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{{short description|Dark ride attraction}}
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'''Phantom Manor''' is a unique interpretation of the traditional ride model conceived for [[The Haunted Mansion]]. An attraction at [[Disneyland Paris]], opened in [[1992]] with the park, it follows a completely different storyline than the Haunted Mansions at [[Disneyland]], the [[Magic Kingdom]] and [[Tokyo Disneyland]].
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{{DLRP}}
{{Infobox attraction
| name = Phantom Manor
| logo =
| logo_width = <!--Default is 250px-->
| image =Phantom Manor View.jpg
| imagedimensions = 250px
| caption = Phantom Manor
| location = Disneyland Park (Paris)
| section = [[Frontierland]]
| status = Operating
| cost =
| soft_opened = {{Start date|2019|04|30}} (Reopening)
| opened = {{Start date|1992|04|12}} (Original)<br>{{Start date|2019|05|03}} (Reopening)
| closed = {{End date|2018|01|08}} (Original)<br>
| previousattraction = <!--If there is an appropriate article, this should be linked.-->
| replacement = <!--If there is an appropriate article, this should be linked.-->
| coordinates = <!--Use ONLY if attraction is at one park. Use {{coord}}-->
| type = [[Omnimover]] [[dark ride]], [[Haunted attraction (simulated)|Haunted attraction]]
| manufacturer = Vekoma
| designer = [[Walt Disney Imagineering]]
| model =
| theme = [[Haunted attraction (simulated)|Haunted attraction]]
| music = Grim Grinning Ghosts ([[Buddy Baker (composer)|Buddy Baker]], [[Xavier Atencio]], [[John Debney]])
| height_ft = <!--Must be expressed in feet and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| height_m = <!--Must be expressed in metres and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| drop_ft = <!--Must be expressed in feet and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| drop_m = <!--Must be expressed in metres and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| length_ft = 785
| speed_mph = <!--Must be expressed in miles per hour and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| speed_km/h = <!--Must be expressed in kilometres per hour and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| sitearea_sqft = <!--Must be expressed in square feet and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| sitearea_sqm = <!--Must be expressed in square metres and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| gforce =
| capacity =
<!--Use only one of vehicles, rows, participants, or audience-->
| vehicle_type = [[Omnimover]]s
| vehicles =
| riders_per_vehicle = 1 to 3
| rows =
| riders_per_row = <!--Only use if rows has been specified.-->
| participants_per_group= <!--Only use if neither rows or vehicles is applicable.-->
| audience_capacity = <!--For shows-->
| duration = 6 minutes
| restriction_ft = <!--Must be expressed in feet and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| restriction_in = <!--Must be expressed in inches and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| restriction_cm = <!--Must be expressed in centimetres and may contain only numeric characters.-->
| virtual_queue_name =
| virtual_queue_image = <!--Use ONLY the filename, not a full [[Image:]] link-->
| virtual_queue_status= <!--should be available if above fields are used-->
| single_rider = <!--Must be "available" if available.-->
| pay_per_use = <!--Must be "available" if available.-->
| custom_label_1 = Hosted by
| custom_value_1 = Gérard Chevalier as The Phantom (1992–2018) (French Version) <br> [[Bernard Alane]] as The Phantom (2019-pres) (French Version) <br> [[Vincent Price]] as The Phantom (English Version)
| custom_label_2 = [[Audio-Animatronics]]
| custom_value_2 = 92
| custom_label_3 =
| custom_value_3 =
| custom_label_4 =
| custom_value_4 =
| custom_label_5 =
| custom_value_5 =
| custom_label_6 =
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| custom_label_8 =
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| accessible =
| transfer_accessible = yes
| assistive_listening =
| cc =
| website = [http://www.disneylandparis.com/en-us/attractions/disneyland-park/phantom-manor/ Disneyland Paris – Phantom Manor]
}}
'''Phantom Manor''' is a [[dark ride]] attraction in [[Frontierland]] at [[Disneyland Park (Paris)|Disneyland Park]] in [[Disneyland Paris]]. Phantom Manor is the park's version of [[The Haunted Mansion]] attractions at [[Disneyland]], [[Magic Kingdom]] and [[Tokyo Disneyland]], although it is designed to be darker in tone compared to other Haunted Mansion rides. It opened with Euro Disneyland on April 12, 1992.
The attraction combines a walk-through portion with [[Omnimover]] vehicles and features special effects and [[Audio-Animatronics]]. This version of the ride has a distinct plot, compared to the largely ambiguous story lines of the other Haunted Mansion attractions in Disney parks. The ride also features a unique orchestral soundtrack, differing from the American and Japanese versions.

== History ==
== History ==
In the planning days of ''Euro Disneyland'' (now called [[Disneyland Park (Paris)|Disneyland Park]]), [[Tony Baxter]], executive designer for [[Walt Disney Imagineering]], decided that certain staple Disney attractions would have to be altered for the new park. The [[Haunted Mansion]] was among these attractions. [[Jeff Burke]] was assigned the role of executive producer for the construction of the park's version of [[Frontierland]] and with help from Imagineer [[Bob Baranick]] and show writer [[Craig Thierault]], it was decided that the story related to Phantom Manor would have to be congruent with that of Frontierland's fictional town of ''Thunder Mesa''.
While planning Euro Disneyland, [[Tony Baxter (imagineer)|Tony Baxter]], executive designer for [[Walt Disney Imagineering]], decided that certain staple Disney attractions would likely have to be modified to fit the altered tastes and preferences of a European audience. The [[The Haunted Mansion|Haunted Mansion]] was among these, and the Imagineers saw the new iteration of the ride as an opportunity to expand and build on past ideas. Jeff Burke was assigned the role of executive producer for the construction of this park's version of Frontierland and, with help from Imagineer Bob Baranick and show writer Craig Fleming, it was decided that the story related to Phantom Manor would have to be congruent with that of Thunder Mesa, the fictional town portrayed in Frontierland. A similar treatment was given to the Paris version of [[Big Thunder Mountain Railroad]].


A major influence for the story of the ride was [[Gaston Leroux]]'s novel, ''[[The Phantom of the Opera (novel)|The Phantom of the Opera]]'', the secondary plot focusing on the abandoned bride [[Miss Havisham]] from [[Charles Dickens]]' ''[[Great Expectations]]'', as well as many European Gothic legends, which were altered for a [[American Old West|Western]] setting. Imagineer [[Marc Davis (animator)|Marc Davis]] disliked the derelict aspect of the building, stating "[[Walt Disney|Walt]] would never approve of it." However, the designers of the attraction thought that many guests would expect a haunted house attraction to look dilapidated and would likely be confused if the façade had a spotless appearance like the American mansions.
A major influence for the story of the ride was [[Andrew Lloyd Webber]]'s famous musical [[Phantom of the Opera]], but the story was altered to be set in Western times. Like the other Haunted Mansion rides, only the first scene takes place in the house itself —- the rest takes place in a warehouse hidden from view.


The architecture is in the [[Second Empire architecture|Second Empire style]]. Inspiration for Paris's Frontierland architecture was provided by [[Virginia City Historic District (Virginia City, Nevada)|historic buildings in Virginia City, Nevada]], specifically the [[Fourth Ward School (Virginia City, Nevada)|Fourth Ward School]] for Phantom Manor.<ref>{{cite web|title=Ravenswood Manor – The Making of fantom Manor|url=http://www.ravenswood-manor.com/pmmaking2.html|website=ravenswood-manor.com|access-date=July 31, 2017|archive-date=July 31, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170731202739/http://www.ravenswood-manor.com/pmmaking2.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>
== Story ==
[[Image:TPM.jpg|right|250px|thumb|Phantom Manor - June 2005]]
Phantom Manor follows a storyline devised by [[Walt Disney Imagineering]]:


==Story==
After the original Thunder Mesa town was abandoned, the new Thunder Mesa was built, along with a manor, owned by Henry Ravenswood, an industrial baron who owned the Big Thunder Mountain gold mines. He had a daughter named Melanie, who had a beautiful singing voice. The day came when Melanie had to choose a groom, and chose an engineer, planning to leave town. Henry wouldn't have it, determined to stop the wedding even from beyond the grave that an earthquake put him into. Thus the Phantom came onto the scene and captured Melanie's groom and hung him in the rafters of the house.


=== Old Version (1992-2018) ===
Melanie then waited for her dead groom, never taking off her bridal gown in case he appeared. She aged, then perished in the wine cellar. Meanwhile, 999 other ghosts and ghouls moved to the manor, and Ravenswood was now called Phantom Manor!
Henry Ravenswood (born 1795) was a Western settler who struck gold in Big Thunder Mountain and founded the Thunder Mesa Mining Company, thus creating the city of Thunder Mesa ([[Frontierland]] as a whole). Ravenswood became rich and built himself a Victorian manor high on Boot Hill overlooking Big Thunder Mountain, where he lived with his wife Martha (born 1802) and his daughter, Melanie Ravenswood (born 1842).


Big Thunder Mountain was rumored by [[natives]] to be home to the [[Thunderbird (mythology)|Thunder Bird]], a powerful spirit possessing a treasure. According to the legend, its wrath could be materialized into a terrible earthquake. However, Ravenswood would not believe such stories. Years went by and the gold in Big Thunder Mountain became scarce, making miners dig deeper into the mountain.
There is a great amount of speculation that the Phantom is Mr. Ravenswood, and that he killed her groom and became the Phantom to ensure that Melanie would stay in Thunder Mesa for eternity. Others say that Mr. Ravenswood is just another mortal victim and that the Phantom was another entity entirely, who wanted the lovely Melanie for himself but had been rejected due to an extreme facial deformity. If you subscribe to this theory, the heartbreak drove him mad.


Melanie grew from a young girl into a beautiful young woman and became drawn to several suitors who planned to take her far away from Thunder Mesa, much to the dismay of Henry. Henry did everything he could to stop this, with the first four being subjected to various cruel fates. His useless attempts to stop Melanie in the midst of being engaged to a [[train engineer]] named Jake were put to a stop when a terrible earthquake killed him and Martha. It seemed the Thunder Bird had been awakened and the family was never heard of again. After several years, the story of what really happened came out from underneath the rubble:
== Walk-through ==
The Haunted Mansions in other Disney parks were designed to look clean and aesthetically pleasing. Phantom Manor however was designed to look clearly derelict. The manor's ground are untended, overgrown with weeds and scattered with dead vegetation. Upon entering the grounds, guests see a [[bat guardbox]] and a plaque on the wall which reads "Phantom Manor - Non Omnis Moriar" (Latin: "I will not die completely"). A derelict [[gazebo]] stands on the lawn with an out-of-tune [[music box]] playing within.
Guests walk along the porch and wait outside the house. The doors open by themselves and a servant appears and invites them into the foyer. The foyer is a small room with a central chandelier (with several [[Hidden Mickeys]] in its pattern). There are also two mirrors. Then a cold, mysterious voice - that of the Ghost Host - echoes across the room, politely welcoming us. (The Ghost Host was originally voiced by American actor [[Vincent Price]], but French visitors objected to the English narration, so a French actor, Gérard Chevalier, was substituted. However, one small piece of Price's recording remains in use: the Phantom's evil laughter.) The face of the bride appears in the highest mirror as the voice continues.


On Melanie's wedding day, a mysterious Phantom unknown to anyone appeared in the house. While Melanie was preparing in her room, the Phantom lured Jake up to the attic where he hanged him by the neck from the rafters.
We then file into an octagonal room with four portraits of a young woman. In one, she picks flowers; in the second, she holds a parasol; in the third, she steps through a stream; and in the final portrait, she is having a picnic with her fiancé. The Ghost Host explains that the tour has begun, and wonders if we have noticed that the walls are stretching. The room actually appears to stretch, and the portraits grow taller---revealing some haunting situations the young girl is in. The Ghost Host points out another disturbing fact about the room: It has no exits. He asks us how we plan to get out. Just then the room is plunged into darkness, and a scream comes from above us. We look up to see a cloaked corpse up in the attic, swinging from a hangman's noose. Another figure is pulling the hanged man's rope, this murderer being the Phantom.


In the ballroom, the bride sat alone. Hours went by with no sign of the groom. Guests slowly filed away, leaving Melanie alone in the house with the staff of maids and butlers. "Some day", she told herself, "he will come". And so, having never taken off her [[wedding dress]] or dropped her [[flower bouquet]], in preparation for her loved one's return, she wandered the house aimlessly, singing melancholy songs of lost love.
The stretching room suddenly lights up and a door opens, revealing a hallway lined with portraits.


But the Phantom was still in the house, laughing at her human devotion to her intended husband. One after one, he invited his dead, demonic friends from the afterlife to fill the house in an eternal party. A dark curse fell upon the house and the shape of the house was slowly transformed by the evil forces. No one ever set foot in the house ever since.
As the we file down this hallway, we see that one portrait is that of a [[knight]] and his horse on a cliff. There is another of a young woman in a temple; a third of a ship sailing across the sea; and a fourth of a woman reclining on a sofa. As we watch, the portraits magically morph into spooky versions: The knight become a ghost; the woman in the temple became the horrible [[Medusa]]; the ship becomes a [[ghost ship]] sailing through a storm; and the reclining woman becomes a were-[[puma|panther]]. At the end of the corridor is a large portrait of the manor's dead owner, Melanie Ravenswood, wearing a bridal gown.


Inside and outside, the house was decaying with age. Dusty cobwebs covered every inch, the disheartened staff not caring, for it was rumored that Melanie had lost her mind. She wandered the house for years and years, singing softly to her groom, while all around her demons and ghosts reveled and danced. Everywhere she went she was reminded of the wedding. The Phantom's eternal laughter still carried through the walls of the house. Outside, the once beautiful grounds were falling apart and crumbling. The gilded staircase and structure were dotted with mold and trees and every plant on the grounds died. As if sensing the evil inherent in the house, nothing living ever trod there. Even so, Melanie kept her hopes, waiting for her love's return and never figured why he didn't show up at the wedding.
We then turn a corner and enter a large room with a grand staircase leading to the floor above. Old furniture lines the walls. Sitting on a shelf is a bust of a stern-looking woman whose eyes seems to follow us.


The earthquake that killed her parents all those years ago cut a huge gouge in the west half of the property and in the crumbling ghost town of the old Thunder Mesa. The deserted buildings were rumored to be called Phantom Canyon, the dark supernatural version of the town and anyone who entered the ghastly old town at night never came back.
An unbroken train of black carriages, known as Doom Buggies, travels through the room. We board the Doom Buggies, each buggy accommodating two of us, and the carriages slip us away into darkness. As we rise, we can see the outlines of a staircase. Suddenly we find themselves moving past the ghost of young Melanie, who bows to us as we pass.


Today, no one knows if Melanie Ravenswood is still alive in that old house on the hill. If she is, then she is well over 100 years old. Her beautiful voice still carries over the town at night though, through the walls of the house and night air. And sometimes, people still see lights in the house.
A suit of armor then appears---but apparently its owner has not quite left, as it is still moving. Beside the armor is infamous Endless Hallway. Peering into its depths, we see Melanie appearing and disappearing, as if she is fleeing from something. On the left side of the corridor a stately [[piano]] appears. At first glance it seems to be playing by itself---but then we notice the shadow of a phantom pianist falls across the carpet. A large, red-eyed [[raven]] has perched next to the piano, and it squawks angrily at us. Our Doom Buggies then pass through a corridor lined with doors. Someone---or something---is trying to get through them. As we pass each door, we hear pounding, knocking, or shouting behind it. When we reach the last door, we see that two skeletal hands have wrenched the top of it open. We pass a small hall containing a demonic grandfather clock. A large "13" is on its face, and its hands madly spin backward.


Some nights, when the moon is full and the sky is clear of clouds, one can still hear the lonely mourning of the bride, the maniacal laughter of the Phantom, and the faint tinkle of glass and the laughter of party guests. Whether she is alive or not, what is well known is that poor Melanie never really left the crumbling mansion. She waits for her groom for all eternity.
We then enter a round room where a crystal ball sits on a central table. In it, wrapped in a mist, is the disembodied head of [[Madame Leota]]. As we watch, she summons ghosts and dark creatures to a mysterious ball.


Many people believe the Phantom to be Melanie's late father, Henry Ravenswood, seeking vengeance from beyond the grave. Others believe that it is the pure spirit of evil, and that a curse was placed upon the young girl.
We leave the seancé room and move along a balcony, looking down into a grand ballroom, where a ghostly wedding party takes place. Melanie stands on a staircase, singing a beautiful melody. The Phantom stands in an open window, laughing menacingly. Ghostly guests sit around the dining table, where a moldy wedding cake sits. We see a pile of unopened wedding presents in the background. A drunken ghost swings precariously from the chandelier, his cane wrapped around one of its branches. Elegantly-dressed pairs of ghostly dancers twirl around the ballroom. A spirit organist sits at a massive [[organ (music)|organ]], playing a haunting waltz on it as wraiths fly out of its pipes.


=== New Version (2019-) ===
From this festive scene, we pass to a sad scene: The Bride's Boudoir. Melanie, now an elderly lady, sits in front of a mirror filled with the shape of an enormous skull. She looks forlorn, as if she has abandoned all hope of being reunited with her groom.
For the 2019 refurbishment, the story was slightly revised in addition to the new effects, these include:


* The confirmation that the Phantom was indeed Henry Ravenswood, who vowed that no one would marry his daughter no matter what, using various means, including direct murder. (Previously, the Identity of the Phantom was left ambiguous pre 2019 refurb, on whether or not it was really him or some evil presence that awakened from the earthquake that killed him and his wife, and collapsed the mines inside of Big Thunder Mountain.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-02-22 |title=Ravenswood Manor - Jeff Burke Interview |url=http://ravenswood-manor.com/jeffburke.html |access-date=2024-08-06 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170222173201/http://ravenswood-manor.com/jeffburke.html |archive-date=February 22, 2017 }}</ref>)
The Doom Buggies fly out of the upstairs window and swoop down into a vast graveyard. There we come face to face with The Phantom, a living skeleton standing before a freshly-dug grave. What is its purpose? Beside him growls a terrifying undead dog. Our Doom Buggies then enter the freshly-dug earth and travel underground, into some catacombs, where we see many coffins being opened by their skeletal residents. Four white marble busts then come into view, bearing the expressive faces of four phantoms singing [[Grim Grinning Ghosts]].
* Instead of simply Jake, Melanie had a variety of suitors, (Barry Claude, Sawyer Bottom, Captain Rowan D. Falls, and Ignatius "Iggy" Knight), who all were killed in various accidents implied to be staged by the Phantom, just before or after they married his daughter.
* Melanie becoming aware of the phantom that terrorized and killed all her potentional husbands, (implied via the changes to the ride post 2019 refurb,<ref>{{Cite web |date=2019-05-04 |title=Reopening of the Phantom Manor at Disneyland Paris ! |url=https://www.dlpwelcome.com/phantom-manor-2019/ |access-date=2024-08-06 |website=DLP Welcome |language=fr-FR}}</ref> although it is still ambiguous if she came to realize if it was her father, or if she knew it was her father from the start.), before outright being driven mad in the process and resulting in her complete allegiance to the Phantom after her death, with her spirit offering to marry riders at the climax in the new version of the ride.<ref>{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QBJLOlXs7NU |title=[4K-On Ride] Phantom Manor - Disneyland Paris version of Haunted Mansion |date=2023-07-25 |last=DLP Welcome |access-date=2024-08-06 |via=YouTube}}</ref>


==Attraction==
We then enter a ghost town straight out of the Wild West. An eerie-looking man stands before a ramshackle train station, offering to sell us tickets. Next we see a ruined town hall where the town's mayor stands, welcomes us, and invites us to be the manor's 1000th ghost. As he tips his hat, his head comes with it. We're then caught in a gun battle between a bandit, fleeing a bank on a mule, and a cowardly sheriff with Big Thunder Mountain in the background. We see a drugstore where a green-faced pharmacist drinks deadly-looking potions. We then see a [[bar (establishment)|saloon]] whose front wall has caved in. Inside it there are a dancing showgirl, a bartender, and a man playing a honky-tonk piano. Four invisble gamblers play poker nearby.
Like the [[The Haunted Mansion|Haunted Mansion]]s located in other Disney parks, only the introduction of the ride (the Octagonal Portrait Gallery) takes place in the visible Manor façade. The actual ride itself takes place in a large warehouse-style [[show building]] hidden behind the Manor.


Phantom Manor's Omnimover portion is similar to the [[Disneyland]] Haunted Mansion's system. The track layouts of both are almost identical, but not completely. The main difference is that Phantom Manor's track is slightly longer, primarily to accommodate the Phantom Canyon scenes that substitute for the graveyard scenes in the other rides. Many scenes from the classic Haunted Mansions are replicated, but altered to incorporate the new Western theme and plot, such as the Octagonal Portrait Gallery, the Portrait Corridor, the Endless Hallway, the Conservatory, the Corridor of Doors, Madame Leota’s Seance Room, the Ballroom, and even the busts singing ''Grim Grinning Ghosts''.
We spot the Phantom again---this time "in the flesh," and laughing crazily, luring us into an open grave. As we see the silhouette of the Manor ahead, we enter a dark passage and see Melanie's corpse pointing to the way out. We enter a subterranean chamber lined with large, gilt-framed mirrors---in which we can see that The Phantom has decided to hitch a ride with us! We then travel through a wine cellar where servants await. They help us out of our Doom Buggies, and we walk toward the exit---but there is one more ghost to bid us farewell. As we travel up toward ground-level, a woman no bigger than a doll stands to the side of the passageway behind bars. She tells us to hurry back, and to be sure to bring our death certificates. We then exit into Boot Hill, the Manor's private cemetery.


===Outside queue===
== The Characters ==
In the original Haunted Mansions at [[Disneyland]], the [[Magic Kingdom]] and [[Tokyo Disneyland]], the mansion was designed to look clean and aesthetically pleasing. Phantom Manor, however, is designed to look clearly derelict and stands at the top of a small hill, looking out onto the southern side of [[Big Thunder Mountain]], with a commanding view of the washed out trestle, the mine elevator, and the second lift hill. The Manor's grounds are untended, overgrown with weeds and scattered with dead vegetation.
As in the other Disney Haunted Mansion rides, we don't actually see "999 ghosts" as each Ghost Host claims. However, there are many memorable characters---here are some of them:


Upon entering the grounds, guests can see a [[bat]] [[Guardhouse|guard box]] and a plaque on the wall which reads ''Phantom Manor – Non Omnis Moriar'' ([[Latin]] for "I shall not die completely"). A derelict [[gazebo]] stands on the lawn that has a tea set laid out. Originally, these used to move to mimic two people pouring and drinking tea, at night, the light in the gazebo flickers. The gazebo also contains a [[music box]] playing within (since 2001, this music box track is also used in Disneyland's version for use on the [[Haunted Mansion Holiday|annual seasonal overlay]]). This is also the only mansion in any of the parks that has guests enter the ride through the front door. Shadows and lights can be seen from within the house at nighttime. Melanie can also be seen from a window in the façade carrying a candle from one window to the next.
'''Melanie Ravenswood''' is the sad, ghostly bride seen throughout the Manor. She is the daughter of Henry Ravenswood. On the day of her wedding, her groom mysteriously disappeared. From that day, Melanie continues to wear her wedding dress and hold her bouquet as she eternally searches the halls of Phantom Manor for her groom.


===The Foyer===
'''The Phantom''' is the Manor's [[List of Disney Villains|Villain]], the mysterious evil spirit who murdered Melanie's groom and imprisoned Melanie in the Manor. We see The Phantom's shadowy form several times during the ride, but only in the climactic graveyard scene do we get to see him properly. He appears again in Phantom Canyon as a laughing corpse inviting us to take up residence in The Manor. Nobody knows who The Phantom is, but most people believe that he is Henry Ravenswood, Melanie's father, or a disfigured social outcast who coveted Melanie for himself. However, details in the storyline may very well point to the former.
Guests walk up the pathways towards the Manor, along the [[porch]] and queue outside the house where they wait for admission. A cast member dressed as a macabre servant opens the doors and invites a small group of them into the foyer.


====Original version (1992–2018)====
'''Madame Leota,''' a very well-known character from all the Haunted Mansion rides, is a disembodied head, trapped within a misty crystal ball. With tarot cards spread before her in her séance room, she chants ancient incantations, summoning the spirits to the ghostly wedding reception that follows.
This foyer contains a dusty chandelier and two mirrors, and is lined with dark wood panelling. The voice of the Phantom sounds from the ceiling and around the room, politely welcoming guests, telling them the Legend of this place and inviting them to explore the Manor further. Melanie's face fades in and out of the smallest mirror during the narration.


====New version (2019–present)====
'''The Singing Busts'''---Uncle Theodore, Rollo Runkin, Phineas Puck and Ned Nub---do a lively barbershop-harmony version of the Manor's themesong, "Grim Grinning Ghosts." They are seen at the exit of the Skeleton Catacombs.
In the 2019 refurbishment, an additional effect was added to the foyer. The small mirror was replaced by a painting of Melanie in her wedding gown, looking sad, and her father Henry Ravenswood, looking angry, standing behind her outside the decrepit house with both hands on her shoulders. A bare tree is also behind them with four hearts crossed out and a noose hanging from one of its branches. As the Phantom begins recounting the legend of the Manor, the painting changes. It now shows a happier Melanie, dressed in summer clothes, while Henry is smiling and resting one hand on Melanie's shoulder. The Manor is in pristine condition, and the tree, now with leaves, has one heart and a swing hanging from its branches. Lighting effects also transform the wallpaper in the room from old and torn to brand-new.


The Phantom was originally voiced by [[Vincent Price]], but legal agreements required the narration to be primarily in French. Within a few months after the attraction first opened, writer and dub voice actor Gérard Chevalier was brought in to record a French version of Price's narration. However, a small piece of Price's recording was kept in use: the Phantom's maniacal laughter.
'''The Raven''' haunts the ride, squawking angrily and glaring at guests with his red eyes. He appears in the séance room, the music room, the ballroom, the graveyard, and in Phantom Canyon.


In 2018, it was announced that during Phantom Manor's major renovation, parts of Price's narration would be restored to the soundtrack of the attraction. For the 2019 re-opening, the new tracks feature Price once again, original excerpts as well as previously unused material from his 1990 recording, spoken English, with French actor [[Bernard Alane]] voicing the parts in French. The Phantom says (French lines ''in italics'', translated into English below):
'''Ezra''' stands before Phantom Canyon's decrepit train station, trying to sell guests tickets for a train that will never come. Ezra received his name from the cast members who host the Manor, as he resembles one of the Hitchhiking Ghosts in the Haunted Mansion.


"When hinges creak in doorless chambers, ''when strange and frightening sounds are heard all around,'' when candlelight flickers though the air is deathly still, ''that is the time when the Phantom manifests''. Welcome curious friends, it is so nice to have guests. ''We welcome you, humble mortals, to this mysterious manor''. You may not believe it but beauty once lived in this house. ''Phantom Manor had happier days, but times have changed''. And now curious souls, come, I have more to show you. ''Enter brave mortals into this famous manor together''."
'''The Mayor of Phantom Canyon''' invites us to the Manor, holding a skull-shaped key to the city. He tips his hat to guests, and his head tips off with it! His voice is that of [[Paul Frees]] by way of archive audio from the original Mansion attraction and his face is based on the original [[Journey Into Imagination]]'s Dreamfinder character that used to be in place at [[Epcot]]


===Octagonal Portrait Gallery===
'''The Ballroom Scene''' contains many memorable characters: Melanie stands on a stairway, welcoming the ghoulish guests as they flock out of a hearse parked by the open door. The Phantom laughs from a dark window. The dining table is surrounded by celebrating ghosts. A drunken ghost swings precariously from the chandelier. Beside the dining table, four ghost couples twirl and waltz forever. By a far wall of the ballroom, a cloaked figure plays a haunting waltz on a massive pipe organ, while millions of wraiths fly from it and vanish. The organist sometimes looks up to the Doombuggies as they pass.
Guests then enter an octagonal room with four portraits of a young Melanie, with each of her four suitors. Melanie is with Barry Claude in one portrait, Sawyer Bottom in the second, Captain Rowan D. Falls in the third, and Ignatius "Iggy" Knight in the fourth. The Phantom comments on the gallery, referring to the "sweet innocence of youth". Shortly after, Melanie fades away from each of the paintings, with only the suitors left and the Phantom acknowledges a "disquieting metamorphosis" and that "not all tales have happy endings".


Suddenly the room appears to stretch upwards and the paintings grow taller, revealing the fates to each of Melanie's suitors:
== Trivia ==
* Barry Claude sitting on a tree branch, while an angry [[bear]] with her cub roars down below.
*The dancing skeletons featured in the attraction were loosely based on the 1929 Disney animated short [[The Skeleton Dance]].
* Sawyer Bottom straddling a log and being sawed in half by an industrial buzzsaw.
*The character of ''Melanie Ravenswood'' was based on Miss Havisham, the aged bride awaiting her groom in [[Charles Dickens]]' [[Great Expectations]].
* Rowan D. Falls riding in a rowboat about to head over a waterfall.
*Much of the attraction's storyline was inspired by the [[Western River Expedition]], a cancelled attraction that was to have been built at [[Magic Kingdom|Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom]] in the mid-1970s.
* Ignatius Knight standing atop several crates of TNT and an ignited barrel of dynamite.
*The video game ''[[Kingdom Hearts]]'' has a hidden boss that is said to be based on the Phantom in the attraction .


The Phantom comments "It appears everyone is doomed at Phantom Manor. Even you." He goes on to add that the chamber has no windows and no doors, offering the guests a "chilling challenge": to find a way out. After his maniacal laughter echoes away, he adds that "the Phantom" (referring to himself) would be happy to help them — lightning and thunder effects fill the space as the ceiling turns invisible and the Phantom reveals himself in the attic, holding a noose and sinisterly laughing. Then suddenly, lights go out completely and the guests are shrouded in darkness. The gallery's lights slowly come back on and a hidden door opens, revealing a hallway lined with portraits. The Phantom apologizes for frightening the guests prematurely and beckons them further into the Manor, and states that "the real beauty of this house awaits us, farther on, and she's dying to meet you, but beware of the Phantom" (once again referencing himself).
[[Category:Disney parks and attractions]]
[[Category:Haunted Mansion]]
[[Category:Disneyland Resort Paris]]


From 1992 to 2018, the four portraits were of a young Melanie, pictured in more felicitous times, only to stretch to reveal more macabre situations:
[[fr:Phantom Manor]]
*Melanie is having a picnic with her fiancé Jake Evans as [[ant]]s, a [[diamondback rattlesnake]], a [[scorpion]], a [[tarantula]] and a [[beetle]] raid their food.
[[he:אחוזת רוח הרפאים]]
*Melanie holds a parasol as she rides in a boat about to go over a waterfall.
*Melanie picks roses from above a [[tombstone]] while a skeletal [[zombie]] emerges from the ground, gripping a small rake in one hand.
*Melanie wades through a small stream as an [[Water spirit|aquatic monster]] reaches for her foot.

The scene revealed in the attic was also slightly different until 2018; instead of just showing the Phantom evilly laughing, he was hanging Jake Evans, Melanie's sole groom in the original version of the attraction.

Like in the Disneyland version of the ride, the Octagonal Portrait Gallery is actually a pair of cleverly disguised [[Otis Elevator Company|OTIS]] [[elevator]]s. These elevators were originally created to solve a space constraint in California's original version of the attraction, as the Imagineers building the ride had to figure out a way to subtly funnel guests underneath the Disneyland Railroad that sat directly behind the ride's exterior. The floor is lowered while the upper half of the walls are also lowered at half the speed to create the stretching illusion. This served a double purpose of both a dramatic effect, while also lowering guests from the elevation of the attraction façade to the elevation of the ride's loading area in a separate warehouse-style show building behind the berm of the park. The Tokyo and Florida versions of the attraction did not face the same issues regarding space, and thus were constructed with stretching rooms that only stretch upward while guests remain at the same level. Despite Phantom Manor also not facing these spatial issues, the decision was made to use actual elevators for the stretching show scenes in the ride similarly to California's attraction. This was likely done because the façade of the manor is elevated and without the elevator functionality the show building would be visible to guests around the manor and those riding [[Big Thunder Mountain Railroad|Big Thunder Mountain]].

The ceiling at the top of the room is actually a [[scrim (material)|scrim]], which conceals the Phantom until he is backlit from above.

===Interior queue and loading area===
Stepping out of the Stretching Room, guests walk down the Portrait Corridor, which takes them from the Manor visible from within the park into the show building that houses the actual ride. Unlike the Disneyland version, this corridor does not pass under the park's railroad (which instead travels behind the show building). As the guests walk down the corridor, they see four portraits, slowly morphing into more macabre images.

The original paintings were all adapted from the Disneyland version of the ride, based on the opening day versions of the paintings in said attraction:
* A [[Edward the Black Prince|knight]] and his horse on a cliff both becoming ghosts and the sky darkening.
* A [[Medusa|young woman]] in a Greek temple turning into a stone gorgon in the temple’s ruins.
* A [[Flying Dutchman|ship]] sailing across the sea becomes a tattered and ghostly version of itself sailing through a storm.
* A woman reclining on a sofa turns into a [[Were-Cat|were-panther]].

During the ride's 2019 refurbishment, Imagineers decided that the original paintings did not fit with the more serious tone of the attraction, and changed them to better convey the story of the ride. The three paintings were replaced with:
* Henry Ravenswood becoming the Phantom (replacing Medusa).
* The ''Flying Dutchman'' as seen in ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' catching on fire (replacing the original version of the ship).
* Henry and another man outside the Manor about to have a duel, with it changing to Henry shooting his opponent in the back (replacing the were-panther). This portrait is a reference to the duelist-painting ghosts in the Disneyland attraction's ballroom scene.
* A cowboy and his horse on a cliff gazing at what appears to be Big Thunder Mountain becoming ghosts with the sky darkening and ghost buffaloes appearing in the sky (replacing the knight).

At the end of the hallway stands a large portrait of Melanie Ravenswood, wearing her bridal gown, from which she can be heard singing. Although subtle, the refurb added a [https://i.pinimg.com/originals/4c/02/af/4c02aff1da98f9d0359e6e123dff41c5.jpg faint figure of Henry] standing behind Melanie in this painting. It is unknown if this was intended to be an animated effect like the rest of the portraits, or if it was just added for more observant guests to find.

Guests then turn a corner and enter the loading area, a large hall with the Grand Staircase leading to the upper floor. One can see a ghostly, foggy landscape with flashes and bolts of lightning through the huge window above the stairs, and Melanie standing on the midway landing. Old furniture lines the walls, and sitting on a shelf is a marble bust of a stern-looking woman, who stares at guests and seems to follow them as they pass by. This is accomplished using the [[Hollow-Face illusion|hollow face illusion]], and the effect is a commonality between every version of the attraction in the different Disney parks. An unbroken train of black Omnimover vehicles known as "carriages" move through the center of the room, alongside a moving platform to enable easy loading.

Unlike the American versions of the attraction, the loading area is the last scene with narration from the Phantom. The Imagineers chose to convey much of the story visually, and were hesitant to rely on narration throughout the entire ride because of possible language barriers.

===The ride===
Guests board the carriages, each accommodating two to three persons and then move upwards to the show building's main floor. Prior to 2019, guests would pass a young Melanie bowing while holding a candelabra and singing the entire time. During the renovations, Melanie was moved to the loading area and now a twitching suit of armor is in her place (a reference to when California's Haunted Mansion had live actors in a knight costumes scare guests for several weeks after the 1969 opening).

After passing the armor the guests face a seemingly Endless Hallway, with the vision of Melanie and the Phantom appearing and disappearing in the distance while the candelabra that she is holding remains in view. The hallway effect is accomplished with a [[full-length mirror]] on the far end of the hallway, and the disappearance of Melanie and the Phantom is done utilizing the [[pepper's ghost]] effect.

On the left side of the Corridor is a [[Conservatory (greenhouse)|Conservatory]] containing a [[piano]], adorned with the [[wreath]]s of the deceased suitors. At first glance, it seems to be playing a minor chord version of "The Wedding March" by itself, but one can notice a ghost pianist's shadow falling on the carpet (this effect is achieved by the use of mechanical keys). A large, red-eyed [[raven]] sits on a music stand next to the piano and squawks madly.

The carriages then travel through a corridor lined with doors. As guests pass each door, they hear pounding, knocking, or shouting behind it, and the knockers seem to move by themselves, as if their inhabitants are struggling to get out. When the last door is reached, guests can see two skeletal hands clutching at the top, trying to force their way through, with the skeleton yelling "Let me out of here!" (It uses the same audio as the skeleton attempting to escape his coffin in the Conservatory in other Haunted Mansions). The carriages pass a small hall containing a demonic [[grandfather clock]], with a large "13" on its face (instead of the usual 12) and its hands spinning backward as it chimes. The walls are lined with purple wallpaper covered in eyes, several of which glow in the dark as the guests move between the hallway and the next scene.

The carriages then enter a round Seance Room adorned with [[gargoyle]]s, where a [[crystal ball]] sits on a floating central table. The ball contains the head of Madame Leota. Behind her is a raven perched on a chair. As the ride vehicles revolve around her, she summons ghosts and dark creatures to a wedding party in both English and French (translated in English below):

"Goblins and Ghoulies, creatures of fright, we summon you now, to dance through the night!
''Spirits and ghosts, on your proud stallions, accompany the beautiful bride through the night!''<ref name="Nuptial Doom">{{cite web|title=A Guided Tour of Phantom Manor: Nuptial Doom|url=http://ravenswood-manor.com/pmexperience2.html|website=Ravenswood Manor – A Tribute to Thunder Mesa in Disneyland Paris|publisher=ravenswood-manor.com|access-date=May 13, 2015|archive-date=January 7, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150107004413/http://www.ravenswood-manor.com/pmexperience2.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>
Warlocks and Witches, answer this call! Your presence is wanted at this ghostly ball!
''From the twelve knolls of midnight to the morning bells, we shall waltz together, gruesome debutante!''<ref name="Nuptial Doom" />
Join now the Spirits in Nuptial Doom, a ravishing Bride, a vanishing Groom..."

The narration in this scene is entirely separate from that of the original attraction, although retaining the ghostly [[séance]] aspect. Whereas the original scene was created purely for spectacle, the redesigned scene for Phantom Manor was created with the story of the ride in mind. This is reflected in the narration with Leota's mentions to the bride and groom (being Melanie and her various suitors, respectively). During the 2019 refurb of the attraction, the scene received a new effect that saw Madame Leota's crystal ball floating above the table. The original score for this scene was replaced with the score from the American versions of the attraction, although it was changed back shortly afterward after fans voiced their displeasure with the change.

Guests leave the Seance Room and move along a balcony, looking down into the [[Ballroom]], where a ghostly wedding party takes place. Melanie stands on a staircase, singing while the Phantom stands behind her, laughing at her as lightning flashes behind him. Ghostly guests enter the room, bringing in wedding presents, and sitting around the dining table, where a moldy [[wedding cake]] is waiting for them. Drunken ghosts swing from the chandelier above the table. Elegantly dressed pairs of ghostly dancers twirl around the Ballroom, as a spirit organist sits at a massive organ, playing a haunting waltz as [[Ghost#Terminology|wraith]]s fly out of its pipes. Apart from plot-related retheming, this scene is similar to the regular Haunted Mansions' ballrooms. During soft-opening previews after the 2019 refurbishment, the music here was temporarily replaced with the equivalent music from the American Haunted Mansions, but was switched back after backlash similarly to the previous Séance scene. The transparent effects of ghosts in this scene is accomplished with the [[pepper's ghost]] effect, with animatronics above and below the ride vehicles reflected in mirrors to create the illusion of transparency.

Leaving the Ballroom, the vehicles enter the Bride's Boudoir (which replaces the attic scene in the original attraction). A dying fire is crackling in the fireplace. Guests then see Melanie who has given up looking for her long lost groom. Melanie sits weeping into a mirror as an old woman while her father's skeletal face can be seen over her shoulder in the reflection. A music box and [[Phonograph|gramophone]] play in the background. Prior to 2019 the scene was largely the same, but the mirror was fogged and damaged to resemble an actual skull, in reference to the [[Charles Allan Gilbert|Allan Gilbert]] painting ''All is Vanity''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://mbracedefreak.wordpress.com/2014/05/15/vanity-and-the-gossip/|title=Vanity and the Gossip|date=May 15, 2014}}</ref> The clock displayed in the room has a blade pendulum, in reference to [[Edgar Allan Poe]]'s "[[The Pit and the Pendulum]]," which was also the basis for a movie featuring [[Vincent Price]].

The carriages leave the Bride's Boudoir through open double doors and glide across a terrace and then into a stormy graveyard, past an animatronic of the Phantom with a shovel standing before an open grave, with an undead dog growling beside him. The Phantom laughs as the guests pass by. The carriages then travel underground to the [[catacombs]] (presumably Boot Hill), passing by fissures in the ground as a reference to the earthquake that resulted in the death of Henry Ravenswood. A series of coffins being opened by their [[Skeleton|skeletal residents]] are seen, as well as a pair of skeleton hands attempting to pry open a coffin from the inside, typically found in the conservatory scene in the Haunted Mansion. A set of Singing Busts then come into view, singing the original ''[[Grim Grinning Ghosts]]'' from the Haunted Mansion. For unknown reasons, the singing bust originally portrayed by Chuck Schroeder was removed in the Phantom Manor, leaving only four.

Through a hole, the carriages then enter Phantom Canyon, which is a twisted, supernatural version of Thunder Mesa. Great rifts in the earth surrounding the vehicles again convey damage from the previous earthquake, which marked Thunder Mesa's turning point from a prosperous community to a ghost town. An animatronic ticket master (using the same mold as Ezra, one of the original Hitchhiking Ghosts from the American rides) stands before a ramshackle train station, offering the riders train tickets to the [[Underworld]]. Guests then pass a ruined [[town hall]] where the mayor (who speaks clips of dialogue from [[Paul Frees]], the original rides' Ghost Host, and who is modeled from the same mold as animatronics of Dreamfinder from the original version of [[Epcot]]'s [[Journey into Imagination with Figment]]) holds the Key to the City and invites guests to be the Manor's 1000th ghost, "but beware of hitchhiking ghosts!" As he tips his hat, his head comes with it. A [[shootout]] follows between a bank robber fleeing on a [[mule]] and a cowardly sheriff, with [[Big Thunder Mountain Railroad|Big Thunder Mountain]] in the background. Guests see a [[pharmacy]] where a green-faced [[pharmacist]] drinks a potion of some-sort, followed by a [[bar (establishment)|saloon]] whose front wall has caved in. Inside it, there is a dancing [[showgirl]], a [[bartender]] and a man playing a [[honky-tonk]] piano. Every once in a while, a hand with a candelabra appears out of the piano. Four invisible [[gambler]] figures play [[poker]] nearby.

Much of Phantom Canyon was derived from a planned scene of a wild mining town called Dry Gulch in the [[Western River Expedition]] at the [[Magic Kingdom]], later retooled into their version of Big Thunder Mountain Railroad. Phantom Canyon occupies a space that in the regular Haunted Mansions is used for the graveyard scene.

Another cackling figure of the Phantom and his raven stands by a tree and gestures towards a noose hanging on a branch and an empty coffin for awaiting guests, his eyes glowing red at passing riders. Prior to 2019, this animatronic version of the Phantom was a skeleton with rotting flesh on his body, showing the guests that he has lost any humanity he's ever had left in him. As guests see the silhouette of the Manor above, they enter the mausoleum, where Melanie's four suitors were buried. Prior to the 2019 refurb, guests would encounter Melanie's floating skeleton pointing the way out. After the refurb, the skeletal hand of one of her suitors holds a wedding ring out as guests pass by. The vehicles enter a subterranean chamber lined with large, gilt-framed mirrors in which the ghostly image of Melanie, driven insane by the loss of her suitors and groom, appears in the vehicles, beckoning riders to wed her. Vehicles travel through a [[wine cellar]], where cast members await to help them disembark their carriages and exit the attraction.

===Post show===
As guests travel towards daylight, the evil laughter of the Phantom can be heard, as well as Melanie's voice, telling guests to "hurry back" and to "bring their death certificates". Prior to 2019, a small Melanie would beckon guests to hurry back. This figure was removed in the ride's 2019 refurbishment. Finally, guests exit into [[Boot Hill]], a cemetery filled with humorous gravestones, as well as ride-oriented gravestones for the Ravenswoods and several others. If one should turn around to look back at the house, they can occasionally see the Phantom looking out the window over the exit and down at them, before he closes the curtains. The effect is more visible at night due to backlighting. In the Cemetery, one can hear Melanie's beating heart in her tomb, both a reference to the original Haunted Mansion bride, whose red beating heart could be seen through her chest and [[Edgar Allan Poe]]'s ''[[The Tell-Tale Heart]]''.

==Soundtrack==
An opening narration by [[Vincent Price]] was recorded and initially used. However, due to a deal with French officials, the attraction's audio had to be primarily in French; thus the narration was rerecorded by Gérard Chevalier, who had provided a dubbed French voice for Price in some of his movies. Price's narration is available on the CD ''[[The Haunted Mansion - 30th Anniversary (1999 CD)]]''. Parts of Price's original narration in English were restored to the soundtrack in 2019, including excerpts previously unused in the attraction.

The attraction features an orchestrated score by [[John Debney]]. Although it is based on [[Buddy Baker (composer)|Buddy Baker]]'s ''[[Grim Grinning Ghosts]]'', it provides the attraction with a cinematic feeling, along with giving it a darker, more romantic tone. In the climactic Phantom Canyon scene, a big-band-style swing version of "Grim Grinning Ghosts" is heard, compared to the original version's "spirited" but straight meter.

==Other information==
In the early 2000s, Phantom Manor was given a special Halloween celebration. Known as ''The Phantom Wedding'', it featured a large scrim covering the whole building, which was used for projection of Melanie's recreated wedding. In 2005, however, this celebration was replaced by another.

On January 8, 2018, Phantom Manor closed for refurbishment. The graveyard has remained relatively untouched, though the walkway and manor itself were covered in scaffolding. At the ''FanDaze'' event at [[Walt Disney Studios Park]] on June 2, Imagineer Tom Fitzgerald confirmed that Vincent Price's original English dialogue would return to Phantom Manor following its refurbishment.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUhCBp7sGJg |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/IUhCBp7sGJg |archive-date=2021-12-21 |url-status=live|title=Vincent Price narration returning to Phantom Manor at Disneyland Paris – YouTube|date=June 2, 2018|via=YouTube|work=Attractions Magazine|access-date=June 3, 2018}}{{cbignore}}</ref> The ride soft-reopened on April 30, 2019, and fully reopened on May 3.

== Incidents ==
During the morning of April 2, 2016, the body of a 45-year-old cast member was found inside the attraction. He had been working on lighting backstage, and his death was understood to have been accidental and due to [[electrocution]]. The ride was closed during the investigation.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.local10.com/news/weird-news/disneyland-paris-worker-found-dead-in-haunted-mansion-ride|title=Disneyland Paris worker found dead in haunted mansion ride|last=Tavss|first=Jeff|date=April 4, 2016|website=ABC News 10|access-date=April 6, 2016}}</ref>

==See also==
*[[Mystic Manor]]

==References==
{{reflist}}

==External links==
===Videos===
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3isUpRxMdVI dlrpfans – Phantom Manor]

===Photo pages===
* [http://www.photosmagiques.com/gallery/disneyland-park/frontierland/phantom-manor/ Photos Magiques – Phantom Manor]
* [http://www.photosmagiques.com/gallery/disneyland-park/frontierland/boot-hill/ Photos Magiques – Boot Hill]

===Fan websites===
* [http://www.doombuggies.com/phantom1.php Doombuggies – Phantom Manor]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110720222525/http://dlrpsynopsis.free.fr/attraction.php?attraction_id=54 DLRP Synopsis – Phantom Manor]
* [http://www.dlrpmagic.com/guidebook/disneyland-park/frontierland/phantom-manor/ DLRP Magic – Phantom Manor]

{{Disneyland Park (Paris)}}
{{Disney rides}}

[[Category:1992 establishments in France]]
[[Category:2018 disestablishments in France]]
[[Category:2019 establishments in France]]
[[Category:Amusement rides introduced in 1992]]
[[Category:Amusement rides introduced in 2019]]
[[Category:Amusement rides manufactured by Vekoma]]
[[Category:Amusement rides that closed in 2018]]
[[Category:Audio-Animatronic attractions]]
[[Category:Cultural depictions of Medusa]]
[[Category:Dark rides]]
[[Category:Disneyland Park (Paris)]]
[[Category:Fiction about witchcraft]]
[[Category:Fiction set in the 1870s]]
[[Category:Fictional houses]]
[[Category:Frontierland]]
[[Category:Ghosts in popular culture]]
[[Category:Haunted Mansion]]
[[Category:Haunted attractions (simulated)]]
[[Category:Omnimover attractions]]
[[Category:Walt Disney Parks and Resorts attractions]]
[[Category:Western (genre) amusement rides]]
[[Category:Works based on mythology]]
[[Category:Works about fictional serial killers]]

Latest revision as of 09:09, 9 January 2025

Phantom Manor
Phantom Manor
Disneyland Park (Paris)
AreaFrontierland
StatusOperating
Soft opening dateApril 30, 2019 (2019-04-30) (Reopening)
Opening dateApril 12, 1992 (1992-04-12) (Original)
May 3, 2019 (2019-05-03) (Reopening)
Closing dateJanuary 8, 2018 (2018-01-08) (Original)
Ride statistics
Attraction typeOmnimover dark ride, Haunted attraction
ManufacturerVekoma
DesignerWalt Disney Imagineering
ThemeHaunted attraction
MusicGrim Grinning Ghosts (Buddy Baker, Xavier Atencio, John Debney)
Length785 ft (239 m)
Vehicle typeOmnimovers
Riders per vehicle1 to 3
Duration6 minutes
Hosted byGérard Chevalier as The Phantom (1992–2018) (French Version)
Bernard Alane as The Phantom (2019-pres) (French Version)
Vincent Price as The Phantom (English Version)
Audio-Animatronics92
WebsiteDisneyland Paris – Phantom Manor
Must transfer from wheelchair

Phantom Manor is a dark ride attraction in Frontierland at Disneyland Park in Disneyland Paris. Phantom Manor is the park's version of The Haunted Mansion attractions at Disneyland, Magic Kingdom and Tokyo Disneyland, although it is designed to be darker in tone compared to other Haunted Mansion rides. It opened with Euro Disneyland on April 12, 1992. The attraction combines a walk-through portion with Omnimover vehicles and features special effects and Audio-Animatronics. This version of the ride has a distinct plot, compared to the largely ambiguous story lines of the other Haunted Mansion attractions in Disney parks. The ride also features a unique orchestral soundtrack, differing from the American and Japanese versions.

History

[edit]

While planning Euro Disneyland, Tony Baxter, executive designer for Walt Disney Imagineering, decided that certain staple Disney attractions would likely have to be modified to fit the altered tastes and preferences of a European audience. The Haunted Mansion was among these, and the Imagineers saw the new iteration of the ride as an opportunity to expand and build on past ideas. Jeff Burke was assigned the role of executive producer for the construction of this park's version of Frontierland and, with help from Imagineer Bob Baranick and show writer Craig Fleming, it was decided that the story related to Phantom Manor would have to be congruent with that of Thunder Mesa, the fictional town portrayed in Frontierland. A similar treatment was given to the Paris version of Big Thunder Mountain Railroad.

A major influence for the story of the ride was Gaston Leroux's novel, The Phantom of the Opera, the secondary plot focusing on the abandoned bride Miss Havisham from Charles Dickens' Great Expectations, as well as many European Gothic legends, which were altered for a Western setting. Imagineer Marc Davis disliked the derelict aspect of the building, stating "Walt would never approve of it." However, the designers of the attraction thought that many guests would expect a haunted house attraction to look dilapidated and would likely be confused if the façade had a spotless appearance like the American mansions.

The architecture is in the Second Empire style. Inspiration for Paris's Frontierland architecture was provided by historic buildings in Virginia City, Nevada, specifically the Fourth Ward School for Phantom Manor.[1]

Story

[edit]

Old Version (1992-2018)

[edit]

Henry Ravenswood (born 1795) was a Western settler who struck gold in Big Thunder Mountain and founded the Thunder Mesa Mining Company, thus creating the city of Thunder Mesa (Frontierland as a whole). Ravenswood became rich and built himself a Victorian manor high on Boot Hill overlooking Big Thunder Mountain, where he lived with his wife Martha (born 1802) and his daughter, Melanie Ravenswood (born 1842).

Big Thunder Mountain was rumored by natives to be home to the Thunder Bird, a powerful spirit possessing a treasure. According to the legend, its wrath could be materialized into a terrible earthquake. However, Ravenswood would not believe such stories. Years went by and the gold in Big Thunder Mountain became scarce, making miners dig deeper into the mountain.

Melanie grew from a young girl into a beautiful young woman and became drawn to several suitors who planned to take her far away from Thunder Mesa, much to the dismay of Henry. Henry did everything he could to stop this, with the first four being subjected to various cruel fates. His useless attempts to stop Melanie in the midst of being engaged to a train engineer named Jake were put to a stop when a terrible earthquake killed him and Martha. It seemed the Thunder Bird had been awakened and the family was never heard of again. After several years, the story of what really happened came out from underneath the rubble:

On Melanie's wedding day, a mysterious Phantom unknown to anyone appeared in the house. While Melanie was preparing in her room, the Phantom lured Jake up to the attic where he hanged him by the neck from the rafters.

In the ballroom, the bride sat alone. Hours went by with no sign of the groom. Guests slowly filed away, leaving Melanie alone in the house with the staff of maids and butlers. "Some day", she told herself, "he will come". And so, having never taken off her wedding dress or dropped her flower bouquet, in preparation for her loved one's return, she wandered the house aimlessly, singing melancholy songs of lost love.

But the Phantom was still in the house, laughing at her human devotion to her intended husband. One after one, he invited his dead, demonic friends from the afterlife to fill the house in an eternal party. A dark curse fell upon the house and the shape of the house was slowly transformed by the evil forces. No one ever set foot in the house ever since.

Inside and outside, the house was decaying with age. Dusty cobwebs covered every inch, the disheartened staff not caring, for it was rumored that Melanie had lost her mind. She wandered the house for years and years, singing softly to her groom, while all around her demons and ghosts reveled and danced. Everywhere she went she was reminded of the wedding. The Phantom's eternal laughter still carried through the walls of the house. Outside, the once beautiful grounds were falling apart and crumbling. The gilded staircase and structure were dotted with mold and trees and every plant on the grounds died. As if sensing the evil inherent in the house, nothing living ever trod there. Even so, Melanie kept her hopes, waiting for her love's return and never figured why he didn't show up at the wedding.

The earthquake that killed her parents all those years ago cut a huge gouge in the west half of the property and in the crumbling ghost town of the old Thunder Mesa. The deserted buildings were rumored to be called Phantom Canyon, the dark supernatural version of the town and anyone who entered the ghastly old town at night never came back.

Today, no one knows if Melanie Ravenswood is still alive in that old house on the hill. If she is, then she is well over 100 years old. Her beautiful voice still carries over the town at night though, through the walls of the house and night air. And sometimes, people still see lights in the house.

Some nights, when the moon is full and the sky is clear of clouds, one can still hear the lonely mourning of the bride, the maniacal laughter of the Phantom, and the faint tinkle of glass and the laughter of party guests. Whether she is alive or not, what is well known is that poor Melanie never really left the crumbling mansion. She waits for her groom for all eternity.

Many people believe the Phantom to be Melanie's late father, Henry Ravenswood, seeking vengeance from beyond the grave. Others believe that it is the pure spirit of evil, and that a curse was placed upon the young girl.

New Version (2019-)

[edit]

For the 2019 refurbishment, the story was slightly revised in addition to the new effects, these include:

  • The confirmation that the Phantom was indeed Henry Ravenswood, who vowed that no one would marry his daughter no matter what, using various means, including direct murder. (Previously, the Identity of the Phantom was left ambiguous pre 2019 refurb, on whether or not it was really him or some evil presence that awakened from the earthquake that killed him and his wife, and collapsed the mines inside of Big Thunder Mountain.[2])
  • Instead of simply Jake, Melanie had a variety of suitors, (Barry Claude, Sawyer Bottom, Captain Rowan D. Falls, and Ignatius "Iggy" Knight), who all were killed in various accidents implied to be staged by the Phantom, just before or after they married his daughter.
  • Melanie becoming aware of the phantom that terrorized and killed all her potentional husbands, (implied via the changes to the ride post 2019 refurb,[3] although it is still ambiguous if she came to realize if it was her father, or if she knew it was her father from the start.), before outright being driven mad in the process and resulting in her complete allegiance to the Phantom after her death, with her spirit offering to marry riders at the climax in the new version of the ride.[4]

Attraction

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Like the Haunted Mansions located in other Disney parks, only the introduction of the ride (the Octagonal Portrait Gallery) takes place in the visible Manor façade. The actual ride itself takes place in a large warehouse-style show building hidden behind the Manor.

Phantom Manor's Omnimover portion is similar to the Disneyland Haunted Mansion's system. The track layouts of both are almost identical, but not completely. The main difference is that Phantom Manor's track is slightly longer, primarily to accommodate the Phantom Canyon scenes that substitute for the graveyard scenes in the other rides. Many scenes from the classic Haunted Mansions are replicated, but altered to incorporate the new Western theme and plot, such as the Octagonal Portrait Gallery, the Portrait Corridor, the Endless Hallway, the Conservatory, the Corridor of Doors, Madame Leota’s Seance Room, the Ballroom, and even the busts singing Grim Grinning Ghosts.

Outside queue

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In the original Haunted Mansions at Disneyland, the Magic Kingdom and Tokyo Disneyland, the mansion was designed to look clean and aesthetically pleasing. Phantom Manor, however, is designed to look clearly derelict and stands at the top of a small hill, looking out onto the southern side of Big Thunder Mountain, with a commanding view of the washed out trestle, the mine elevator, and the second lift hill. The Manor's grounds are untended, overgrown with weeds and scattered with dead vegetation.

Upon entering the grounds, guests can see a bat guard box and a plaque on the wall which reads Phantom Manor – Non Omnis Moriar (Latin for "I shall not die completely"). A derelict gazebo stands on the lawn that has a tea set laid out. Originally, these used to move to mimic two people pouring and drinking tea, at night, the light in the gazebo flickers. The gazebo also contains a music box playing within (since 2001, this music box track is also used in Disneyland's version for use on the annual seasonal overlay). This is also the only mansion in any of the parks that has guests enter the ride through the front door. Shadows and lights can be seen from within the house at nighttime. Melanie can also be seen from a window in the façade carrying a candle from one window to the next.

The Foyer

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Guests walk up the pathways towards the Manor, along the porch and queue outside the house where they wait for admission. A cast member dressed as a macabre servant opens the doors and invites a small group of them into the foyer.

Original version (1992–2018)

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This foyer contains a dusty chandelier and two mirrors, and is lined with dark wood panelling. The voice of the Phantom sounds from the ceiling and around the room, politely welcoming guests, telling them the Legend of this place and inviting them to explore the Manor further. Melanie's face fades in and out of the smallest mirror during the narration.

New version (2019–present)

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In the 2019 refurbishment, an additional effect was added to the foyer. The small mirror was replaced by a painting of Melanie in her wedding gown, looking sad, and her father Henry Ravenswood, looking angry, standing behind her outside the decrepit house with both hands on her shoulders. A bare tree is also behind them with four hearts crossed out and a noose hanging from one of its branches. As the Phantom begins recounting the legend of the Manor, the painting changes. It now shows a happier Melanie, dressed in summer clothes, while Henry is smiling and resting one hand on Melanie's shoulder. The Manor is in pristine condition, and the tree, now with leaves, has one heart and a swing hanging from its branches. Lighting effects also transform the wallpaper in the room from old and torn to brand-new.

The Phantom was originally voiced by Vincent Price, but legal agreements required the narration to be primarily in French. Within a few months after the attraction first opened, writer and dub voice actor Gérard Chevalier was brought in to record a French version of Price's narration. However, a small piece of Price's recording was kept in use: the Phantom's maniacal laughter.

In 2018, it was announced that during Phantom Manor's major renovation, parts of Price's narration would be restored to the soundtrack of the attraction. For the 2019 re-opening, the new tracks feature Price once again, original excerpts as well as previously unused material from his 1990 recording, spoken English, with French actor Bernard Alane voicing the parts in French. The Phantom says (French lines in italics, translated into English below):

"When hinges creak in doorless chambers, when strange and frightening sounds are heard all around, when candlelight flickers though the air is deathly still, that is the time when the Phantom manifests. Welcome curious friends, it is so nice to have guests. We welcome you, humble mortals, to this mysterious manor. You may not believe it but beauty once lived in this house. Phantom Manor had happier days, but times have changed. And now curious souls, come, I have more to show you. Enter brave mortals into this famous manor together."

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Guests then enter an octagonal room with four portraits of a young Melanie, with each of her four suitors. Melanie is with Barry Claude in one portrait, Sawyer Bottom in the second, Captain Rowan D. Falls in the third, and Ignatius "Iggy" Knight in the fourth. The Phantom comments on the gallery, referring to the "sweet innocence of youth". Shortly after, Melanie fades away from each of the paintings, with only the suitors left and the Phantom acknowledges a "disquieting metamorphosis" and that "not all tales have happy endings".

Suddenly the room appears to stretch upwards and the paintings grow taller, revealing the fates to each of Melanie's suitors:

  • Barry Claude sitting on a tree branch, while an angry bear with her cub roars down below.
  • Sawyer Bottom straddling a log and being sawed in half by an industrial buzzsaw.
  • Rowan D. Falls riding in a rowboat about to head over a waterfall.
  • Ignatius Knight standing atop several crates of TNT and an ignited barrel of dynamite.

The Phantom comments "It appears everyone is doomed at Phantom Manor. Even you." He goes on to add that the chamber has no windows and no doors, offering the guests a "chilling challenge": to find a way out. After his maniacal laughter echoes away, he adds that "the Phantom" (referring to himself) would be happy to help them — lightning and thunder effects fill the space as the ceiling turns invisible and the Phantom reveals himself in the attic, holding a noose and sinisterly laughing. Then suddenly, lights go out completely and the guests are shrouded in darkness. The gallery's lights slowly come back on and a hidden door opens, revealing a hallway lined with portraits. The Phantom apologizes for frightening the guests prematurely and beckons them further into the Manor, and states that "the real beauty of this house awaits us, farther on, and she's dying to meet you, but beware of the Phantom" (once again referencing himself).

From 1992 to 2018, the four portraits were of a young Melanie, pictured in more felicitous times, only to stretch to reveal more macabre situations:

  • Melanie is having a picnic with her fiancé Jake Evans as ants, a diamondback rattlesnake, a scorpion, a tarantula and a beetle raid their food.
  • Melanie holds a parasol as she rides in a boat about to go over a waterfall.
  • Melanie picks roses from above a tombstone while a skeletal zombie emerges from the ground, gripping a small rake in one hand.
  • Melanie wades through a small stream as an aquatic monster reaches for her foot.

The scene revealed in the attic was also slightly different until 2018; instead of just showing the Phantom evilly laughing, he was hanging Jake Evans, Melanie's sole groom in the original version of the attraction.

Like in the Disneyland version of the ride, the Octagonal Portrait Gallery is actually a pair of cleverly disguised OTIS elevators. These elevators were originally created to solve a space constraint in California's original version of the attraction, as the Imagineers building the ride had to figure out a way to subtly funnel guests underneath the Disneyland Railroad that sat directly behind the ride's exterior. The floor is lowered while the upper half of the walls are also lowered at half the speed to create the stretching illusion. This served a double purpose of both a dramatic effect, while also lowering guests from the elevation of the attraction façade to the elevation of the ride's loading area in a separate warehouse-style show building behind the berm of the park. The Tokyo and Florida versions of the attraction did not face the same issues regarding space, and thus were constructed with stretching rooms that only stretch upward while guests remain at the same level. Despite Phantom Manor also not facing these spatial issues, the decision was made to use actual elevators for the stretching show scenes in the ride similarly to California's attraction. This was likely done because the façade of the manor is elevated and without the elevator functionality the show building would be visible to guests around the manor and those riding Big Thunder Mountain.

The ceiling at the top of the room is actually a scrim, which conceals the Phantom until he is backlit from above.

Interior queue and loading area

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Stepping out of the Stretching Room, guests walk down the Portrait Corridor, which takes them from the Manor visible from within the park into the show building that houses the actual ride. Unlike the Disneyland version, this corridor does not pass under the park's railroad (which instead travels behind the show building). As the guests walk down the corridor, they see four portraits, slowly morphing into more macabre images.

The original paintings were all adapted from the Disneyland version of the ride, based on the opening day versions of the paintings in said attraction:

  • A knight and his horse on a cliff both becoming ghosts and the sky darkening.
  • A young woman in a Greek temple turning into a stone gorgon in the temple’s ruins.
  • A ship sailing across the sea becomes a tattered and ghostly version of itself sailing through a storm.
  • A woman reclining on a sofa turns into a were-panther.

During the ride's 2019 refurbishment, Imagineers decided that the original paintings did not fit with the more serious tone of the attraction, and changed them to better convey the story of the ride. The three paintings were replaced with:

  • Henry Ravenswood becoming the Phantom (replacing Medusa).
  • The Flying Dutchman as seen in Pirates of the Caribbean catching on fire (replacing the original version of the ship).
  • Henry and another man outside the Manor about to have a duel, with it changing to Henry shooting his opponent in the back (replacing the were-panther). This portrait is a reference to the duelist-painting ghosts in the Disneyland attraction's ballroom scene.
  • A cowboy and his horse on a cliff gazing at what appears to be Big Thunder Mountain becoming ghosts with the sky darkening and ghost buffaloes appearing in the sky (replacing the knight).

At the end of the hallway stands a large portrait of Melanie Ravenswood, wearing her bridal gown, from which she can be heard singing. Although subtle, the refurb added a faint figure of Henry standing behind Melanie in this painting. It is unknown if this was intended to be an animated effect like the rest of the portraits, or if it was just added for more observant guests to find.

Guests then turn a corner and enter the loading area, a large hall with the Grand Staircase leading to the upper floor. One can see a ghostly, foggy landscape with flashes and bolts of lightning through the huge window above the stairs, and Melanie standing on the midway landing. Old furniture lines the walls, and sitting on a shelf is a marble bust of a stern-looking woman, who stares at guests and seems to follow them as they pass by. This is accomplished using the hollow face illusion, and the effect is a commonality between every version of the attraction in the different Disney parks. An unbroken train of black Omnimover vehicles known as "carriages" move through the center of the room, alongside a moving platform to enable easy loading.

Unlike the American versions of the attraction, the loading area is the last scene with narration from the Phantom. The Imagineers chose to convey much of the story visually, and were hesitant to rely on narration throughout the entire ride because of possible language barriers.

The ride

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Guests board the carriages, each accommodating two to three persons and then move upwards to the show building's main floor. Prior to 2019, guests would pass a young Melanie bowing while holding a candelabra and singing the entire time. During the renovations, Melanie was moved to the loading area and now a twitching suit of armor is in her place (a reference to when California's Haunted Mansion had live actors in a knight costumes scare guests for several weeks after the 1969 opening).

After passing the armor the guests face a seemingly Endless Hallway, with the vision of Melanie and the Phantom appearing and disappearing in the distance while the candelabra that she is holding remains in view. The hallway effect is accomplished with a full-length mirror on the far end of the hallway, and the disappearance of Melanie and the Phantom is done utilizing the pepper's ghost effect.

On the left side of the Corridor is a Conservatory containing a piano, adorned with the wreaths of the deceased suitors. At first glance, it seems to be playing a minor chord version of "The Wedding March" by itself, but one can notice a ghost pianist's shadow falling on the carpet (this effect is achieved by the use of mechanical keys). A large, red-eyed raven sits on a music stand next to the piano and squawks madly.

The carriages then travel through a corridor lined with doors. As guests pass each door, they hear pounding, knocking, or shouting behind it, and the knockers seem to move by themselves, as if their inhabitants are struggling to get out. When the last door is reached, guests can see two skeletal hands clutching at the top, trying to force their way through, with the skeleton yelling "Let me out of here!" (It uses the same audio as the skeleton attempting to escape his coffin in the Conservatory in other Haunted Mansions). The carriages pass a small hall containing a demonic grandfather clock, with a large "13" on its face (instead of the usual 12) and its hands spinning backward as it chimes. The walls are lined with purple wallpaper covered in eyes, several of which glow in the dark as the guests move between the hallway and the next scene.

The carriages then enter a round Seance Room adorned with gargoyles, where a crystal ball sits on a floating central table. The ball contains the head of Madame Leota. Behind her is a raven perched on a chair. As the ride vehicles revolve around her, she summons ghosts and dark creatures to a wedding party in both English and French (translated in English below):

"Goblins and Ghoulies, creatures of fright, we summon you now, to dance through the night! Spirits and ghosts, on your proud stallions, accompany the beautiful bride through the night![5] Warlocks and Witches, answer this call! Your presence is wanted at this ghostly ball! From the twelve knolls of midnight to the morning bells, we shall waltz together, gruesome debutante![5] Join now the Spirits in Nuptial Doom, a ravishing Bride, a vanishing Groom..."

The narration in this scene is entirely separate from that of the original attraction, although retaining the ghostly séance aspect. Whereas the original scene was created purely for spectacle, the redesigned scene for Phantom Manor was created with the story of the ride in mind. This is reflected in the narration with Leota's mentions to the bride and groom (being Melanie and her various suitors, respectively). During the 2019 refurb of the attraction, the scene received a new effect that saw Madame Leota's crystal ball floating above the table. The original score for this scene was replaced with the score from the American versions of the attraction, although it was changed back shortly afterward after fans voiced their displeasure with the change.

Guests leave the Seance Room and move along a balcony, looking down into the Ballroom, where a ghostly wedding party takes place. Melanie stands on a staircase, singing while the Phantom stands behind her, laughing at her as lightning flashes behind him. Ghostly guests enter the room, bringing in wedding presents, and sitting around the dining table, where a moldy wedding cake is waiting for them. Drunken ghosts swing from the chandelier above the table. Elegantly dressed pairs of ghostly dancers twirl around the Ballroom, as a spirit organist sits at a massive organ, playing a haunting waltz as wraiths fly out of its pipes. Apart from plot-related retheming, this scene is similar to the regular Haunted Mansions' ballrooms. During soft-opening previews after the 2019 refurbishment, the music here was temporarily replaced with the equivalent music from the American Haunted Mansions, but was switched back after backlash similarly to the previous Séance scene. The transparent effects of ghosts in this scene is accomplished with the pepper's ghost effect, with animatronics above and below the ride vehicles reflected in mirrors to create the illusion of transparency.

Leaving the Ballroom, the vehicles enter the Bride's Boudoir (which replaces the attic scene in the original attraction). A dying fire is crackling in the fireplace. Guests then see Melanie who has given up looking for her long lost groom. Melanie sits weeping into a mirror as an old woman while her father's skeletal face can be seen over her shoulder in the reflection. A music box and gramophone play in the background. Prior to 2019 the scene was largely the same, but the mirror was fogged and damaged to resemble an actual skull, in reference to the Allan Gilbert painting All is Vanity.[6] The clock displayed in the room has a blade pendulum, in reference to Edgar Allan Poe's "The Pit and the Pendulum," which was also the basis for a movie featuring Vincent Price.

The carriages leave the Bride's Boudoir through open double doors and glide across a terrace and then into a stormy graveyard, past an animatronic of the Phantom with a shovel standing before an open grave, with an undead dog growling beside him. The Phantom laughs as the guests pass by. The carriages then travel underground to the catacombs (presumably Boot Hill), passing by fissures in the ground as a reference to the earthquake that resulted in the death of Henry Ravenswood. A series of coffins being opened by their skeletal residents are seen, as well as a pair of skeleton hands attempting to pry open a coffin from the inside, typically found in the conservatory scene in the Haunted Mansion. A set of Singing Busts then come into view, singing the original Grim Grinning Ghosts from the Haunted Mansion. For unknown reasons, the singing bust originally portrayed by Chuck Schroeder was removed in the Phantom Manor, leaving only four.

Through a hole, the carriages then enter Phantom Canyon, which is a twisted, supernatural version of Thunder Mesa. Great rifts in the earth surrounding the vehicles again convey damage from the previous earthquake, which marked Thunder Mesa's turning point from a prosperous community to a ghost town. An animatronic ticket master (using the same mold as Ezra, one of the original Hitchhiking Ghosts from the American rides) stands before a ramshackle train station, offering the riders train tickets to the Underworld. Guests then pass a ruined town hall where the mayor (who speaks clips of dialogue from Paul Frees, the original rides' Ghost Host, and who is modeled from the same mold as animatronics of Dreamfinder from the original version of Epcot's Journey into Imagination with Figment) holds the Key to the City and invites guests to be the Manor's 1000th ghost, "but beware of hitchhiking ghosts!" As he tips his hat, his head comes with it. A shootout follows between a bank robber fleeing on a mule and a cowardly sheriff, with Big Thunder Mountain in the background. Guests see a pharmacy where a green-faced pharmacist drinks a potion of some-sort, followed by a saloon whose front wall has caved in. Inside it, there is a dancing showgirl, a bartender and a man playing a honky-tonk piano. Every once in a while, a hand with a candelabra appears out of the piano. Four invisible gambler figures play poker nearby.

Much of Phantom Canyon was derived from a planned scene of a wild mining town called Dry Gulch in the Western River Expedition at the Magic Kingdom, later retooled into their version of Big Thunder Mountain Railroad. Phantom Canyon occupies a space that in the regular Haunted Mansions is used for the graveyard scene.

Another cackling figure of the Phantom and his raven stands by a tree and gestures towards a noose hanging on a branch and an empty coffin for awaiting guests, his eyes glowing red at passing riders. Prior to 2019, this animatronic version of the Phantom was a skeleton with rotting flesh on his body, showing the guests that he has lost any humanity he's ever had left in him. As guests see the silhouette of the Manor above, they enter the mausoleum, where Melanie's four suitors were buried. Prior to the 2019 refurb, guests would encounter Melanie's floating skeleton pointing the way out. After the refurb, the skeletal hand of one of her suitors holds a wedding ring out as guests pass by. The vehicles enter a subterranean chamber lined with large, gilt-framed mirrors in which the ghostly image of Melanie, driven insane by the loss of her suitors and groom, appears in the vehicles, beckoning riders to wed her. Vehicles travel through a wine cellar, where cast members await to help them disembark their carriages and exit the attraction.

Post show

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As guests travel towards daylight, the evil laughter of the Phantom can be heard, as well as Melanie's voice, telling guests to "hurry back" and to "bring their death certificates". Prior to 2019, a small Melanie would beckon guests to hurry back. This figure was removed in the ride's 2019 refurbishment. Finally, guests exit into Boot Hill, a cemetery filled with humorous gravestones, as well as ride-oriented gravestones for the Ravenswoods and several others. If one should turn around to look back at the house, they can occasionally see the Phantom looking out the window over the exit and down at them, before he closes the curtains. The effect is more visible at night due to backlighting. In the Cemetery, one can hear Melanie's beating heart in her tomb, both a reference to the original Haunted Mansion bride, whose red beating heart could be seen through her chest and Edgar Allan Poe's The Tell-Tale Heart.

Soundtrack

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An opening narration by Vincent Price was recorded and initially used. However, due to a deal with French officials, the attraction's audio had to be primarily in French; thus the narration was rerecorded by Gérard Chevalier, who had provided a dubbed French voice for Price in some of his movies. Price's narration is available on the CD The Haunted Mansion - 30th Anniversary (1999 CD). Parts of Price's original narration in English were restored to the soundtrack in 2019, including excerpts previously unused in the attraction.

The attraction features an orchestrated score by John Debney. Although it is based on Buddy Baker's Grim Grinning Ghosts, it provides the attraction with a cinematic feeling, along with giving it a darker, more romantic tone. In the climactic Phantom Canyon scene, a big-band-style swing version of "Grim Grinning Ghosts" is heard, compared to the original version's "spirited" but straight meter.

Other information

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In the early 2000s, Phantom Manor was given a special Halloween celebration. Known as The Phantom Wedding, it featured a large scrim covering the whole building, which was used for projection of Melanie's recreated wedding. In 2005, however, this celebration was replaced by another.

On January 8, 2018, Phantom Manor closed for refurbishment. The graveyard has remained relatively untouched, though the walkway and manor itself were covered in scaffolding. At the FanDaze event at Walt Disney Studios Park on June 2, Imagineer Tom Fitzgerald confirmed that Vincent Price's original English dialogue would return to Phantom Manor following its refurbishment.[7] The ride soft-reopened on April 30, 2019, and fully reopened on May 3.

Incidents

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During the morning of April 2, 2016, the body of a 45-year-old cast member was found inside the attraction. He had been working on lighting backstage, and his death was understood to have been accidental and due to electrocution. The ride was closed during the investigation.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Ravenswood Manor – The Making of fantom Manor". ravenswood-manor.com. Archived from the original on July 31, 2017. Retrieved July 31, 2017.
  2. ^ "Ravenswood Manor - Jeff Burke Interview". February 22, 2017. Archived from the original on February 22, 2017. Retrieved August 6, 2024.
  3. ^ "Reopening of the Phantom Manor at Disneyland Paris !". DLP Welcome (in French). May 4, 2019. Retrieved August 6, 2024.
  4. ^ DLP Welcome (July 25, 2023). [4K-On Ride] Phantom Manor - Disneyland Paris version of Haunted Mansion. Retrieved August 6, 2024 – via YouTube.
  5. ^ a b "A Guided Tour of Phantom Manor: Nuptial Doom". Ravenswood Manor – A Tribute to Thunder Mesa in Disneyland Paris. ravenswood-manor.com. Archived from the original on January 7, 2015. Retrieved May 13, 2015.
  6. ^ "Vanity and the Gossip". May 15, 2014.
  7. ^ "Vincent Price narration returning to Phantom Manor at Disneyland Paris – YouTube". Attractions Magazine. June 2, 2018. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved June 3, 2018 – via YouTube.
  8. ^ Tavss, Jeff (April 4, 2016). "Disneyland Paris worker found dead in haunted mansion ride". ABC News 10. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
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Videos

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Photo pages

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Fan websites

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