Happy Tuesday morning, everyone! I hope it’s nice and cool where you are–it’s another 100+ scorcher here (I am sooooo ready for autumn), perfect for staying in the AC and getting some work done. Like Diane, I’m still recovering from RWA and missing all my friends and the fun we had. It’s not always easy to settle down to working on the WIP and getting used to my quiet house. (Though I did have fun hitting the school supply sale at Target this weekend! I bought new pens and pretty, shiny new Disney Princess notebooks, perfect for this new book…)
I had a ridiculous amount of fun on my one day at Disney World, which really was a “magical day”! (Big thanks to Michelle Willingham for introducing us to the “Unofficial Guide” plan, which means never waiting in long lines and getting to see everything in a reasonable amount of time!). I loved the rides, seeing the adorable children in their costumes (especially the tiny pirate twins sword-fighting on the sidewalk), and eating lunch at Cinderella’s Castle. I must, must, must get back there for a real vacation ASAP! One thing I was especially struck by was the storytelling of many of the rides (and also how clean and tidy everything was). The details of rides like Pirates of the Caribbean, Splash Mountain, and Snow White’s Scary Adventure were amazing, and a good lesson in building worlds and adding depths and layers to our own stories.
One of the best rides for this was the Haunted Mansion. I’m glad I did a little reading about it before we left, because it’s so easy to get caught up in the moment and miss lots of fun, clever little details! I think the Mansion at Disney in France actually does feature a narrative through the whole ride (a tale of a bride and a Phantom), but the Orlando attraction is more of a vignette-style, but a good example of storytelling for all that. Here is a little of what I observed from my “Doom Buggy”:
The Haunted Mansion opened in 1971, and underwent a large refurbishment in 2007. It can be found in Liberty Square, a portrayal of colonial America, and the exterior is built in a “Dutch Gothic Revival” style reminiscent of millionaire’s mansions in the Hudson River Valley (according to the Disney World site…). On the walk in you go by a hearse and a little graveyard, which includes a tombstone for Madame Leota which is supposed to open its eyes and blink at you (though I didn’t catch that feature!). Once inside the crowds are pressed into an octagonal room hung with portraits and the wall behind you slides closed (the scariest part of the whole ride, IMO!). A ghostly voice intones “Welcome, foolish mortals, to the Haunted Mansion!” and goes on to say “Is this haunted room actually stretching? Or is it your imagination, hmmm?” The walls do stretch upwards, revealing humorously macabre scenes in the portraits–then the lights go out, lightning flashes, and there’s a glimpse of a hanged silhouette on the wall. I think I did shriek a little at that point…
They say if you hang back a little in the stretching room you can hear the gargoyles on the walls whisper and a voice telling you “Get out!”–but the staff doesn’t want you to linger. They hustle you along a dark hallway with portraits that turn from people into ghouls as you watch and into your two-person “Doom Buggy”. (I now like to imagine what riders would see of my WIP if they rode a doom buggy through the pages…)
There are rooms of Escher-like stairways floating in mid-air, floating candelabras, talking portraits, a library with moving ladders and flying books and a stormy forest beyond the windows (while “Grim Grinning Ghosts” plays throughout in the background). The Buggies spin backwards to reveal new scenes, like a conservatory full of dead flowers and a coffin with someone trying to get out (while nails hang out of the coffin’s roof!), with a raven looking on. A corridor is full of ghosts trying to escape, knocking, swirling around, breathing doors, and a demonic clock that chimes 13 as the hands spin backward and a claw’s shadow passes over it.
Then there is my favorite part–the ballroom! Diners sit around a table consuming a phantom feast, while a ghost plays the organ and ghostly couples spin around and around (and latecomers arrive in an open coffin on a hearse). I loved the portraits of the two dueling men, which shoot at each other across the wall. Then comes the attic, full of dusty items and portraits of a murderous bride with her various husbands (each husband morphs into being headless as a voice intones “Until death do we part!”). The buggies go out a window and into a cemetery where so much is happening it’s impossible to keep track–I glimpsed a king and queen on a teeter-totter, children on swings, a tea party, a dog, an arm coming out of the crypt holding a wineglass, spirits on bikes.
As you exit, a tiny girl ghost above the door whispers “Hurry back! be sure to bring your death certificate if you decide to join us. Make final arrangements now. We’ve been dying to have you…” Very creepy. And then an uninvited guest joins you in the buggy to follow you home….
I loved this ride! If only I could have gone on it at least a couple more times to catch some of the details I missed. (I found out after I got home there is a whole fan site for this ride, Doom Buggies, with lots of great info!)
Have you been to Disney World? What is your favorite ride there, and what little details have you noticed? Where have you found some unexpected inspiration???
My children and I visited Disney in early June – it was already hot and humid! We develped a strategy to maximize Fast Passes, avoid long lines, and stay out of the heat! The Haunted Mansion is one ride that cooled us down! My kids enjoyed the humor of the tombstones as we entered the foyer. We also ate lunch (late) in the restaurant across from the Haunted Mansion – ICE COLD AIR and few people.
Our other favorite ride was Buzz Lightyear. The goal is to use the ray gun to shoot the Emporer’s henchmen and collect points. It became a competition between the three of us! I liked riding on the People Mover above ground through Tomorrowland … but my children called it the Putt Putt Transport. But it never had any line, it gave us a bird’s eye view of the park, and cooled us a little, too!
During RWA, I stayed inside the hotel with ICE COLD A/C.
Weather is beautiful in Hawaii – 80s with no humidity. This is the benefit of paying $$$$ to live on an island!
LOL Kim! I was just thinking today how much I would love to be in Hawaii right now. 🙂
I also enjoyed the Buzz Lightyear ride a lot! I rode it mainly to get some AC, but it was so much fun shooting at the aliens (and I ended up with a respectable score too!). I would have gone on the Pirates ride several times if I had time…
Ohhhhhhhh, rub it in!!! So close and yet so far. I didn’t even get to glimpse Disney World! All I saw was a Mountain from my hotel window.
Love Disney world. We went a few weeks after it first opened and have returned many times since. (We can get in free with a ticket that includes all 4 parks. Haunted Mansion has always been a family favorite. Now that it is only two adults and an occasional grandchild, we spend a lot of time at Epcot. The exhibits there have changed more than at the other parks. At Disney World, our other favorites are Pirates of the Caribbean and It’s A Small World. Of all the parks we have been to, it really is kept the cleanest and in best shape.
We will be in Orlando in Oct. and will probably spend one day there. This time we are going to Universal so I can go to the Harry Potter section. It is way too hot to do much at the parks in the summer. RWA week was brutal. We were there in June and the temperature with heat index was 102 to 115 the whole time we were there. We hiked the Everglades and went to the Dry Tortugas in that heat. Hopefully there will b e no serious storms this Fall.
I’ve only been to Disney World once, and that some time ago, but I go to Disneyland a lot! They’re fairly similar — or, rather, The Magic Kingdom in Orlando is quite similar to the main Disneyland park.
One neat thing — the Haunted Mansion in Anaheim is an old mansion in New Orleans, so it’s styled very differently than the one in Florida.
My favorite ride in Disneyland is probably Pirates, which is even longer than the one in Florida (it’s about twenty minutes long.) And then I love to eat in the Blue Bayou restaurant, especially if it’s a hot day. You step out of the hot sun, and suddenly you’re “outside” in a cool evening on a bayou terrace, and the boats from Pirates are going by you….really cool.
I do want to revisit Disney World, though! Especially Epcot. And to look at all the differences between the parks, as I know the Anaheim one so well. (For example, the Tiki Room is a lot bigger in Orlando. And I hear Space Mountain is a better ride!)
And of course, Orlando is much wetter. 🙂
Cara