The above article ignited my nostalgia. Ah, there was definitely excitement in the air in Adventureland when the drums of the Tahitian Terrace Polynesian Revue began their rythmic rumbling. The smell of chicken teriyaki and pineapple drifted through the foliage as you made your way into Adventureland, just past the Enchanted Tiki Room. The Tahitian Terrace was sponsored by Kikkoman International, Inc. and its famous soy sauce. The article provides a nice one-paragraph history of soy sauce ("undoubtedly man's oldest prepared condiment") for those who need to fill in this blank in their knowledge base.
As for me, I love the photographs, which detail the stage, the dancers and, of course, the food. The fire dancer depicted at the top right of page 1 is a bit smaller than the fellow who was performing in that role at the time of the infamous "black footed rock hopper" incident at the Jungle Cruise, as chronicled earlier in this blog.
Of course, for those of you who long for a taste of the Tahitian Terrace, the article offers us a culinary time machine by providing a recipe for Chicken Teriyaki like that served at the restaurant.
Leafing through the Summer 1980 Vacationland magazine also called to mind a list of places, people and things that aren't here anymore:
- Wonder Bread
- Disneyland ticket books (Big 11 - $8.50/adult; Deluxe 15 - $9.25/adult; General Admission - $7.00/adult)
- Harvey Korman (who starred in Herbie Goes Bananas alongside Cloris Leachman---the movie was released in 1980)
- Movieland Wax Museum
- Hanna-Barbera's Marineland
- the Main Street Electrical Parade---on Main Street (nightly at 8:50 p.m. and 11:30 p.m.)
- the shops of the old Disneyland Hotel
- a good portion of the "New York Street" area of Universal Studios' famous back lot (lost to a recent fire)
- Walt Disney Productions (now known as The Walt Disney Company) and, of course,
- the Tahitian Terrace itself.
As for now, a fond Aloha! to our lost (but never forgotten) friend, the Tahitian Terrace.