Phantom Fantasia

Phantom Fantasia, later renamed Wicked Witches Haunt, was a dark ride opened in 1983 at Thorpe Park in Surrey, England. It took riders through a series of large animated horror scenes and illusions. The ride was designed by British attraction studio Sparks and the endless transit system manufactured by Mack Rides in Germany. The ride was refurbished with a UV treatment in 1994, renamed 'Wicked Witches Haunt'. It was demolished following a fire in 2000.

Phantom Fantasia
Thorpe Park
StatusClosed
Opening date1983 (As Phantom Fantasia)
1994 (As Wicked Witches Haunt)
Closing date21 July 2000 (2000-07-21)
Replaced byDetonator: Bombs Away
General statistics
Attraction typeDark ride
ManufacturerMack Rides
DesignerSparks
ThemeHorror
Vehicle typeEndless transit system
Duration5 minutes

History

Phantom Fantasia was opened in 1983 as part of the Central Park area, Thorpe Park's first large development into a theme park.[1] It was produced by Sparks in Colchester. The ride featured many animated characters, including a hunchback swinging from a bone chandelier, a torture chamber, a ghoulish seance with a levitating table, Henry VIII dining at his banquet table while ghosts of his six wives appear and disappear around him (using a Pepper's ghost effect), a crypt, a Victorian street scene featuring Sweeney Todd and Mrs Lovett's shop windows, a black magic alchemist/necromancer brewing a potion, two witches around a cauldron in their cave, Mary Queen of Scots holding her severed head in her arms, and a ballroom of eighteenth-century-costumed waltzing skeletons.[2]

The ride was refurbished as Wicked Witches Haunt in 1994 with a scenic overhaul in UV. A number of witch animatronic figures added, a new soundtrack and a new final scene in a cobweb-filled dungeon. On-ride photography was also added [3]

The attraction was destroyed by a large fire in 2000, the cause of which was never publicly announced.[4]

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gollark: AS has "shooting stars". I don't know what they do.
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gollark: That's an obvious case of the "naturalistic fallacy".

References

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