Club 33 is a Private club As envisioned by Walt Disney:In the trophy room the vulture would talk to guests and answer their questions using microphones hidden in the chandelier.Since Walt died shortly before Club 33 opened this plan was never implemented.Club 33 at Disneyland is very exclusive. You must be a member or a guest of a member.Since 2007 Disneyland is not accepting new membership applications.The maximum of number years to wait has been reached. The cost for individual members as of 2007 is $9,500 initiation and $3,200 per year dues. From the 1973 Disney University Food Showmanship Disney Style: High above the streets and courtyards of New Orleans Square is the elegant Club 33 part dining room, part relaxed refreshment center, part distinguished art gallery, and part private showplace. Club 33 was created as an exclusive membership club to provide Industry Sales participants a private place to dine and entertain.
The colorful realism and the precise architectural detail of New Orleans Square captures the atmosphere of the nineteenth- century New Orleans French Quarter. Glancing upwards to the second story balconies and the ornate iron railings hung with flowers, one would hardly guess that they surround the little-known but quite elegant Club 33.Walt Disney felt that a special place was needed where he could entertain visiting dignitaries and others in a quiet, serene atmosphere where superb cuisine and distinctive decor would complement one another. He asked artist Dorothea Redmond to provide watercolor renderings of what such a place might look like. Accompanied by renowned decorator Emil Kuri, Walt and his wife traveled to New Orleans to select many of the beautiful antiques that are on display. After years of planning, Club 33 became a reality in May of 1967. Sadly enough, it was never seen by its creator because of his untimely death five months earlier.
Club 33, so named after its address, 33 Royal Street, is comprised of two dining rooms and several adjoining areas, all of which hold a wide array of magnificent antiques and original works of art. After ascending in the French lift to the second floor, guests enter into The Gallery. Here they find interesting items such as an oak telephone booth with beveled leaded glass panels adapted from the one used in the Disney motion picture "The Happiest Millionaire" and a rare console table which was found in the French Quarter of New Orleans. In The Gallery, as elsewhere in the Club, are many original works by Disney artists and sketches done as design studies for New Orleans Square and the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction.
The Main Dining Room is decorated in First Empire, recalling the era of Napoleon and the early nineteenth century. Three glimmering chandeliers and wall sconces illuminate the entire room.