Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Eek! ticket attraction

Theme parks plot ways to scare up even more money around Halloween

- By Hugo Martin

IN years past, Six Flags Magic Mountain’s annual Halloween celebratio­n isolated the monsters and ghouls to certain areas of the amusement park while keeping other parts, such as the kid-centric Bugs Bunny World, as a scare-free sanctuary for parkgoers who wanted no part of what the Southern California park calls Fright Fest.

Those safe zones are gone this year. During the 19-night Fright Fest, the entire park in Valencia is turned over to costumed maniacs, bloodsucke­rs and creeps. Even Bugs Bunny World goes dark.

“After 7 p.m., there are no more safe zones,” Six Flags Magic Mountain spokeswoma­n Sue Carpenter said.

Surging demand

Halloween is such a monster hit for the theme park industry that operators must continuall­y devise new ways to expand the autumn screamfest and scare up even more dollars from horror fans.

This year, Southern California parks have added extra nights to Halloween celebratio­ns, enlarged the events to engulf their entire parks and developed extravagan­t new dishes and alcoholic drinks to complement their spooky attraction­s.

And prices for almost everything have crept ever upward.

Tickets for the annual afterhours Halloween party for kids at Disneyland — Mickey’s Halloween Party — are $130 each for peakdemand days, up from $120 last year. At Universal Studios Hollywood, a single ticket to its Halloween Horror Nights is $97 for peak-demand nights, compared with $95 last year. A single-night ticket for Knott’s Berry Farm’s Halloween festivitie­s is $82, up from $75 last year.

Prices are rising because demand for all things Halloween continues to surge.

In October, theme parks that otherwise resemble ghost towns in September are suddenly operating near capacity, said Phillip White, cofounder of IsItPacked.com, a website that monitors crowds at popular tourist destinatio­ns.

The average wait time for attraction­s at Disneyland in September is about 20 minutes, he said. But wait times jump to as high as 90 minutes in October because of the park’s annual Halloween celebratio­n, White added.

‘Something for your money’

Halloween fans don’t appear frightened by the higher prices or longer lines, as long as admission tickets mean big gore and big scares.

Jonathan Green, a 33-year-old theme park fan from Santa Clarita, said he recently spent about $180 for food and an admission ticket to Universal Studios Halloween Horror Nights. He praised the high level of detail that was put into the haunted mazes and the costumes worn by the scare actors in the park.

“Theme parks are so expensive these days that it’s important to feel like you are getting something for your money,” he said. “The parks realize, ‘Hey, we need to put out a solid product.’ ”

A strong economy and demand for new, immersive experience­s are fueling the popularity of Halloween events, theme park operators say.

“The more experienti­al we become, the more popular we become,” said Charity Hill, executive producer of Dark Harbor, the Halloween celebratio­n at the Queen Mary in Long Beach. She said the event at the retired ocean liner recorded its highest attendance numbers last year.

‘They wanted more’

During this Halloween season, Americans are expected to spend $9 billion, the second-highest amount in the 14-year history of the annual survey commission­ed by the National Retail Federation. Twenty-one percent of the nearly 7,000 Americans questioned in the survey said they plan to visit a haunted attraction this year, little changed from the previous year.

To take advantage of the demand, Disneyland Resort, where the scares are relatively tame to keep from frightenin­g off families with small children, added eight days to its Halloween celebratio­n, running from Sept. 7 until Oct. 31. It was launched Sept. 15 last year.

At neighborin­g Disney California Adventure, the entire park is sprinkled with Halloween decoration­s and spookified attraction­s. Until last year, only one specific area of the park — Cars Land — got a scary makeover.

Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, which jumped into the Halloween craze in 2016 with a two-night event, has expanded its scarefest to 13 nights, adding mazes, exhibits and a creepy circus, featuring a killer clown.

“The main impetus to going bigger this year was the feedback we got last year from our guests,” said Gary Soloff, marketing director at Warner Bros. Studios. “The feedback was that it wasn’t enough. They wanted more.”

More options

Universal Studios Hollywood, where Halloween Horror Nights extends from Sept. 14 until Nov. 3, is targeting foodies by offering six decadent dishes made specifical­ly to complement one of the park’s haunted mazes, which features creatures and scenes from the Netflix series “Stranger Things.” The dishes include an Upside Down Burger and Eleven’s Waffle Extravagan­za.

Like Six Flags Magic Mountain, Knott’s Berry Farm in Buena Park has expanded its scare zones — areas where guests are chased and menaced by costumed actors — to cover all areas of the 160-acre park.

Dark Harbor, the Halloween celebratio­n that began Sept. 27 and runs until Nov. 2 at the Queen Mary in Long Beach, is targeting adult spook enthusiast­s by doubling to four the number of cocktail bars hidden inside haunted mazes.

Visitors to the mazes must find secret passageway­s to uncover the bars, where costumed bartenders serve Halloween-themed drinks.

“I think people are being entertaine­d on multiple levels,” Hill said.

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? Monsters wait for the gates to open to greet guests at the Queen Mary’s Dark Harbor Halloween celebratio­n in Long Beach, Calif.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times Monsters wait for the gates to open to greet guests at the Queen Mary’s Dark Harbor Halloween celebratio­n in Long Beach, Calif.
 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? Actors Billie Lourd, left, Leslie Grossman and Colton Haynes go through an “American Horror Story”themed maze during Halloween Horror Nights last year at Universal Studios.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times Actors Billie Lourd, left, Leslie Grossman and Colton Haynes go through an “American Horror Story”themed maze during Halloween Horror Nights last year at Universal Studios.
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? Visitors pass through the blood-filled hallway of the Overlook Hotel inside the Shining maze at last year’s Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times Visitors pass through the blood-filled hallway of the Overlook Hotel inside the Shining maze at last year’s Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios.

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