The Star Malaysia - Star2

Halloween to the max

People come from miles around – a journalist came from Norway! – to see the decoration­s in this little front yard in a little American city.

- By AISHA SULTAN This is the Halloween display leading into Donaubauer’s fully-decorated garage.

SOMEONE dumped Halloween in the front yard.

From a distance, it looks like a flashy hot mess. But once you get closer to the gargantuan Halloween display that took over this modest house in St Charles, Missouri, you start to appreciate its genius.

There’s the skeleton gang playing poker around a wooden bar that was hand-cut and painted. The skeleton wedding party and its fiendish guests. The skeleton cowboy riding a skeletal horse. The caged ghoul lurching toward you through fog and sparkling lights. The werewolf wearing a bloodstain­ed shirt and pants growling as you walk by.

Chris Donaubauer is the king of the Halloween acropolis he’s created that annually blankets the yard, fills the driveway and garage and extends through the backyard and onto the roof.

His wife, Sara, 34 – a cafeteria worker at St Charles High School – appreciate­s his annual effort but stays away from the setup.

Donaubauer, 38, works for himself, mowing yards, working on cars, and doing odd jobs. But around town he’s known as the guy who “goes bigger than Clark Griswold”, in reference to the overly enthusiast­ic comic lead character played by Chevy Chase in The National Lampoon’s Vacation film series.

It’s a reputation Donaubauer takes seriously. He’s a man who wears his holiday spirit on his yard. Whatever the Donaubauer display lacks in sophistica­tion, it makes up for in enthusiasm.

He starts unpacking the boxes of decoration­s in September. It takes eight- to 12-hour days for the entire month to set up everything from 300 boxes of decoration­s stored in their basement, the attic, and a shed. He likes to finish by the beginning of October to give visitors an entire month to appreciate his handiwork.

The ranch-style house stands at a little more than 100sq m on an unassuming street. Near the end of October, the glittering Halloween display attracts hundreds of visitors a night; they are welcome to walk around the yard. Some bring their out-of-town guests each year.

Earlier this week, a journalist from Norway visited the house after catching word about it. On Halloween night on Tuesday, they gave out at least a thousand pieces of candy to trick-or-treaters.

It started 15 years ago. Their oldest son, Brendon, was born on Dec 13, and it was going to be his first Christmas. Chris put up the lights, added a few blow-up Santas and snowmen and made a wooden cutout of a gingerbrea­d house and family for the lawn.

“I called it The Normal,” he says. Every year, it grew.

The Donaubauer­s live with their three kids and Chris’ mother. She orders a couple thousand dollars’ worth of new decoration­s each year. People drop off things he can add to the burgeoning display. He hates throwing anything out and will try to repair and repurpose things that eventually break down.

He estimates that just the Halloween display is worth around US$50,000 to US$100,000 (RM200,000 to RM400,000). (For some perspectiv­e, real estate website Trulia estimates the value of their house to be just under US$150,000, or RM600,000.)

Chris is well-known around the neighbourh­ood, but people travel from miles away to see what he’s added each year. The regulars count on him, following his progress on a Facebook page.

“They expect me to do it,” he says. And he takes pride in the chaotic, sprawling, eye-catching scenes he’s built all around him.

People always want to know how much the family’s light bill is. The Donaubauer­s use the year- round budgeting option offered through the area’s electric company, so they don’t even know how much the displays add to the bill. They keep security cameras on 24/7, and when the display is lighted up at night, a family member is always outside to keep an eye on things.

When the weather forecast is bad, they spend 45 minutes to an hour covering the entire thing. The front lawn is hard to walk through, Sara says. You can’t take two paces on the yard without stepping on something.

“There’s still some room,” Chris says with a laugh.

The only thing that bothers Sara about the time-consuming project is when people holler at them from the street late at night to turn the display on after they’ve turned it off.

“Show some respect,” she always wants to say to them. But those incidents are few and far between.

Chris gets a kick watching other people’s amazement at what he’s created. The Christmas display is even bigger than Halloween.

Last year, a mother brought her young blind son, around five years old, to visit the display. He perceived light for the first time because of the overwhelmi­ng amount of light, she told Chris.

“Oh gosh, you could honestly cry hearing that,” he says.

In December, there are 750,000 to a million lights crammed on the small plot. The displays run on their own circuit breaker box, and they also use electricit­y from the house.

“You could run two whole houses off of how much electric we got here,” Chris says.

When people in wheelchair­s visit, he helps them navigate the crowded driveway.

“There’s lots to see up here,” he says. He and his wife don’t like it when people just drive by without stopping to take a look around.

He used to put out a box for kids to leave letters for Santa. People started dropping cash in it for tips, so he had to get rid of it. Visitors are always trying to tip him, but he always refuses to accept any money.

Two years ago, he stopped entering the town’s best holiday lights and decoration contest. He had won every year for more than a decade.

“I quit entering to give someone else a chance.” he says. But then other people started entering his house for him. They would leave notes in his mailbox telling him.

The city started giving him a special “Over the Top” award instead. – St Louis Post-Dispatch/Tribune News Service

 ??  ?? A family comes to look at the Halloween display at Chris Donaubauer’s front yard on the 600 block of Nancy Drive, in St Charles, Missouri. — Photos: TNS
A family comes to look at the Halloween display at Chris Donaubauer’s front yard on the 600 block of Nancy Drive, in St Charles, Missouri. — Photos: TNS
 ??  ?? Chris Donaubauer pulling a set of faulty Christmas lights from his expansive Halloween display at his home.
Chris Donaubauer pulling a set of faulty Christmas lights from his expansive Halloween display at his home.
 ??  ?? Son Brendon, 15, is turning on the lights of a Halloween display in the backyard of his home.
Son Brendon, 15, is turning on the lights of a Halloween display in the backyard of his home.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia