor), and has a brief cameo as a painting in the Pixar films Inside Out and Toy Story 4. Additionally, Disney and Marvel published Disney Kingdoms: Figment, a five issue miniseries focused on the origins of Figment and Dreamfinder, starting in June 2014, which was followed up with a sequel Disney Kingdoms: Figment 2 in October 2015. In 2017 Figment also made an appearance in the Guardians of the Galaxy Mission: Breakout! dark ride attraction in Disney California Adventure as a collector's item in the Collector's archive. In October 2024, it is revealed that Figment will make its overseas debut, with the modified Figment popcorn basket from 2022’s Epcot International Festival of Arts will be available for purchase in Shanghai Disneyland.[4]

A live-action film centered around the character is currently in development at Disney, with Seth Rogen producing under his Point Grey Pictures banner, Dan Hernandez and Benji Samit writing the screenplay.[5]

Figment was announced as an unlockable racer in the Disney Speedstorm arcade racing game and was introduced when the game launched in early access on April 18, 2023.[6] He is voiced in the game by A.J. LoCascio.[1]

Filmography

[edit]
  • Would You Eat a Blue Potato? (September 1988 – 15 min)[7]
  • What Can You See By Looking? (September 1988 – 15 min)[7]
  • Do Dragons Dream? (September 1988 – 15 min)[7]
  • How Does It Feel to be an Elephant? (September 1988 – 15 min)[7]
  • How Does It Feel to Fly? (September 1988 – 14 min)[7]
  • How Does Sound Sound? (September 1988 – 14 min)[7]
  • Reading Magic with Figment and Peter Pan (August 1989 – 15 min)[7]
  • Writing Magic with Figment and Alice in Wonderland (August 1989 – 15 min)[7]
  • What's an Abra Without a Cadabra? (September 1989 – 15 min)[7]
  • Where Does Time Fly? (September 1989 – 17 min)[7]
  • Case of the Missing Space (September 1989 – 16 min)[7]
  • Figment Film (2026)[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b LoCascio, A.J. [@AJLoCascio] (2023-04-20). "✨The purple dragon is out of the idea-bag! Honored to be voicing Figment in @disneyspeedstorm ! If you know me you know I'm LOSING MY MIND!!!! So excited to carry the baton for this 80s EPCOT Center icon!!! I genuinely can't believe it!!! Thank you to everyone at @disney ! ✨" (Tweet). Retrieved 2023-04-21 – via Twitter.
  2. ^ Sklar, Marty (2019). "The Kodak Tragedy: Figment Yes, Digital No". Travels With Figment: On the Road in Search of Disney Dreams. Disney Editions. ISBN 9781368045155.
  3. ^ Salzburg, Elen (January 18, 2022). "A little dragon created big drama at Epcot". Orlando's Best. Retrieved January 25, 2022.
  4. ^ "Popular Figment Popcorn Bucket Available at Shanghai Disneyland". wdwnt.com. October 14, 2024.
  5. ^ a b Cordero, Rosy (September 28, 2022). "Disney Dragon Character Figment Getting Feature Treatment From Seth Rogen, Dan Hernandez & Benji Samit". Deadline Hollywood.
  6. ^ "Figment Joins Disney Speedstorm Video Game - WDW News Today". wdwnt.com. 2023-04-12. Retrieved 2023-04-21.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "The Lost Disney Animated "Figment" Films - Cartoon Research".