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The Simpsons ride at Universal Studios Hollywood replaced the Back to the Future attraction that had been part of the park’s Upper Lot, which has been transformed over the last decade. (File photo by Andy Holzman, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
The Simpsons ride at Universal Studios Hollywood replaced the Back to the Future attraction that had been part of the park’s Upper Lot, which has been transformed over the last decade. (File photo by Andy Holzman, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)
Robert Niles is the founder and editor of ThemeParkInsider.com.
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Southern California will lose a bit of its theme park history in January, when Universal Studios Hollywood closes its longest-running stand-alone attraction.

Universal’s Animal Actors and the Special Effects Show will close at the park on Jan. 8, “to make way for a new attraction,” Universal announced earlier this month. Some version of the Animal Actors show has been playing in its theater on Universal’s Upper Lot since 1970, making it the longest-running attraction at the park other than Universal’s ever-changing Studio Tour.

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Located next to the Animal Actors Stage, the Special Effects Show’s Castle Theater has been staging various performances since 1980, making the two theaters the oldest unaltered corner of the park. Frankly, the theaters’ plain facades stick out in the company of the aggressively decorated lands around them, including The Simpsons’ Springfield and The Wizarding World of Harry Potter.

Insiders have suggested that a “Fast & Furious”-themed roller coaster will replace the closing theaters, but Universal has not confirmed that. Whenever the new attraction opens, it will provide the final piece in an almost complete transformation of the park over the past two decades.

Since 2003 on the Upper Lot, Gru and the Minions have evicted Terminator, The Secret Life of Pets replaced the old Globe Theater, Universal Plaza took over the old Western stunt show space, DreamWorks Theatre replaced Shrek 4-D, which replaced the old Rugrats show, the park rebuilt its Universal Boulevard entrance street, The Simpsons kicked out Back to the Future then expanded into Springfield, and The Wizarding World of Harry Potter consumed the Universal (later Gibson) Amphitheatre as well as The Adventures of Curious George, which had replaced the Nickelodeon Blast Zone.

On the Lower Lot, Transformers replaced Backdraft and the old Special Effects Stages, while Revenge of the Mummy did in E.T., and Jurassic World replaced Jurassic Park. The biggest change will come early next year, when Super Nintendo World opens on the space formerly occupied by the “Phantom of the Opera” soundstage 28.

Among Southern California theme parks, only Disney California Adventure has seen the kind of recent transformation that Universal has brought to its Hollywood park. While Universal has been undergoing its Hollywood makeover, the Disneyland Resort’s second gate changed its entrance to copy the old Pan Pacific Auditorium (and Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida), built Buena Vista Street, Cars Land and Avengers Campus, added a Little Mermaid ride, changed Tower of Terror into Guardians of the Galaxy and rethemed Paradise Pier into Pixar Pier.

Even the park that Universal and DCA are chasing — the original Disneyland — has been stepping up to stay ahead of the market. Disneyland has rebuilt the entire northern edge of the park, adding Star Wars Galaxy’s Edge then rebuilding and expanding Mickey’s Toontown, which will open early next year.

The Disneyland parks and Universal Studios Hollywood have been the top three most-attended theme parks in California for years. These aggressive investments will help ensure that they remain on top.