Disney wanted this to feel like a comeback story.
Animation Academy is returning to Disney’s Hollywood Studios. The Magic of Disney Animation name is back. Animation Courtyard is being refreshed. On paper, it sounds like a love letter to the park’s roots.

Instead, it’s turned into a controversy.
Because the live artists are gone.
The Backlash Isn’t About Olaf
The new experience, titled “Olaf Draws!,” will feature an Audio-Animatronic Olaf introducing each session. Guests will learn how to draw through pre-recorded instruction from Disney Animation artists. Characters will rotate throughout the day, giving families the chance to sketch icons like Mickey, Minnie, Stitch, Moana, Ursula, and more.
That lineup should be exciting.
But that’s not what fans are talking about.

What they’re talking about is the absence of a real person at the front of the room.
For years, Animation Academy classes were led by live artists — Cast Members who brought personality, humor, and spontaneity into every lesson. They adjusted to the room. They responded to kids. They improvised. They made mistakes. They made magic.
Now, that human layer has been replaced by a screen.
And fans noticed immediately.
“This Isn’t What We Asked For”
Online reactions were swift. Many longtime guests expressed disappointment that Disney would revive the name of Animation Academy but remove the very thing that made it special.
For some, this feels less like a creative upgrade and more like a cost-cutting move. Pre-recorded instruction is easier to schedule. It’s consistent. It removes variability.

But variability was part of the charm.
Families remember artists who stayed late to answer questions. Kids remember instructors who circled their tables and gave encouragement. Adults remember watching a character come to life in real time.
That kind of connection doesn’t translate through a video.
And for a park built on storytelling and performance, losing that interaction feels personal.
What Disney Is Adding
To be fair, the broader Magic of Disney Animation space is ambitious.
The former Star Wars: Launch Bay building will transform into a stylized Walt Disney Studios Lot setting. Guests will explore animation galleries, themed character meet-and-greets inside “Off the Page!” environments, and a theater showcasing Once Upon a Studio.

There’s also Drawn to Wonderland — a fully indoor, air-conditioned playground inspired by Mary Blair’s Alice in Wonderland artwork. After nearly a decade without a true play space, that addition is a meaningful correction for families.
So yes, Disney is investing in the area.
But the criticism isn’t about the expansion.
It’s about what was quietly removed.
A Bigger Shift in Philosophy
When you zoom out, the decision feels symbolic.
Hollywood Studios is in the middle of a visible transformation. Attractions are closing. Entire areas are rebranding. Intellectual property is being consolidated and streamlined.
In that environment, removing live artists feels like another step toward standardization.

Technology replaces performance.
Consistency replaces personality.
And for fans who loved the unpredictability of Animation Academy, that stings.
Disney may view Olaf Draws! as a modernization.
But for many guests, it feels like something irreplaceable just walked offstage.



