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Remembering George McGinnis

Disney Imagineer George McGinnis with a model of the Indiana Jones Adventure ride vehicle.

This one is tough to write.

Disney Imagineer George McGinnis has died at the age of 87. George was the last Imagineer personally hired by Walt Disney, and in his thirty years with Disney he worked on many classic attractions including my all-time favorite Imagineering masterpiece, Horizons. He was also a great guy.

George was the first of the Legendary-era Imagineers I ever met. In 2009 my brother and I went to California for the D23 Expo. It was my first trip to California and both of our first trip to Disneyland. It was a total-immersion situation with Disney Legends and shenanigans going on all around us, but nothing could beat the evening we spent hanging out with George.

George and I had corresponded online for some time, as he was a frequent contributor to our Horizons Tribute discussion group on Yahoo (ah, those were the days). He invited Jeff and I up to Glendale for dinner so we went, slightly awestruck by the circumstances.

George welcomed us into his house and toured us through his office, full of paper and foamcore models of some of the famous ride vehicles he helped design. There were reminders of his storied career everywhere – a picture sat to the side showing him alongside the malevolent robot Maximillian from The Black Hole, which he also designed.

George and some of his Black Hole creations.

George took us out and showed us around Glendale, driving us around the old office park where Walt Disney Imagineering is located. We got the full historic tour of the area – which office had belonged to whom, which parking lot was the one where they tested the Star Tours simulator mockup back in the day, where all the great events of Imagineering’s past had taken place.

We went to dinner at the Americana in Glendale, where he showed us the trolley system he had designed for them (he did the same for The Grove in Los Angeles). He bought us dinner and reveled us with tales, discussing far more than things Disney – lots of politics and philosophy, about which I was delighted to discover we shared much in common.

The fact that this guy, who had done so much, was willing to take a couple of random fans out for dinner knocked me out at the time, and continues to amaze me today. I still can’t believe I got to know the guy who helped lead the design of the attraction which, undoubtedly, was one of the most formative forces in my life.

Born in Greenville, Pennsylvania, George attended school to become an industrial designer. It was in 1966, at Pasadena’s Art Center College of Design, that Walt Disney, along with Disney Legends John Hench and Bob Gurr, saw George’s student project. George found himself with an invitation to visit the Imagineering offices where he was quickly hired.

George’s first job was to design new modes of transportation for Progress City – Walt’s futuristic city. Working on everything from PeopleMovers to electric golf carts, George created some of the artwork that can be seen in Walt’s famous “EPCOT film” from 1966.

George contributed his skills to Disneyland’s new Tomorrowland of 1967, designing the famous “Mighty Microscope” from Adventures Thru Inner Space and the swirling rockets of the Astro Jets. In preparation for Walt Disney World’s opening, George designed a range of vehicles ranging from the WEDway PeopleMover to parking lot trams. He also contributed to the iconic Nautilus submarines for the 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea attraction. In 1971 George became a show designer, spending several years developing Space Mountain for Walt Disney World and Disneyland.

In 1979, George became Manager of Industrial Design for EPCOT Center. His talent for designing robots led to Epcot’s fondly remembered SMRT-1, as well as the menacing Maximillian and heroic V.I.N.CENT from The Black Hole. Returning to Epcot, George became show designer for Horizons.

In the years that followed, George worked on projects for Disney parks around the globe. He designed the Mark V and Mark VI Disney monorails, worked on the Magic Kingdom’s Dreamflight attraction, and created the trams for the Disney-MGM Studios Backlot Tour. George’s work can be found in ride vehicles for Splash Mountain and the Indiana Jones Adventure, and for Disney’s Animal Kingdom he designed Kilimanjaro Safari jeeps, the Discovery River Cruise rafts, and the Wildlife Express steam engines. After his 1995 retirement he continued to consult on a number of projects, including the Rocket Rods, Kali River Rapids, Grizzly River Run, and others transportation projects inside and outside of Disney.

George published his autobiography last year. Despite his legendary accomplishments, he has yet to be named an official Disney Legend, an oversight which I hope will someday be rectified.

Thanks, George. You are missed.

George and his family outside Horizons.

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6 comments to Remembering George McGinnis

  • A beautiful tribute to a life well lived. I remember hanging on every word of the multi-part series he wrote on the topic of Horizons – an experience that also shaped a part of my life and worldview, as it did for many others.

    Thank you for also posting a link to his recently released autobiography. A copy is on its way to my mailbox, and I can’t wait to read more great tales from an equally great mind.

    The stage lights may burn less brightly for the day, but the show never ends.

    Godspeed Mr. McGinnis, and thank you.

  • Linnea

    Hi, I want to thank you for your wonderful post. George was my great uncle and I’m really touched that you took the time to write this and that you feel this way about him.

    • Linnea – Thank you so much for commenting! Just know that I am not alone in my feelings – there are a LOT of people out there who appreciate George’s work as much as I do! Pass along our condolences to your family – he is definitely missed.

  • SledgeNE

    I just readed today from him. Since yesterday i was looking for the Robots of The Black Hole-Movie from Disney, the movie is still awesome, and i like to watch the movie so often i can since my childhood. I saw yesterday an article about a special screening from this movie from the year 2010. Very sad that this movie was not re-shown worldwide in cinemas. His works on the design of the robots are amazing. I was a child when i saw the movie in the 80s with the age of maybe 5 or 6 and i was interested on the complete movie. It’s a fantastic movie with the best robot design in a sci-fi-movie after “Star Wars”. I don’t want a reboot from the original-movie. There is nothing that can beat the original. 😉 Best wishes from germany. 🙂

  • […] A scanned image from The Art of Walt Disney World Resort. The design is from Disney Imagineer George McGinnis.(2) #10 from the Limestone Roof Photo […]

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