Chicago Sun-Times

THE FREAKS AND MONSTERS OF THE HAUNTED HOUSE

- BY ALEXANDRA ARRIAGA, DIGITAL CONTENT PRODUCER aarriaga@suntimes.com | @alexarriag­a__ This article is part of Working 360, a weekly email newsletter of stories that matter to working Americans. Working 360 content can be found at chicago. suntimes.com/se

Scaring comes naturally for Stephen Kristof, who started a haunted house at the age of 13.

Kristof, now 28, is the founder, lead designer and director of Realm of Terror in Round Lake Beach.

From late September to early November, he oversees makeup and costume crews and as many as 80 actors and maintenanc­e staff. From the time makeup gets started around 5 p.m. until the crowds finish up after midnight, Kristof describes the scene as “chaos.”

“There’s something unique about haunted houses you don’t find anywhere else. It’s performanc­e theater, part amusement ride, you get the thrill-seeking adrenaline aspect of it,” he said. “It’s a unique combinatio­n of so many different art forms, the culminatio­n is beautiful and fun in a way that’s always interested me.”

Every year, changes are made to the Realm of Terror. This year, the theme takes guests through a “dark portal” into another world, similar to the “upside down” in the Netflix series “Stranger Things.” The warehouse is filled with various temporary structures so that guests never know where they are, creating the illusion sometimes of being undergroun­d.

For the actors, who come from a variety of day jobs such as school administra­tors, technician­s for Fortune 500 companies and staff at Taco Bell, they get covered in masks and costumes and get ready to “attack” the thrill-seeking guests as they pass through their rooms.

For guests, the thrill of a fright is about escape, he said. For 30 minutes, visitors are able to transport into another, terrifying world where their fears of the dark, of tight, claustroph­obic spaces and of suspense cause an adrenaline rush that takes over the thoughts of work or their everyday lives.

“You never know where the next attack is gonna come from, above or below or what side,” Kristof said. “It’s the fear of the unknown, as long as we keep people on their toes, they never feel safe.”

Still, safety is ensured at the haunted attraction. Though an occasional flailing arm hits an actor who spooked a guest, there are sometimes visitors who attend the haunted house for the excuse to shove or punch — those people are removed.

At the end of a night, the cast and staff get together and exchange “war stories” over pizza.

“After the show, it’ll be 1 a.m. and we’re done, throats are sore, we have headaches, we’re still sitting for another hour laughing about the night. You think about the person that got so scared she turned around and slapped her boyfriend for bringing her, or the 6-5 guy who ran out of your room because he was so afraid of you,” Kristof said. “We all become one family.”

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Stephen Kristof, Realm of Terror founder, says haunted houses are “a unique combinatio­n of so many different art forms.”
PROVIDED Stephen Kristof, Realm of Terror founder, says haunted houses are “a unique combinatio­n of so many different art forms.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States