Move It! Shake It! MousekeDance It! Street Party Parade

Move It! Shake It! MousekeDance It! Street Party was an interactive daytime entertainment offering at Magic Kingdom that turned Main Street, U.S.A. and the Central Plaza into a character-filled dance celebration. Debuting on January 18, 2019, the show was created for Mickey and Minnie’s Surprise Celebration, the resort-wide recognition of Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse’s 90th anniversary era. It was not a traditional parade in the classic Magic Kingdom sense. Instead, it functioned as a hybrid procession and hub dance party, with colorful floats traveling up Main Street before stopping around the castle forecourt so guests could join the fun directly.

The production featured Mickey and Minnie in bright, confetti-inspired celebration costumes, joined by Donald Duck, Daisy Duck, Goofy, Clarabelle Cow, live-singing hosts, dancers, and other Disney friends. The show’s soundtrack leaned heavily into Mickey Mouse Club nostalgia, mixing modern arrangements of classic Mickey-themed tunes with the original song “It’s a Good Time.” The result was deliberately cheerful and retro, trading the pop-radio feel of its immediate predecessor for a more Mickey-centered musical identity.

Like earlier versions of the Move It! Shake It! concept, the street party used a shortened parade route. Floats stepped off near Town Square, traveled up Main Street, U.S.A., circled the Central Plaza, and paused so performers and characters could lead a dance party in front of Cinderella Castle. This structure made the hub the best place to experience the full show, while guests along Main Street could still enjoy the processional portion as the floats passed by.

Historically, Move It! Shake It! MousekeDance It! was the final evolution of a Magic Kingdom street-party format that began in 2009 with Move It! Shake It! Celebrate It! Street Party and was refreshed in 2014 as Move It! Shake It! Dance & Play It! Street Party. The 2019 version kept the same basic concept but gave it a cleaner character focus, updated costumes, refreshed music, and a stronger connection to Mickey and Minnie as the park’s central hosts.

The show did not return as a regular offering after Walt Disney World’s 2020 closure, and it is currently listed as temporarily unavailable. Its place in Magic Kingdom history is modest but specific: it was not a grand parade or a nighttime spectacular, but it captured a period when Disney was experimenting with flexible, guest-participation entertainment that could make the park’s central hub feel spontaneous, energetic, and unmistakably Mickey-focused.