Iconic animatronic Chuck E. Cheese band is breaking up nationwide



The first Chuck E. Cheese location opened on May 17, 1977, in San Jose, California, offering screaming children and their patient parents pizza, arcade games, ball pits, and animatronic entertainment. There are now 400 locations in the United States and hundreds more across 17 other nations, including Egypt and Australia.

One of the chain's distinguishing features is its resident band, Munch's Make Believe Band, comprising Chuck E. Cheese, an anthropomorphic chicken named Helen Henny, a purple monster named Mr. Munch, a dog named Jasper T. Jowls, a mustachioed chef named Pasqually, and, in more recent years, a rabbit named Bella Bunny.

This motley crew first took the stage in 1989. Curtains would rise and the animatronic animals would jitter in time with pre-recorded music.

Atari co-founder and Chuck E. Cheese founder Nolan Bushnell indicated in a 2017 interview that he was inspired in part by the Tiki Room at Disneyland, stating, "Aha. There's no theater organist here. ... They've got the flowers singing. Yeah, we can do that. We've got the Tiki gods chanting away. Yeah, we can do that."

After spending 35 years unnerving children, the band is set to break up.

The New York Times reported that by year's end, the band will stop performing in all but two locations: one in Los Angeles and the other in Nanuet, New York.

The rodent-led band's eradication is part of a broader facelift — what Chuck E. Cheese CEO David McKillips has described as the "most aggressive transformation."

According to the Times, this upheaval was hastened by the pandemic, which prompted the temporary closure of numerous locations as well as the company's filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2020. Keen to stay afloat, the company is now appealing to a more screen-oriented generation, swapping out the bands for virtual entertainment, digital dance floors, and trampoline zones.

"Kids are consuming entertainment differently than they were 10, 20 years ago," said McKillips. "Kids, really of all ages, are consuming their entertainment on a screen."

In a mock November press conference, the titular rodent announced, "We are going to be performing here on a regular basis here in North Ridge, California."

Munch interjected, saying, "It's called a residency."

"We thought we should let you know officially," Cheese said. "Especially all you super fans out there that want to know where to find us."

Bushnell said in a corresponding release, "It's great that the original animatronic band will remain in residency at the Northridge location while the other locations offer experiences and create memories with the new vision."

In response to the Times report, the chain tweeted, "We hear you guys, truly [heart emoji.] We believe in the power of play and the joy of being a kid, and will always stay true to being a place Where a Kid Can Be A Kid!"

Chuck E. Cheese then invited fans to share their memories of the shifty-eyed band.

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Video: Enormous dragon prop catches fire during live 'Fantasmic!' show at Disneyland



Disneyland visitors got more than they bargained for Saturday night when a 45-foot-tall dragon prop caught fire during a live show, KNBC reported.

"We saw some small explosions coming out of the head, and then, all of a sudden, the whole dragon was just engulfed, and then, all of a sudden, the worker started coming around escorting everybody out for safety," attendee Elaine Gilmer told ABC News.

"The dragon is usually the highlight — that's what most people look forward to," Gilmer's daughter, Elyssa Gilmer told the outlet.

"We always love that part, so it's exciting to watch; it's kind of sad knowing that [the fire] happened."

Disneyland's iconic "Fantasmic!" show is staged on the theme park's Tom Sawyer Island.

No injuries were reported in the fiery mishap, according to the Anaheim Fire Department, KABC reported. Disneyland officials told the outlet all cast members were evacuated from island.

The prop caught fire at the climax of the show. Under normal circumstances, "Fantasmic!" ends with dancing, costumed characters on a steamboat. Saturday, it ended with an announcement that "the performance cannot continue due to unforeseen circumstances."

Disney describes the show as featuring "a fantastical array of live performers, beloved Disney characters, enhanced special effects, state-of-the-art projections and superb pyrotechnics."

"It was a big giant fireball. Then they began pushing people out," Ryan Laux, 28, a Los Angeles video producer and annual season passholder told the Los Angeles Times. Laux was near the show when the fire broke out.

The 45-foot-tall dragon prop that caught fire is nicknamed "Murphy." The fire-breathing creature is meant to depict a dragon form of the Maleficent character from "Snow White."

An #RIPMurphy hashtag associated with the smoky demise of the mechanical beast trended on Twitter. Some readers joked about feeling relief on discovering the hashtag was not a reference to actor Eddie Murphy, who is very much alive.

This is not the first time, first park, nor first animatronic Disney dragon to catch fire. The "Sleeping Beauty" dragon float burst into flames at Disney World in Florida in 2019.

A person who says she was at the show posted images of Maleficent sheathed in smoke and flame. The person, who goes by @MelissaLeeGiles on Twitter, says she used her iPhone to capture the shot.

Watch her video below of Maleficent Dragon catching fire during Disneyland's "Fantasmic!" show.

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