A Tiny Window into a Legendary Ride
Before the era of digital downloads and high-definition home releases, theme-park visitors brought the magic home one small frame at a time. The GAF Pana-Vue slide — a humble 2-inch-by-2-inch film transparency — was the souvenir format of choice for a generation of Walt Disney World guests in the 1970s and early 1980s. Held up to the light or dropped into a hand-held viewer, each slide delivered a vivid, intimate glimpse of the attractions and characters that filled their vacation memories. This particular slide, numbered WDW 232 in the Pana-Vue series, captures one of the most talked-about scenes in the entire Disney parks canon: the Auctioning Village Maidens tableau from Pirates of the Caribbean.
The Scene That Disney Changed Forever
Pirates of the Caribbean opened at Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom in 1973, and from its earliest days the Auction Scene stopped boats in their tracks. A portly, leering Auctioneer stands before a queue of captured village women while pirates in the crowd hoot and bid. Center stage, defiant and red-haired, stands the woman who became universally known simply as the Redhead — the most sought-after "prize" in the lot. For decades she was the face of the scene, her image appearing on merchandise, promotional materials, and yes, souvenir slides like this one.
In 2018, Disney revised the scene as part of a broader sensitivity update. The Redhead was reworked into a sword-brandishing pirate herself, and the auction was reframed around plundered goods rather than captured women. It was a significant creative decision, and it transformed every pre-revision image of the original scene into a piece of living history. This slide, bearing the Walt Disney Productions copyright mark used before 1986, documents that original vision exactly as Walt's Imagineers designed it — the Auctioneer at his podium, the line of village women, even a pair of goats loitering in the foreground as a comic counterpoint to the chaos around them.
What Makes This Slide Collectible
Pana-Vue slides were produced under license by GAF Corporation, a major player in consumer photography and slide-viewer products throughout the 1970s. The Walt Disney World series ran across multiple years and covered virtually every major attraction, giving guests an affordable, pocket-sized record of their visit. Today these slides are collected both as objects of pop-culture history and as documentation of rides and scenes that have since been altered or retired entirely.
The WDW 232 designation places this slide firmly within the Magic Kingdom attraction subset of the series. The Walt Disney Productions copyright (rather than the later "Walt Disney Company" wording adopted after 1986) helps narrow the production window to the years between the ride's 1973 opening and the mid-1980s corporate rebranding — a roughly thirteen-year span during which the original Auction Scene was presented exactly as depicted here. For researchers, archivists, and fans of classic park history, that copyright mark is a meaningful detail.
The image itself shows the characteristic magenta/red color shift that affects most surviving chromogenic slides of this vintage. Decades of storage cause the cyan dye layer to fade preferentially, leaving warmer tones dominant. It is an honest mark of age, and collectors of original park ephemera generally accept it as part of the artifact's character rather than a flaw to be apologized for. The physical mount remains structurally sound, meaning the slide can still be used in a period-correct viewer or digitized with a flatbed scanner.
From a Disney Estate Collection
This slide comes to us as part of a larger Disney estate collection — the assembled lifetime of a dedicated parks enthusiast whose decades of visits, careful storage, and genuine love of the attraction left behind a remarkable archive of physical media. Pana-Vue slides, especially those depicting scenes that no longer exist in their original form, are increasingly difficult to find outside of dedicated collector networks. The combination of pre-1986 copyright, original Auction Scene imagery, and the historical weight of the 2018 revision makes this particular frame stand out even within a well-stocked collection.
Whether you are building a Pirates of the Caribbean display, documenting the evolution of the ride across its history, or simply hunting for a tangible connection to the Magic Kingdom of the 1970s, this slide offers something that no modern reprint can replicate: an original photographic document of a scene that generations of guests encountered exactly as it was and that now exists only in memory and in artifacts like this one.
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