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Leota Ann Thomas (née Wharton, formerly Toombs; August 9, 1925 -December 1991) was an employee of WED Enterprises (now Walt Disney Imagineering), the division of The Walt Disney Company that designs and builds Disney's theme parks, attractions, and resort hotels. Thomas is best known as the face of Madame Leota, the disembodied head that speaks from inside a crystal ball in Disney's Haunted Mansion attractions. The character's voice was supplied by actress Eleanor Audley. When the attraction first opened in 1969 at Disneyland, the Madame Leota effect was achieved by projecting a loop of 16mm film onto a sculpted head; it since has been replaced by a digital display. Thomas appears in another part of the Haunted Mansion attraction. Near the end of the attraction guests pass a tiny bride, whose face and voice were provided by Thomas. The effect is also achieved via projection onto a faceless figure. Thomas's first husband was Harvey Toombs, her second was Hugh Thomas. Her daughter, Kim Irvine, is also an Imagineer and performs the part of Madame Leota in Disneyland's seasonal Haunted Mansion Holiday overlay, which adds characters and elements from Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas. Thomas died after a battle of cancer in December, 1991. She is memorialized at the Magic Kingdom's Haunted Mansion attraction in Florida with an animated tombstone created by Imagineering that incorporates a sculpted face whose eyes open intermittently. Similar to other faux tombstones that pay tribute to the attraction's creators with witty wordplay, its inscription reads: Dear sweet Leota Beloved by all In regions beyond now, But having a ball The last line is a reference to the glass sphere in which Madame Leota appears, in the attraction and in the 2003 film, The Haunted Mansion. Leota Toombs Thomas was posthumously named a Disney Legend in a public ceremony on September 10, 2009, on the first day of the inaugural D23 Expo in Anaheim, California. The award was accepted by her two daughters.
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