Theme parks turn Halloween into monthlong scream
Ghosts and ghoulish goblins all add up to big profits for parks
Nona Lee Davis performs in role as the Terra Queen at Universal Orlando's Halloween Horror Nights in Orlando, Fla. Many theme parks turn Halloween, which is a huge moneymaker, into a monthlong celebration.
Peter Cosgrove, Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. 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.
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, such as Mexico and Brazil, without strong Halloween traditions.
"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.
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