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Phantom Manor
Extended report by Regan B. Pederson
Phantom Manor is absolutely, positively, definitely,
my favourite theme park attraction. They did everything right
here. The Haunted Mansion (at DL or WDW) is number 3, behind Star
Tours.
The name change is perfect. At DL and WDW, all the
guests call the Haunted Mansion the Haunted House. Now, at DL-P,
when they are wrong they are at least completely wrong! Phantom
Manor is an original name that belongs to an original house. The
greatest improvement from the Haunted Mansions is the music. Even
as much as I love the original Grim Grinning Ghosts, Disney worked
some of its greatest magic here. Grim Grinning Ghosts was
re-orchestrated,
slowed down, romanced, dignified, changed in the most wonderful
ways, and re-recorded in several different versions for different
sections of the ride's interior and exterior (yes, you can finally
hear the music outside in the waiting area). You'll forget that
it really is the tune of Grim Grinning Ghosts, until you get to
the singing busts.
Phantom Manor is in Frontierland, and they made it
so it really does fit in. The house exterior is again totally
different. They did well in making it intriguing but not blatantly
haunted. It looks like an old western house that is seriously
dilapidated.
The Manor 'yard' is something to see in itself. Like
the house it looks like it was very beautiful at one time, but
nobody's taken care of it. There's a gazebo, plant holders, lots
of nice stairs & structure, all meant to look like it was
really nice and lavish at one point in time. The queue winds through
part of it, and there is a very large sheltered waiting area with
a fountain in the middle. The entire 'yard' is (of course) built
on a hill and the house sits on top.
You finally get up to the deck surrounding the house
and walk around to the front doors (this is a concept that was
lost at the Haunted Mansion at WDW). When you get inside the foyer,
Phantom Manor finally begins to resemble the Haunted Mansions.
There's the chandelier with cobwebs and the two doors into the
stretch rooms. Otherwise, the decor is still very different. It's
very antique western. There is a small mirror in-between the two
doors. When the Phantom starts speaking, you can see a picture
of the bride in the mirror.
By the way, Paul Frees died before he could play
the voice of the Phantom. I don't know who does it now, but you
only hear the Phantom speak (entirely in French) in the entrance
foyer, in the stretch room, and a little bit in the portrait hall.
There is no spoken dialogue during the ride itself. Due to language
barriers, and the fact that the scenes are so great and the music
so well done, I think it's good that they don't have much spoken
sound. Incidentally, Vincent Price did the original Phantom narration
in English, but it was quickly replaced after the French complained.
Thankfully, the voice of Paul Frees has been retained in Phantom
Manor: the Imagineers edited together some of his original `Ghost
Host' script and he now speaks through the mouth of the mayor
of Phantom Canyon, who has a habit of losing his head.
It's interesting to note that the floor design of
the ride is almost identical to Disneyland. The elevator has rightfully
returned to the stretch room (yes, you do really go down at Disneyland
Paris). There is also the tunnel where the changing pictures have
been returned (these were left out in Florida). The 'basement'
is actually dug into the hill, with the tunnel going beneath some
trees behind which the show building is hidden. The tunnel does
NOT go beneath the railroad tracks; the entire attraction is housed
within the same building as the Grand Canyon Diorama.
So what is Phantom Manor all about, anyway? I spent
hours trying to figure that out - I went on it about 20 times
in 2 days. This has become somewhat of an obsession for me, and
I am still endeavouring to find out how it really goes. This information
was put together from my own personal observations, and also by
asking the Manor staff and City Hall. I do not guarantee its accuracy
at all, since one CM even told me that the story is based on Hitchcock's
Psycho movie! (only the shape of the house bears any resemblance
at all)
The year is 1860. The Phantom (he probably has a
real name but I couldn't find out what it is) owns the Manor and
most of Frontierland as well. This is, of course, why the house
sits on a hill overlooking Frontierland. When two of the town's
residents decided to get married the Phantom insisted they have
the wedding & party at his place. All of the preparations
were made. The bride got all ready and waited for her groom to
show up. She never saw him, for the Phantom had hung him soon
after he walked through the door. She waited and waited: her bouquet
began to wilt; the wedding presents stacked in the ballroom went
unopened; the cake began to sag and topple. The bride sobbed as
she watched the Phantom's guests come out of their tombs. She
looked behind her, and out the window she saw the Phantom laughing
at her and she suddenly realized what his real intentions were.
He had dug a grave for her, right next to the freshly filled one
for her former fiancee. She decided to put an end to her agony,
so still in her wedding dress, and still holding her bouquet,
she poisoned herself. The Phantom just laughs, and stands ready
to claim his next victim, right after they see their predecessors
in Phantom Canyon. If anybody knows the real story, or just knows
that I'm plain wrong, please tell me, I would be greatly indebted
to you.
Stretch-room notes from Don Reagin (REAGIND@gacsrv.gactr.uga.edu):
The portraits in the stretch rooms are specially tailored to Phantom
Manor's theme, and are far more macabre than those found in the
other three parks. All four of the portraits feature turn-of-the-century
characters, with rosy cheeks and winsome faces. One is a beautiful
young woman picking roses. When the room stretches, we see beneath
her, just on the other side of a hedge, a gruesome corpse coming
up out of his grave to attack her. The second portrait is a happy
couple picnicking in a field. When the room stretches, we see
a menagerie of rattlesnakes, scorpions, and fire ants approaching
them. The third is a young woman smiling as she sits with a frilly
umbrella under sunny skies. The room stretches to reveal that
she is in a canoe about to topple over a very high waterfall.
And the final portrait is a young woman in bloomers wading in
a small stream. When the portrait stretches, we see a horrible
water monster about to grab her leg. All four of these portraits
are unique, and give you one of the first indications that this
Manor is definitely not your average Haunted Mansion. Just to confuse matters still further, Scott Kessler (sdk@asdi.saic.com) has the following thoughts on the Phantom Manor storyline: I heard (interpreted) the story slightly differently. It would seem the Phantom was enamoured of the girl. He certainly hangs the husband to be (as we see in the elevator) but then I thought she entered the house and he more or less captured her and won't let her leave unless she marries him. She refuses, and is thus doomed to spend her life in the house. As the story progresses, we see both the Phantom decay and the bride getting older and older as she waits and hopes that her long-lost fiancee will return. Finally she dies, ultimately joining the Phantom in death. |
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