Daily News (Los Angeles)

Gates open to Potter, pets and dinos

Universal Studios Hollywood entertains visitors again after 13 months

- By Brady MacDonald bmacdonald@scng.com

Universal Studios Hollywood reopened Thursday after a yearlong coronaviru­s closure with a new Secret Life of Pets dark ride designed to delight families and a revamped Jurassic World water ride determined to terrify the tourists.

The park’s first day of operations, after a 13-month closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic that began in March 2020, was just for annual and season passholder­s; it reopens to the general public today.

Fans anxious to fly alongside Harry Potter, face off with an IRex super dino or get adopted on Secret Life of Pets had their wish granted when Universal swung open the gates a bit early at 9:20 a.m.

Visitors were greeted by a new arrival procedure. Temperatur­e screenings took place inside the Jurassic parking structure before guests reached the security checkpoint. Inside the park, COVID-19 health and safety reminders were visible everywhere.

Crowds were light prior to park opening. There were no lines for security near the front entrance. Socially distanced lines that formed at a dozen front gate turnstiles stretched halfway back to the spinning Universal

globe. At 9:20 a.m., passholder­s gave a cheer after counting down from 10 before streaming into the reopened park. By 9:30 a.m., there were no lines at the front gate and passholder­s could easily enter without any wait.

Sisters Ellen Kang and Joanne Kang-Kim of Rowland Heights waited outside the gates in matching Gryffindor robes.

“We’ve been waiting for them to open,” said Kang,

24.

“We stayed up all night trying to get opening day tickets,” added Kang-Kim,

26.

The Harry Potter fans weren’t heading to ride the Forbidden Journey attraction first. They planned to head straight for the new Secret Life of Pets dark ride. That was a good choice. The attraction only had a 10-minute wait around 9:30 a.m. before the park officially opened at 10 a.m.

Newly engaged couple Cindy Anaya and Phillip Gutierrez of Montebello arrived at Universal at 8:30 a.m. to be first in line.

“You have no idea how excited we are,” Gutierrez said.

“It’s been too long,” Anaya said.

By 10:30 a.m., wait times were short for the most popular rides, with Secret Life of Pets and Revenge of the Mummy only 10 minutes, Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey at 20 minutes and the queue for the Studio Tour at 15 minutes.

All indoor attraction­s are required to only use outdoor queues under COVID-19 health and safety guidelines. Riders move continuous­ly through indoor queues without stopping and immediatel­y board rides to keep indoor activities under 15 minutes, as required by state guidelines.

The Secret Life of Pets attraction required riders to get in a virtual queue before getting in line — to help manage crowding on the new ride during reduced capacity restrictio­ns due to COVID-19 health and safety mandates. Universal has tested virtual queues before, but Pets is the first official attraction to offer the timesaving service.

The best way to get in the virtual queue is through the Universal Studios Hollywood mobile phone app. Virtual queue tickets are also dispensed at two kiosks near the ride entrance.

Passholder­s by their nature are seasoned veterans at theme park navigation. But the virtual queue had its issues on opening day — as is common with any new tech and particular­ly at launch. The hard-ticket kiosk broke down at times — forcing employees to help passholder­s in the line figure out how to navigate the app. The hiccups were all part of the opening day jitters and the learning curve for seasoned pros.

In many ways, California theme parks are going through the growing pains often experience­d by brand-new parks. After being closed for a year the issues are similar.

Corona residents Lindsay Suggett, left, and her sister Sydney Suggett take a selfie with a Homer Simpson character at Universal Studios Hollywood on Thursday. Universal has decided to keep the Simpsons ride closed for now.

There are new protocols for veteran employees, new procedures for new hires and new traffic patterns and rules for longtime passholder­s.Passholder­s and daily visitors will have to pack their understand­ing, considerat­ion and generosity along with their sunglasses, masks and hand sanitizer.

Remember: The parks aren’t going anywhere — despite extended pandemic closures. Even if Transforme­rs 3-D and Jurassic World go down at the same time — as they did at one point Thursday morning — you can ride them later in the day or on another visit to the park.

The dual downtime of Transforme­rs and Jurassic on the lower lot temporaril­y produced the longest wait time of the day — 50 minutes — for the Mummy coaster. The Mummy line looked longer than it really was because of social distancing requiremen­ts and the outdoor-only requiremen­t for queues.

By 2:15 p.m., attraction wait times rose as more visitors showed up. Jurassic World — The Ride had a 3-hour wait time and the line for the Studio Tour had

grown to an hour. Universal paused virtual queue distributi­on for The Secret Life of Pets — Off the Leash whenever the dark ride experience­d down time.

Passholder­s were good about wearing their masks, with very few nose pokers or chin strappers on the midways.

Frequent cleaning of ride vehicles is regular protocol now. Removing your mask on the Revenge of the Mummy coaster — yes, ride operators can see you even in the dark — requires a full cleaning of your ride vehicle once you return to the station.

The Raptor Encounter on the lower lot was back and just as terrifying as ever for those seeking a selfie with the dino predators. Raelyn Moreno kept looking over her shoulder as her friend Stephanie Ramirez snapped her photo with the costumed velocirapt­or. The pair were thrilled to return to Universal Studios Hollywood at reduced capacity after the yearlong closure.

“It’s fun to finally be back,” said Moreno, 35, of West Covina.

“It’s nice to not have long lines,” said Ramirez, 31, of Pasadena Heights.

Most attraction­s have been changed in some way or another by the coronaviru­s protocols — some big and some small.

Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey riders enter the outdoor queue near the Weasley car, drop off their belongings at bag check, wait outdoors again in the herbivore garden before passing through the massive indoor queue without stopping inside Hogwarts Castle.

Ride operators were only loading every fourth or fifth ride vehicle on the constantly moving Forbidden Journey in the morning when crowds were light. But every ride vehicle can be loaded when it gets busy. Only one family or group will be allowed per ride vehicle. Party blending is prohibited due to COVID-19 guidelines.

Wait times were essentiall­y nonexisten­t for the Flight of the Hippogriff. Ride operators squirted hand sanitizer on every rider’s hands before boarding — a practice repeated at every ride. Like most rides, the Hippogriff coaster was loaded every other row to maintain social distancing. With a top speed just under 30 mph, the family coaster doesn’t cause face masks to move at all.

A new on-ride photo kiosk opened Thursday for the Hippogriff coaster with collectibl­e photos starting at $23.

Wizarding World shops had separate entrances and exits to control flow and reduce unnecessar­y mixing.

The Honeydukes candy shop has tight confines during “normal” times; the store will limit capacity to around 30 shoppers to reduce crowding. The Three Broomstick­s restaurant had both outdoor and indoor socially distanced seating — something permitted in the state’s orange tier. The Hog’s Head Pub was closed. Additional outdoor seating was added at the Triwizard stage and the Owlery — something the park tested during the Taste of Universal event.

The Olivanders shopping experience is closed, but wizard and witch apprentice­s can still shop in the store. Wizards in training could still bring the shop windows to life with their interactiv­e wands, but now they have to wait their turn in socially distanced queues.

Universal has decided to keep the Simpsons ride closed for now, but the game booths out front are open. A few booths closed off seats to promote physical distancing.

The escalators down to the lower lot offered panoramic views of Universal’s worst kept secret — Super Nintendo World — which is well under constructi­on but has not yet been announced.

Some rides and attraction­s — including Despicable Me Minion Mayhem, Simpsons ride, “WaterWorld” stunt show and Dreamworks Theatre — will reopen later in the summer. In the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, the Ollivander’s wand pairing experience, “Tri-Wizard” stage show and “Frog Choir” performanc­e will also return at a later date.

State officials allowed theme parks to reopen to California residents only beginning April 1 after the tourist destinatio­ns lost billions and were forced to lay off tens of thousands of employees amid the pandemic.

Universal beat Disney to the starting gate — never missing an opportunit­y to stick it to the theme park rival and industry leader. Disneyland and Disney California Adventure won’t return until April 30. Local competitor­s Six Flags Magic Mountain and Legoland California reopened on April 1. SeaWorld San Diego returned with rides and coasters a few days before Universal on Monday. Knott’s Berry Farm will be the last Southern California theme park to return to full operations on May 6 for passholder­s and May 21 for the general public.

 ?? PHOTO BY MICHAEL OWEN BAKER ?? Palmdale residents
Mya Green, 9, Devin Green 7, mom Monica Green and dad Demetrius Green, from left, take cover from water spray during the tram ride at Universal Studios Hollywood on Thursday.
PHOTO BY MICHAEL OWEN BAKER Palmdale residents Mya Green, 9, Devin Green 7, mom Monica Green and dad Demetrius Green, from left, take cover from water spray during the tram ride at Universal Studios Hollywood on Thursday.
 ?? PHOTOS BY MICHAEL OWEN BAKER ?? Workers clean a roller coaster seat on Revenge of the Mummy at the reopening of Universal Studios Hollywood on Thursday. The coasters are cleaned if any riders remove their masks during the ride. Most visitors appeared to be obeying new restrictio­ns that require masks against the coronaviru­s.
PHOTOS BY MICHAEL OWEN BAKER Workers clean a roller coaster seat on Revenge of the Mummy at the reopening of Universal Studios Hollywood on Thursday. The coasters are cleaned if any riders remove their masks during the ride. Most visitors appeared to be obeying new restrictio­ns that require masks against the coronaviru­s.
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 ??  ?? Ride operator C.E. Gray sprays hand sanitizer on visitors before they ride the Flight of the Hippogriff coaster at the reopening of Universal Studios Hollywood on Thursday.
Ride operator C.E. Gray sprays hand sanitizer on visitors before they ride the Flight of the Hippogriff coaster at the reopening of Universal Studios Hollywood on Thursday.

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