A colorful collection of actors, musicians and politicians have been banned, barred or ejected from Disneyland over the years for behaving badly at the Happiest Place on Earth — and many more have fallen just short of being kicked out.

Shoreline Mafia member Ohgeesy and his entourage were ejected this week from Disneyland after an alleged gun threat, but the Los Angeles rapper is not the most famous celebrity kicked out of the Anaheim theme park.

With more than 700 million visitors over the past half century, Disneyland is bound to get a few bad apples every once in awhile.

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An ex-Marine from New York was kicked out of Disneyland after unfurling a Trump 2020 reelection banner on the Mark Twain riverboat. A family brawl in Toontown that went viral resulted in criminal charges. A 1970 protest by Yippies in Disneyland led to arrests and the closure of the park.

Celebrities tend to get VIP treatment at Disneyland and expulsion of famous stars from the park is rare. Let’s take a closer look at the five most famous people to be banned, barred or ejected from Disneyland.

Bruce Springsteen & Steven Van Zandt

Bruce Springsteen and his E Street Band guitarist Steven Van Zandt were thrown out of Disneyland in 1983 for violating the park’s dress code, according to memoirs by both musicians.

The E Street entourage was “unceremoniously thrown out of Disneyland for refusing to remove our bandanas,” wrote Springsteen in his “Born to Run” autobiography.

Disney security was worried Springsteen and Van Zandt would be misidentified as gang members if they didn’t remove their bandanas.

“We’re out of here!” Springsteen recalled shouting. “We’re going to Knott’s Berry Farm!”

But the E Street gang couldn’t get into Knott’s either — for the same reason.

“At Disneyland, enforcing this ridiculous law is also an attack on rock and music and all the people who believe in it,” Little Steven wrote in a 1983 letter. “They’re telling me nobody rocks in the Magic Kingdom. Nobody expresses their individuality in the Magic Kingdom except maybe that guy in the rodent suit.”

Van Zandt was furious at the slight and called for a boycott of the Mouse House.

“It is time to boycott Disneyland until the vague and unfair dress code they enforce is abolished once and for all,” Van Zandt wrote.

Blake Lively

“Gossip Girl” star Blake Lively told talk show host David Letterman a story about being thrown in the Disneyland jail as a 6-year-old and getting banned from the theme park for a year.

“It was really scary and traumatizing,” Lively said on the “Late Show with David Letterman” in 2009.

The Tarzana native grew up going to Disneyland every week as a child in the 1990s.

“My mom would take me out of school and take me to Disneyland,” Lively told Letterman.

Lively and her brother tried to enter Disneyland with a transferred re-entry stamp.

“You get a stamp when you leave the park,” Lively said. “If you spray hairspray on it, you can transfer them to someone else’s hand.”

The siblings were caught and detained by Disney security, she said.

“We go downstairs in Disneyland,” Lively said. “It’s all white rooms. Everyone is dressed in all white. The furniture is all white. They just interrogated us.”

Barack Obama

Former U.S. president Barack Obama was kicked out of Disneyland as a student at Occidental College for smoking in a gondola on the Skyway attraction.

“I’m ashamed to say this, so close your ears young people, but a few of us were smoking on the gondolas,” Obama said during an Anaheim political campaign stop in 2018.

“These were cigarettes, people,” he clarified to a bit of laughter.

Disney security was waiting for Obama and his friends as they got off the Skyway in the early 1980s.

“There’s these two very large Disneyland police officers and they say, ‘Sir, can you come with us?’” Obama recounted. “They escort us out of Disneyland.”

“This is a true story, everybody,” he continued. “I was booted from the Magic Kingdom.”

Disney CEO Bob Iger quickly replied via Twitter to Obama’s comments.

“Obama just opened his speech in Anaheim with a story from his college years about getting kicked out of Disneyland for smoking cigarettes on a ride,” Iger tweeted. “He can always come back, as long as he doesn’t smoke.”

Former Disney CEO Micheal Eisner also jumped on Twitter to make it clear he didn’t boot the future president from the Mouse House.

“Just to be clear. I was not CEO Of Disney when Barack Obama was at Occidental College and was ‘booted’ out of Disnyland for smoking a cigarette,” Eisner tweeted. “Knowing he was going to be President, I wouldn’t do that :)”

Nikita Khrushchev

Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev was barred from Disneyland in 1959 for security reasons before he even had a chance to step foot in the Happiest Place on Earth during a visit to the United States.

Khrushchev fumed at the perceived insult.

“I was told that I could not go to Disneyland,” Khrushchev said. “I asked, ‘Why not? What is it? Do you have rocket-launching pads there?’ I do not know.”

The U.S. State Department said Khrushchev’s wife and daughters were welcome to visit Disneyland, but they declined.

“What is it?” he asked. “Is there an epidemic of cholera there or something? Or have gangsters taken over the place that can destroy me? Then what must I do? Commit suicide?”

Bad Behavior

There is no shortage of bad behavior by celebrities at Disneyland that fell just short of warranting ejection from the park.

Pop singer and former Disney star Christina Aguilera hurled profanities at Mickey Mouse, according to TMZ.

“Mean Girls” actress and former Disney star Lindsay Lohan and her guests engaged in “very inappropriate behavior” aboard the Sailing Ship Columbia, MiceAge reported.

“Spider-Man” star Andrew Garfield spent his 29th birthday munching on pot brownies at Disneyland, he told W Magazine. “I’m probably banned … forever,” he joked to E! News.