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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Movie promotion tour hits Spokane in train

‘Disney’s A Christmas Carol’ set to open in November

Felicia Baumgarden, 23 of Spokane, watches her face morph in to the face of Tiny Tim on July 7, 2009, as she participates in an interactive display of Disney's "A Christmas Carol" Train Tour. The train is traveling across the United States promoting the movie due to be release in November.  (Dan Pelle / The Spokesman-Review)
It may have been 63 degrees and sunny Tuesday morning, but at Spokane’s Amtrak station on West First Avenue, snowflakes were falling, carolers were singing and train cars were decked with holly. Long lines of people waited for a chance to take a free peek at a Walt Disney attraction as the traveling promotion for “Disney’s A Christmas Carol” hit Spokane as part of a 40-city, 24-week tour. “I just wanted her to have a little Christmas in July. I think it’s more for me than for her,” said Laura Papetti of Spokane, who held her 16-month-old daughter, Isabella. “They are kind of magical things, these stories.” The four vintage rail cars that rolled into Spokane were filled with exhibits, including artifacts on loan from the Charles Dickens Museum in London, costumes and props from the film and demonstrations of technology used in the motion-capture, 3-D film, which is due to open Nov. 6. When visitors exited the train, they went into a 100-seat, blow-up theater where a 9-minute sneak preview of the movie, starring Jim Carrey, Colin Firth and Gary Oldman, was playing. Perhaps the most popular exhibit was the “face morph” stations – computer technology that allowed people to photograph themselves then merge their faces with those of the movie characters, including Ebenezer Scrooge, the Ghost of Jacob Marley and Tiny Tim. Karen Kotlarz of Spokane and her sons, Jacob, 7, and Zachery, 11, cracked up when they saw Zachery’s face on that of Belle, Scrooge’s love interest, who is played by Robin Wright Penn. Visitors can receive free e-mailed copies of their favorite face morph in a week, said Nicole Rivelli, a spokesperson for Walt Disney Studios. Rivelli said traveling tours of this length are rare. It took more than a year of planning, including arranging the collaboration with Amtrak, whose conductors and engineers are driving the train. However, Rivelli said, “We didn’t just want to tell them about it. We wanted them to experience it for themselves. We brought Disney to Spokane.”