Way ahead of 'em! :-)
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http://www.cnn.com/2005/TRAVEL/10/12/halloween.theme.ap/index.html?section=cnn_latest

Halloween turning into monthlong holiday

Theme parks putting on a show for fall visitors

Wednesday, October 12, 2005


ORLANDO, Florida (AP) - Dave Surgan dropped into a crouch, then leaped
into the air and let out an eardrum-rupturing yelp.

His imitation of a crazed monkey during a recent audition at Universal
Studios Orlando helped him land a job frightening some of the hundreds of
thousands of visitors who will come to be scared, be very scared, at the
theme park resort's multimillion-dollar Halloween celebration this October.

"Once, they had to call the paramedics because a girl started
hyperventilating," said Surgan, 22, who in the past five years has worked
as a crazed chain saw operator and a mutated dinosaur at the park's
monthlong Halloween Horror Nights, now in its 15th year.

Not so long ago, Halloween was merely a one-day holiday, observed
primarily by kids dressed in fake blood, plastic teeth, ballerina tutus or
superhero costumes, who traipsed from door-to-neighborhood door dragging
pillowcases full of candy.

Not anymore. Over the past five years or so, the nation's $11 billion
amusement park industry has appropriated the holiday as its own, helping
transform Halloween into a monthlong celebration.

"If there are still theme parks out there that aren't celebrating it, they
need to get their heads examined," said James Zoltak, editor of Amusement
Business, a trade publication. "It's a moneymaker, almost universally."

Although the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions
keeps no figures, industry experts estimate that millions of people go to
Halloween celebrations at parks around the nation, generating tens of
millions of dollars in extra revenue for them.

For Terri Lacroix, the appeal of the Halloween celebrations comes from the
adrenaline rush she gets anticipating where the next grotesquely masked
figure is going to jump out at her in the confined space of a haunted
house.

"I don't like roller coaster rides but I love scary movies. This is my
adrenaline rush," said Lacroix, 35, an Orlando catering manager, as she
exited "The Skool" haunted house at Universal's Halloween Horror Nights.


Worldwide trend

Nationwide, Halloween has grown by leaps and bounds as a holiday, and this
year consumers were expected to generate $3.3 billion in Halloween
spending, according to the National Retail Federation. Celebrations also
have spread abroad to amusement parks in places without strong Halloween
traditions such as Mexico and Brazil.

"One of the things we know is that this is a worldwide trend. It's not
just in the United States," said Beth Robertson, a spokeswoman for the
amusement park association.

The parks' embrace of Halloween has been for economic reasons as much as
creative ones. Before Southern California's Knott's Berry Farm became the
first park with a major Halloween celebration 33 years ago, most regional
theme parks closed their gates soon after Labor Day.

Halloween gave the regional parks an extra incentive to extend the season
longer and offered the year-round destination parks in Orlando and Los
Angeles a marketing tool to get people through their gates during what
traditionally was a slow period.

"People just love to be immersed in a frightening Halloween experience.
They love giving up that control," said Jim Timon, senior vice president
of entertainment at Universal Orlando, who helps plan the park's Halloween
Horror Nights.

Knott's Berry Farm in 1973 began with just some scary decorations and a
few dozen "monsters" lurking in the fog to jump out at unsuspecting
guests. This year, the celebration will have 12 mazes, five "scare zones,"
six live shows and encounter over 1,000 "monsters" roaming the property.
The Halloween celebration accounts for about 15 percent of the park's
annual business, attracting 500,000 people from as far away as Germany,
said Jennifer Blazey, a spokeswoman for Knott's Berry Farm.

"We were the first and there are a lot of copycats out there now," she
said.


Natural fit

Busch Gardens Williamsburg in Virginia started its Howl-O-Scream
celebration in 1999 with two attractions and three shows that operated
over three weekends in October. This year, the Halloween celebration
started in mid-September with five haunted houses, four "scare zones,"
five attractions and eight shows and also accounts for 15 percent of the
park's annual attendance.

"It's a good business for us, doing it now for seven weekends," said Diane
Centeno, a spokeswoman for the park which closes after Halloween.

The parks vary in scare intensity from the child-friendly mellowness of
trick-or-treating with Disney characters at Walt Disney World to the more
R-rated anxieties generated by the "Slash" show at Worlds of Fun in Kansas
City, which is geared toward teenagers and young adults.

"'Slash' is kind of edgier, a magic show with a lot of gore and blood,
people cut in half," said Nick Guevel, a spokesmen for Worlds of Fun,
which started developing a scary Halloween celebration three years ago.

Creatively, theme and amusement parks are well-positioned to handle the
wild special effects that celebrants have come to expect from Halloween.
Some park officials such as Universal's Timon, spend 11 months planning
for the Halloween celebrations. Timon and a handful of associates lock
themselves in a hotel room each December to plot out concepts for the
following year.

"For theme parks to become involved in Halloween, it's kind of a natural
fit because it's something that is so easily translated into a live
experience," said Timon. "We're able to take what you expect the Halloween
experience to be and blow it up a thousand times."

This year, the nation's theme and amusement parks are counting on
successful Halloween celebrations more than ever as a season of great
promise in the spring gave way to what is expected to be flat attendance
for the year because of the hurricanes and high gas prices.

"Everybody is really gearing up for it, particularly because of the fuel
crisis and the weather," said Dennis Speigel, president of International
Theme Park Services Inc., a consulting firm. "The parks are putting a
heavy emphasis on it, so they can help generate the numbers that will help
pick up some of the drop they've seen in late August and early September."



Copyright 2005 The Associated Press



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