Just yesterday, Disney announced Olaf Draws! — a new version of the Animation Academy experience coming later this summer to The Magic of Disney Animation at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
The updated offering will feature an Audio-Animatronic Olaf hosting drawing classes, with the animation instructions provided through pre-recorded videos of accomplished animators from Walt Disney Animation Studios.

But here’s the issue: this replaces the live artists.
For years, Animation Academy meant sitting in a room with a real Cast Member – a working artist – who walked guests through a character drawing step by step. That classroom quietly inspired kids of all ages to believe artistic dreams were possible. Taking away the person at the front of the room changes the heart of it all. No two classes were exactly the same. The delivery, the pacing, the small off-script moments, watching someone create in real time, the ability to ask questions afterward — that was all part of the magic.
Replacing real, talented artists with an animatronic and pre-recorded video just feels wrong. And while this update is no small investment for the company, this move from paying live Cast Member artists feels cheap.

Sure, Olaf is adorable and funny. The new Audio-Animatronic will be impressive on its own, and the talented artists on the pre-recordings deserve their flowers too, but they are in effect removing the real human element that made Animation Academy what it is.
The best of both worlds: why not have Olaf interacting with a live animator in the room?
Fans have pointed these issues out across social media. On Disney’s own Facebook announcement, countless comments call for the return of live animators. Some are pleading Disney to reconsider, while others say they won’t prioritize the attraction without that in-person instruction.



And what does this mean when the Olaf Audio-Animatronic eventually glitches out or doesn’t work for a day? The show doesn’t go on.
Live animation instruction still currently exists elsewhere; but for how much longer? Disney California Adventure continues to offer Animation Academy classes led by real artists. EPCOT featured live animators during the 2026 Festival of the Arts, and until recently, Conservation Station at Disney’s Animal Kingdom also hosted in-person drawing experiences before it was shuttered for the incoming Bluey experience.

There is room for animation for everyone, for technology and for tradition. But removing live artists from an experience built on human creativity feels disconnected and out of touch, especially for Disney.



