The Amy Adams led film is iconic for many reasons but the Enchanted voice cameos are a highlight that brings viewers back time after time. Though princess Giselle was infatuated with her classic prince charming, Edward, she is cared for and eventually falls in love with a divorce lawyer named Robert, who she ends up happily ever after with and in the real world. They've been a happy couple for a while by the time of the sequel, Disenchanted.
The film contains many Disney references including familiar names who lent their voice acting skills to classic Disney films, some surface-level allusions include a poisoned apple (Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs) and the sorceress transforming into a dragon (Sleeping Beauty). Other details are less noticeable, such as a restaurant being named Bella Notte in reference to the song from Lady and the Tramp. The cameos, however, are the film's best Easter eggs.
The Little Mermaid
The iconic Jodi Benson has an on-camera role in Enchanted and voiced Ariel in The Little Mermaid. Benson plays Sam, Robert's secretary at the law firm. Giselle is introduced to Sam when Robert brings the stranded princess to work and enlists the help of his secretary to get her back home. In a follow-up scene where Giselle is admiring the office fish tank and Sam explains to Robert that she can't figure out where Giselle came from, the melody from "Part of Your World" from The Little Mermaid can be faintly heard in the background.
Beauty And The Beast
There is a scene where Edward is flipping through TV channels in the hotel room, and a former Disney voice actor is portraying a soap opera star. Paige O'Hara voiced Belle in Beauty and the Beast, and she plays Angela in the soap opera that Edward pauses to watch. The soap opera music is also the song "Beauty and the Beast" rearranged. In a more obscure Beauty and the Beast reference, Angela is arguing with a character named Jerry, and Angela Lansbury and Jerry Orbach voiced Mrs. Potts and Lumiere, respectively, in the animated classic.
Pocahontas
Judy Kuhn provided the singing voice to Pocahontas in the animated film, and she also has a brief cameo appearance in Enchanted. Kuhn's character is a pregnant mother and a tenant in Robert's apartment building, and Edward accidentally stumbles upon her door instead of Robert's as he searches for Giselle. In a subtly humorous moment, Kuhn answers the door with her three children, sees Edward's lavish prince outfit, and tells him that he's "too late," implying that prince charming and a happily ever after aren't in the cards for her.
Cinderella And Sleeping Beauty
In addition, Ilene Woods (the voice of Cinderella) and Mary Costa (the voice of Aurora in Sleeping Beauty) both make brief appearances as guests at the ball. On top of that, Idina Menzel, who played Robert's girlfriend Nancy, later went on to lend her voice acting and singing talents to the iconic role of Elsa in Frozen and Frozen 2. She also reprised her role in Disenchanted, making Menzel the rare actor to play multiple Disney princesses.
Disenchanted Easter Eggs
For the sequel, this franchise didn't deliver a ton of surprise cameos. One notable cameo came from Rachel Covey, who famously played Morgan in Enchanted back in 2007. In Disenchanted, Morgan was recast and played by Gabriella Baldacchino because only 10 years have passed in the story while Covey is 15 years older. Covey does appear quickly in the film as a villager who reminds Giselle of the Monrolasia festival, reuniting her with Adams on screen.
There is one other important cameo to consider, which comes from Alan Tudyk. He voices the scroll and he should sound familiar because Disenchanted marks another role for Tudyk who has lent his voice to Encanto, Moana, Raya and the Last Dragon, Frozen, Wreck-It Ralph, and more. He might not be a household name but Tudyk's appearance in Disenchanted adds another impressive movie to his filmography and shows how the series pays homage to Disney greats.