Rising up, Phil Weinstein, govt producer of “Mickey Mouse Funhouse,” celebrated each Christmas and Hanukkah.
“My uncle had a religiously blended family,” Weinstein says. “We would go to their house and they would have a Christmas tree and a Hanukkah menorah. It was kind of awesome.”
That cherished childhood reminiscence is current in “Hanukkah at Hilda’s,” one of many first “Mickey” episodes to rejoice the Jewish vacation. Within the episode, premiering Dec. 6 on Disney Junior, Mickey and his friends get stranded in a snowstorm at Hilda’s home and be taught that she is Jewish and celebrates Hanukkah. The gang then celebrates each December holidays with Christmas sugar cookies and jelly-filled doughnuts generally known as sufganiyot.
Annually, beginning round Thanksgiving, tradition vultures get to unwrap an early current: a raft of movies, TV exhibits, live shows and extra that fill the calendar by means of the top of the season. And this week, The Occasions is comfortable to be your information to among the most noteworthy choices, from Oscar contenders and crowd-pleasers to vacation specials you and the household can curl up with. Learn on!
Since its premiere in 2021, “Mickey Mouse Funhouse” has highlighted many culturally numerous holidays together with Nochebuena, a Christmas Eve custom celebrated by Latinos; the Korean vacation Chuseok; Día de Muertos and the Armenian vacation Vardavar. “In our show, we have these stairs to anywhere, which is really about imagination,” Weinstein says. “Imagination can take you anywhere and then, as we got into the show, we realized it doesn’t just have to be fantasy places that they go off to. We can really celebrate real things like Hanukkah and Nochebuena.”
That ethos is shared among the many Disney Junior exhibits that may spotlight the Jewish vacation this season. In an episode of Marvel’s “Spidey and His Amazing Friends” titled “Hanukkah Heist,” premiering Dec. 3, Spidey and the Factor assist his Aunt Petunia save her beloved latkes from the present’s villains, together with Rhino and the Inexperienced Goblin. “The Thing is a really special character, and he’s Jewish so it was very natural to tell a story through his point of view,” says Becca Topol, “Spidey’s’’ story editor and co-producer. “The Thing might be tough and gruff but ultimately he’s a softy when it comes to family and holidays and things he loves.”
The “Hanukkah Heist” episode of “Spidey and his Amazing Friends” will premiere Dec. 6 on Disney Junior.
(Disney/Disney)
The hook of the story is that every one the dangerous guys need Aunt Petunia’s latkes as a result of they’re so scrumptious. Aunt Petunia’s secret ingredient, along with the potatoes, oil, salt and onions, is love. “I know that’s true for people in other religions, that the food always ends up being so closely connected to the celebration of holidays,” Topol says. “The real beauty of the episode is that I think audience members can connect with it whether they are Jewish or not. It is the togetherness of the family and the really close relationship that the Thing has with his aunt.”
Topol says at her Hanukkah celebrations, there are at all times a couple of individuals who have by no means had a latke earlier than. “Every culture has their food that they are really proud of that everyone wants to have. You can appreciate this and learn more about the Jewish culture and what traditional Hanukkah is like and connect to it,” she says. “[We are] taking the specific and making it universal and relatable on a bigger level. Spidey is also having latkes for the first time so Spidey is a way in for our audience.”
“SuperKitties” songwriter Keith Harrison Dworkin wrote “Hanukkah Lights” for the “Hanukkah Rescue” episode that premieres Dec. 4 and finds the heroic felines lighting the menorah. “I grew up in a Jewish household so I know what it is to say the prayer over the menorah and go through that ritual. That’s really the centerpiece of the holiday,” he says. “That first version of the song is kind of in lieu of the prayer. And then at the end of the episode, we get the full song, which is kind of the danceable fun party version, and that’s just a lot of fun.”
Dworkin liked having the ability to create a music that feels trendy and relatable “because sometimes Hebraic music cannot feel that way.” The central lyric of the music is that “even when hope grows dim together, we will make it through.” “That was the line that’s really what Hanukkah is about for me thematically,” he says. “It’s about hope. In this particular episode, we are teaching the kids that cultural diversity is good and Hanukkah is a positive and valuable and beautiful part of the holiday season. What a wonderful message to share.”
Every of the episodes take the time to clarify to their younger viewers what Hanukkah is. As she did for the Rosh Hashanah “Spidey” episode that aired final yr, Topol labored with the nonprofit Tanenbaum in addition to Disney Junior’s inner training and inclusion workforce.
“For our audience we need to explain it in a digestible way,” Topol says. “How are you going to explain something that’s relatively complicated? We really did want to go into the heart of it, the miracle of lights. The idea of introducing a holiday to viewers that they may not have celebrated before or know much about and introducing it with joy and love and family and togetherness is a way to really allow those universal themes of holiday to come out and bring more happiness and joy to the world.”
These could also be preschool exhibits however for all concerned, it’s additionally a possibility to assist impart optimistic messages on the younger minds watching.
“We are all just people and we can treat each other with respect,” Weinstein says. “We are always consciously thinking about how we can hopefully help kids to learn how to treat their fellow humans.”