List of Haunted Mansion characters

The following is a list of characters from The Haunted Mansion, a popular theme park attraction located at Disneyland, Walt Disney World (in the Magic Kingdom), and Tokyo Disneyland.

Ghost Host

The Ghost Host serves as the unseen narrator of the attraction; present in the Stretching Room and in the ride itself. His voice provides commentary through the ride heard via onboard speakers in the Omnimover ride vehicle. The character is voiced with a Mid-Atlantic accented voice provided by Paul Frees that has been described as "gleefully sardonic".[1] The hanging corpse seen in the Stretching Room implies that he committed suicide.

The character is given the name 'Master Gracey' in some related media such as the 2003 film and the comics; a name featured on a Tombstone in the queue. This connection was originally popularized by fans. It is an homage to master effects designer Yale Gracey who created most of the special effects in the mansion.

In the 1969 record album The Story and Song from the Haunted Mansion, the Ghost Host was voiced by Pete Renaday, using an accent and manner of speaking inspired by English actor Boris Karloff. During Haunted Mansion Holiday, the Ghost Host is voiced by Corey Burton. In the Tokyo Disneyland Haunted Mansion, the character is voiced in Japanese by Teichiro Hori.

The character is known as the Phantom in Phantom Manor at Disneyland Paris. He was originally voiced in English by Vincent Price, but was replaced by French actor Gérard Chevalier soon after the attraction opened. Price's performance is still used for the Phantom's evil laughter.

Appearances in other media

The Ghost Host's famous line "Welcome, foolish mortals" was reproduced by Corey Burton in the opening titles of the 2003 film. For the tour of the film's version of the mansion, the Ghost Host was voiced by British actor Tony Jay.

The film's Master Gracey (Nathaniel Parker), given the name Edward, is shown to be separate from the Ghost Host although he is a mashup of the Ghost host, the aging man portrait, and the original Master Gracey in the attraction. The character fell in love with Elizabeth Henshaw, the beautiful multiracial daughter of one of the manor's multiracial servants, who in turn, also fell in love with himand they planned to marry. The family's evil butler Ramsley (Terence Stamp), seeing his actions as a disgrace to the family, murdered her with a poisoned cup of and gave Edward a false letter from Elizabeth that he had penned himself which led Edward to believe that Elizabeth had never loved him, causing him to hang himself from the ceiling of the mansion in his grief while Elizabeth's real letter, which was confiscated and hidden by Ramsley, says that she loves Master Gracey, and that she will marry him. After she died, her spirit remained in the mansion as an orb (or "ghost ball"). Edward still loved her, and anxiously awaited her return, which was prophesied by a gypsy woman named Madame Leota. After Jim Evers (Eddie Murphy) reveals the truth to Edward, Ramsley is condemned to Hell for his actions and Elizabeth reunites with Edward, who gives the Evers family the deed to the house, and they ascended to Heaven with the rest of the spirits.

In 2010 at San Diego Comic-Con, a teaser for a new Haunted Mansion film being produced by Guillermo del Toro was shown, in which Ian McShane provided the voice of the Ghost Host.

Stretching Portraits

The following characters are depicted in the portraits of the Stretching Room:

Madame Leota

Madame Leota appears in the ride as a head encased within a crystal ball. She is the spirit of a psychic medium, conducting an otherworldly séance in an attempt to summon spirits and assist them in materializing. Her ghostly head appears on a table in the middle of her dark chamber, from which she speaks her incantations. Musical instruments and furniture levitate and make noises in response. She was played by Leota Toombs (face) and Eleanor Audley (voice). Before Leota Toombs was chosen for the face of the medium in the crystal ball, Imagineer Harriet Burns was tested for the part. Leota Toombs also played the Ghost Hostess who appears at the end of the attraction.

In 2002, a tombstone for Madame Leota debuted at Walt Disney World's Mansion. The epitaph reads: "Dear sweet Leota, beloved by all. In regions beyond now, but having a ball." The face on the tombstone periodically shifts and opens its eyes. In 2006, Disneyland's Madame Leota was given the ability to float above the table in mid-air, via wires. This effect, along with the spell-book, was installed into the Walt Disney World Haunted Mansion during the 2007 refurbishment. In the Servants Quarters (Walt Disney World), there is a bell for Madame Leota's Boudoir. Near the mansion in Walt Disney World, there is a newly opened shop named "Memento Mori" that has many references to Madame Leota.

During Haunted Mansion Holiday at Disneyland, she was played by Leota Toombs' daughter Kim Irvine (face) and Suzanne Blakeslee (voice).

In Phantom Manor at Disneyland Paris, Madame Leota was played by Oona Lind. Her incantations are different from those of The Haunted Mansion, and they alternate between English and French.

Appearances in other media

In the 2003 film, Madame Leota was portrayed by Jennifer Tilly. She is shown first when Eddie Murphy's character, Jim Evers, stumbles upon her chamber after trying to find his way out of a secret passage. Leota then tells him and his children, Michael and Megan about how the mansion was cursed and how to break it before sending them with servants Ezra and Emma to the graveyard to find the clue which is a key to a trunk in the attic which contains the secret of the curse. When the protagonists find the secret which was a letter from the fiancée of the mansion's master, Elizabeth to the master himself, Edward Gracey, the butler Ramsley reveals the truth before banishing everyone. Leota is depicted as a helpful person when she tells Jim on how to break back in the mansion and rescue his family then reveal the truth of Ramsley's evil plans to the master. After Gracey and Elizabeth are reunited in the afterlife, Leota joins the family in their vacation.

In the 2003 video game, Leota acts as the secondary main protagonist and aids the player character, Ezekiel "Zeke" Halloway in navigating the Mansion to restore peace in the residence and free her six friends as well as other spirits from the game's villain, Atticus Thorn, who has enslaved them when his group, the Order of Shadows, took over the estate. At the game's conclusion, Zeke reveals that he had become a successful author and writer with Madame Leota's guidance.

In the comics, Leota was killed mid-trance by William Gracey, and doesn't realize that she's dead.

In the Haunted Mansion level of the Xbox 360 game Kinect Disneyland Adventures, a malevolent Madame Leota (voiced by Suzanne Blakeslee) is encountered upon entering the Mansion, in the Stretching Room.

The video game Epic Mickey has its own version of the character, named Madame Leona, who is the librarian of Lonesome Manor.

Bride

The Bride, one of the Mansion's most enigmatic characters, haunts the Attic. Inspiration for the character can be traced back to legends such as the Brown Lady of Raynham Hall. The Bride has been altered several times over the years, appearing now at Disneyland and Walt Disney World as Constance Hatchaway—the "Black Widow Bride," using a digital projection effect.

The original incarnation of the Bride was a skeletal corpse with glowing eyes, clutching a candle in one hand and a bouquet in the other. The sound of her thumping heart filled the attic, and it could be seen glowing red within her chest. Her groom (according to the Story and Song from the Haunted Mansion album), the Hatbox Ghost, was removed shortly after the attraction opened, as his "disappearing head" effect was unconvincing under the scene's lighting conditions. Several "blast-up" and "pop-up" ghosts were also featured in the attic until they were removed with the "Black Widow Bride" update.

At one point a story circulated that the Bride's ring was embedded in the exterior exit path of Walt Disney World's Haunted Mansion. The object was actually what remained of a crowd-control stanchion that had been cut down. It was removed during 2007's Re-Haunting. In 2011, when the new interactive queue was added, an "official" Bride's ring was embedded in the path to honor the popular legend.

Appearances in other media

A candle-holding bride appears in the 2003 video game, though she is not the character from the movie.

In the comics, the bride is named Emily De Claire.

The storyline of Phantom Manor at Disneyland Paris revolves around a bride named Melanie Ravenswood who is tormented by the sinister Phantom.

Organist

At the attraction's ballroom is a ghostly organist dressed in formal wear with a cape and top hat. He plays Grim Grinning Ghosts as a macabre waltz on the ballroom's pipe organ. Tiny wisp-like spirits emerge from the organ's pipes as the organist plays.

In the original Disneyland version of the attraction, the organ console is the original prop of the organ used by Captain Nemo in the 1954 film, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. While the console is the same, the noticeable differences are that of the bat-shape note stand which replaced the mirror from the 1954 film and the taller set of pipes that replaces the fan-shaped pipes of Nemo's organ to better compliment the ballroom's dimensions and to make a good effect on the skull-like spirits floating out of the pipes.

Other appearances

The organist appears in the video game as one of the six friendly ghosts who are enslaved by the game's villain, Atticus Thorn. Unlike the ride, the character is depicted without a hat and is shown to be short-tempered and rude, on the manner that he refers to the game's protagonist, Zeke Halloway, as "beggar" and is always upset when his playing is interrupted. However, despite some of his negative attitudes, he is also shown to be nice and appreciates Zeke's efforts to restore the Mansion and thanks him for setting him as well as his friends and the other spirits free from Thorn's control. The character gives Zeke a second weapon upgrade.

While the character does not appear in the 2003 film adoption, there is a homage to him wherein one of the supporting characters, Ezra (Wallace Shawn) is shown wearing a cape and a hat and plays an off-key rendition of Richard Wagner's Bridal Chorus during the film's botched wedding ceremony.

Constance Hatchaway

During the 2006 upgrades at Disneyland, the Bride was given a name, a new look, and a backstory. In the late 19th century, Constance married—and murdered—at least five wealthy men and inherited their fortunes. Her ghost utters sinister variations on classic wedding vows as a hatchet materializes in her hands. The visible beating heart of the previous versions of the Bride was not carried over to Constance, but its audio remains on the soundtrack. While much of Constance's story is left to the imagination, there are some hints in the newly decorated attic that give guests some insight into the character. A series of wedding photographs can be seen among various gifts and ceremonial trappings, and as guests pass each photo the heads of Constance's former grooms disappear. In the last photo, Constance holds a rose while posing next to her groom George Hightower. This echoes the portrait (in the stretching room) of a much older Constance holding a rose as she sits atop the tombstone of her late husband George, whose stone bust has a hatchet lodged in its head. (In an early attraction script, the widow in the stretching portrait was named Abigale Patecleaver.) Though Constance's ghost manifests as a young woman, she apparently lived to see old age.

Constance was later installed at Walt Disney World's Haunted Mansion during the 2007 refurbishment, though considerable work was done on her Floridian counterpart (including utilizing different video footage and switching to a single projector instead of two at Disneyland).

Constance is voiced by Kat Cressida.

Appearances in other media

In the Wii game Epic Mickey, Horace Horsecollar (who runs the Detective Agency in the Wasteland) sends Mickey Mouse on a quest to find Constance's murder weapon. As Horace explains to Mickey, "Constance Hatchaway was once the Lady of Lonesome Manor. Several of her husbands... expired. There were suspicions but no evidence. Mrs. Hatchaway hid a hatchet in the house."

In the Xbox 360 game Kinect Disneyland Adventures, Constance haunts the Ballroom and serves as a boss. Her appearance is based on the pre-2006 version of the character, complete with candle and bouquet.

Hatbox Ghost

Hatbox Ghost
The 2015 installation of The Hatbox Ghost
Main article: Hatbox Ghost

The Hatbox Ghost was a character who originally appeared in the attic, on the opposite side of the room from the Bride. He was a cloaked figure with a grinning skeletal face, clutching a cane with a trembling hand. His head would disappear from his body and reappear from within the hat box he held in his other hand. He was removed shortly after the attraction opened at Disneyland due to the effect not working as intended, and returned on April 10, 2015. In the Story and Song from the Haunted Mansion album, he is identified as the Bride's groom ("with each beat of his bride's heart..."). The headless groom theme was re-introduced into the attic scene in 2006, as part of the "Black Widow Bride" storyline.

Guillermo del Toro has stated that his upcoming Haunted Mansion film will feature the Hatbox Ghost as a pivotal figure in the story, and that the mythology of the Mansion will be centered around the character. Del Toro analogized his version of the Hatbox Ghost to a spider sitting in the middle of a "web" of Haunted Mansions.

The look of the Hatbox Ghost may have been inspired by the Man in the Beaver Hat, played by Lon Chaney in the 1927 film, London After Midnight.

On April 10, 2015, it was officially confirmed that the Hatbox Ghost would return to Disneyland's Haunted Mansion in May 2015. The first day of the character's return was May 9, 2015.[2]

The Groundskeeper

The groundskeeper (also known as "The Caretaker") is a man who tends to the Mansion's upkeep but is stopped in his tracks when he effectively joins the guests' tour in seeing the ghosts' materializing at night. He is seen standing just outside the graveyard gates, next to a lamppost, raising a lantern in his shaking hand, and is visibly terrified. A greyhound dog accompanies him, presumably his pet. In his other hand he holds a shovel, which either aids in his groundskeeping or could suggest alternatively he is a grave-robber caught in the act by the ghosts.

It is often pointed out that he is the only 'living' audio-animatronic seen throughout the entire ride.

The groundskeeper features prominently in D. W. Frydendall's comic book series based on the ride, and is identified as Horace Fusslebottom.

The late Don Knotts was supposed to play the character in the 2003 film adoption but he dropped out before shooting began. The groundskeeper and his dog however, appear in the film as one of the many ghosts in the graveyard scene.

In the video game, the groundskeeper also makes an appearance but his dog is omitted. The character is seen in the Winter Garden as a disgruntled ghost who complains that no one is around to pay him for his work. He only appears when the level is completed. It is also noted however that the player character and primary main protagonist, Zeke Halloway, was isnpired by the groundskeeper.

Singing Busts

Singing Busts
The Singing Busts in the graveyard scene

A quintet of marble busts sing Grim Grinning Ghosts amidst the revelry in the graveyard. Their names are (from left to right): Rollo Rumkin, Uncle Theodore, Cousin Algernon, Ned Nub, and Phineas P. Pock. The original concept art for talking or singing busts by Marc Davis included a female, Aunt Lucretia. The busts can also be seen in Phantom Manor at Disneyland Paris, minus Cousin Algernon.

Appearances in other media

They were voiced by the Dapper Dans in the video game and the 2003 film adoption. However, in these two adoptions, they are reduced to a quartet instead of appearing as five.

In the Wii game Epic Mickey, the original five busts make an appearance in a stretching portrait inside Lonesome Manor. In the Xbox 360 game Kinect Disneyland Adventures, four of the busts appear in the queue area outside of the Mansion, and can be conducted.

The Disney animated film Hercules features an homage during the song I Won't Say (I'm in Love), in which the Muses appear as singing busts and are arranged in the same way as the Haunted Mansion characters.

Hitchhiking Ghosts

The Hitchhiking Ghosts are a tongue-in-cheek send-up of urban legends involving phantom hitchhikers. They are seen standing together inside a crypt, thumbs extended. They hitch a ride with guests traveling in Doom Buggies and appear alongside them in mirrors. "They have selected you to fill our quota, and they'll haunt you until you return," says the Ghost Host. In 2011 at Walt Disney World's Haunted Mansion, the mirror scene was updated with digital effects that enable the ghosts to interact with the guests. The vocals for Walt Disney World's computer-generated ghosts were provided by actor Kurt von Schmittou.

The Prisoner is a short, hairy little ghost with a ball and chain shackled to his ankle.

The Skeleton is a tall, dapper, grinning ghost. When the attraction first opened at Disneyland, he was completely bald, but has since had hair of varying lengths. Although the Skeleton figure has the same face mold as the Hatbox Ghost, they are not meant to be the same character. In Marc Davis' original concept art, the character was a stereotypical "sheet ghost" with no clothes, save for the bowler hat he lifted above his head. By the time the attraction opened, the character had evolved into the fully clothed skeletal ghost seen in the Mansion today.

The Traveler is an overweight hunchback wearing a top hat and holding a carpet bag.

The Hitchhiking Ghosts are often referred to as "Gus" (Prisoner), "Ezra" (Skeleton), and "Phineas" (Traveler). These names are thought to have originated from and popularised by Cast Members who worked at the Walt Disney World Haunted Mansion, and further spread by fans. Since then, the names have appeared on merchandise for the characters and in various media licensed by Disney. When the subject was brought up in a 2006 interview, Imagineer Jason Surrell said, "Their names are not Ezra, Phineas, and Gus. I don't know where it came from. I know at one point, Cast Members contributed to this website that names all the ghosts and gives them backstories. None of those have any basis in Imagineering story, or anything like that. But somehow Ezra, Phineas, and Gus in particular managed to stick, so in the book about the only thing I could do is acknowledge that and say it's not official, but acknowledge it at the same time." When the interactive queue was installed outside of the Walt Disney World attraction in 2011, tombstones with the names Gus and Ezra were added. Also added was a tombstone for Phineas Pock, though this is a reference to the singing bust character, and not the Traveler hitchhiking ghost.

Appearances in other media

The Hitchhiking Ghosts make a brief appearance in the 2003 film, passed by the hearse carrying the Evers family through the graveyard, striking their ubiquitous pose. As Jim Evers (Eddie Murphy) is startled by their appearance, the Traveler and Prisoner (played by Deep Roy) argue how the Evers see them, thinking they are invisible until the Prisoner accuses Jim as a liar and psychic as the Skeleton (played by Jeremy Howard) observes silently. Unlike their ride counterparts, the trio were the mansion's former servants. The Traveller was the mansion's head chef (complete with French accent), the Skeleton was the coachman, and the Prisoner was the assistant groundskeeper. Early script drafts for the movie have revealed that the three ghosts were going to play larger comic relief supporting roles, similar to the servant characters Emma and Ezra.

The characters make an appearance in the Xbox 360 game Kinect Disneyland Adventures.

The Hitchhiking Ghosts made cameo appearances in multiple episodes of Disney's House of Mouse.

In August 2012, a "Disney Dream Portrait" by photographer Annie Leibovitz was released, featuring comedic actors Jack Black, Will Ferrell, and Jason Segel as the Hitchhiking Ghosts.

The queue of Tokyo Disneyland's Star Tours: The Adventures Continue features three Audio-Animatronic hitchhiking droids: a former RX pilot droid and two former F-series droids from the attraction's original 1989 incarnation, all posed in the same manner as the Hitchhiking Ghosts.

In 2016, the Disneyland Haunted Mansion "Ghost Post" in-park scavenger hunt includes the Phantom Radio iOS app with Disney voice veterans Peter Renaday as Ezra, Dee Bradley Baker as Gus and Stephen Stanton as Phineas.

Little Leota

Also known as the 'Ghost Hostess', this miniature "lady in white" type ghost beckons guests to hurry back at the end of the attraction: "...and don't forget your death certificate" says the Little Leota. She was played (face and voice) by Leota Toombs. The character is said to have been inspired by the "arrangement hostesses" from the 1965 film The Loved One. The character was conceived as being separate to the character of Madame Leota, however due to being played by the same woman, the two characters are sometimes combined in related media.

References

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