![]() To your left, you see a window with a raging storm outside. You are in the room of changing portraits when getting on your doom buggy. Then, you leave the room and enter the Hall of Portraits. Beware! This room has no doors and no windows (just kidding)! As the portraits are stretching, the ghost host interrupts you with a "scary" moment (a ghost hangs from the ceiling in eerie darkness). And no, you do not get on your doom buggy vehicles yet. ![]() You are inside a weird room that consists of stretching portraits of some of the ghosts in their "corruptive mortal state". The first room you arrive at in the mansion is the Stretching Room, where you hear your tour guide, the " Ghost Host", voiced by Paul Frees. It features gravestones and a horse apparition drawn hearse. In the queue, you see a pet cemetery that is the front yard of the mansion. Finally, the ride opened to guests on August 9, 1969, after a six-year delay. The construction of the mansion itself began in 1962, but construction on the interior was delayed to give the park a time to help finish the New York World's Fair. In 1961, the ride began advertising with a planned 1963 opening. Finally, in the early 1960's, the ride was decided to be put in New Orleans Square. ![]() It was scrapped from opening day plans, but Walt Disney said to transform the story even more. ![]() One of the Imagineers created a sketch of a crooked street leading away from the main street by a church with a graveyard, and a run-down mansion perched on a hill above the main street. The first known park illustration included the main street, green fields, Western village, and a carnival. The attraction's history dates back to the days before Disneyland was even built. ![]()
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