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The Script
Hollywood,
1939. Amid the glitz and the glitter of a bustling, young
movie town at the height of its golden age, The Hollywood
Tower Hotel was a star in its own right... a beacon for
the show-business elite. Now, something is about to happen
that will change all that...
Tonight's
story on The Twilight Zone is somewhat unique and
calls for a different kind of introduction. One stormy night
long ago, five people stepped through the door of an elevator
and into a nightmare. That door is opening once again, and
this time it's opening for you. We invite you, if you dare,
to step aboard because in tonight's episode, you are the
star. And this elevator travels directly to... The Twilight
Zone.
Production Guide

The
pleasant, leafy surroundings of La Terrasse can never prepare
you for what you’re about to experience. As you step
through the entrance gates, the famous Hollywood Tower Hotel
towers into the sky before you. You’re on the driveway
of the huge Pueblo Deco hotel, standing on the spot where
many a glamorous movie star stepped out of their limousine
to check into their luxurious suites. Ghostly music from
the era echoes all around, and distant screams from high
above prepare you for your fate.
Step
through the ornate entrance archway and join the queue to
check-in. The staff haven’t had this many guests in
quite a time. The lobby is still coated in dust, with spider
webs hanging from the chandeliers and ancient artefacts
from the 1920s and 1930s everywhere. Playing cards have
been thrown down on a table, mid-game. Drinks have been
left standing, half empty. What happened here to so suddenly
dim the lights of such a shining Hollywood hotel?
Passing
by the normal guest elevators, mysteriously cordoned off
with “Out of Order” signs, you step through
the door into the hotel’s Library. A dark, dimly lit
room with endless walls of books and artefacts. The Library
doors close, and almost immediately a rumble of thunder
and a flash of lightning outside the window cause the lights
to darken. An old television screen in one corner of the
room flickers to life, and a mysterious lost episode of
“The Twilight Zone” begins playing...
"You
unlock this door with the key of imagination. Beyond it
is another dimension. A dimension of sound. A dimension
of sight. A dimension of mind. You're moving into a land
of both shadow and substance, of things and ideas. You've
just crossed over into... The Twilight Zone."
"Hollywood,
1939. Amid the glitz and the glitter of a bustling, young
movie town at the height of its golden age, The Hollywood
Tower Hotel was a star in its own right... a beacon for
the show-business elite. Now, something is about to happen
that will change all that..."
The
episode shows images of a group of hotel guests boarding
the elevator. As they do, a huge lighting bolt hits the
tower and their elevator drops into another dimension. Electrical
pulses flicker through their bodies and in an instant they’re
gone. The camera quickly pans around to Rod Serling...
"The
time is now on an evening very much like the one we have
just witnessed. Tonight's story on The Twilight Zone is
somewhat unique and calls for a different kind of introduction.
This, as you may recognise, is a maintenance service elevator.
Still in operation, and waiting for you. We invite you,
if you dare, to step aboard, because in tonight's episode,
you are the star. And this elevator travels directly to...
The Twilight Zone."
Leaving
the Library via a hidden exit, you step into the dark and
grimy service corridors of the hotel. You continue through
the dimly-lit Boiler Rooms to your service elevator. All
around, items from the past maintenance workers are still
in place, giving clues to what you might experience above.
It seems the sudden events of October 31st 1939 didn’t
leave time to collect anything. As the level indicator on
the elevator rises and falls mysteriously, it soon settles
back down to “1”, and the doors ping open for
you to climb aboard...
As
your bellhop wishes you a pleasant stay, the elevator vehicle
moves horizontally, backwards, towards the elevator shaft,
with eerie lights and sounds all around. A starfield glistens
around the walls of the service shaft.
"You
are the passengers on a most uncommon elevator, about to
take the strangest journey of your lives. Your destination...
unknown. But this much is clear: a reservation has been
made in your name for an extended stay"
After
moving some distance up the tower, the doors open with the
usual "ping", on a wide hallway mirror. Electricity
buzzes all around.
"Wave
goodbye to the real world. You have just entered... The
Twilight Zone"
Well
go on... wave goodbye! The whole cast wave to themselves
in the mirror, before suddenly a surge of electricity causes
the lights to dim and the reflection to crystallize, turn
to a holographic blue colour and gradually flicker up and
down in waves of electricity. In an instant, it’s
gone. Your reflection no longer exists, and you’re
left looking at an empty elevator vehicle. The elevator
shakes and shudders, with the sound of grinding metal piercing
your ears. The doors close, and you ascend further into
the darkness of the tower. Next stop – a hotel corridor,
floor 13, destroyed by the lightning blast of 1939.
"What
happened here to dim the lights of Hollywood’s brightest
hotel is about to happen again"
The
wall lights along the corridor flicker, the blue light hazes.
Out of nowhere, the group of guests first seen in the Library
video appear as ghosts, wailing and crying to leave their
abandoned Twilight Zone prison.
"One
stormy night long ago, five people stepped through the door
of an elevator and into a nightmare. That door is opening
once again, but this time, it’s opening for you"
Another
bolt of electricity flickers through the corridor and the
ghosts vanish into the glow of the wall lights. The elevator
shakes and shudders again, more and more violently. As all
the lights dim, the door of the destroyed elevator glows
in the distance. As the Twilight Zone opens once again,
it DROPS. And so do you.
The
electrical forces of the Twilight Zone pull your elevator
further and further – you aren’t dropping, you’re
being pulled into another dimension. As you near the bottom
of the shaft, you’re propelled upwards again, at lightning
speed. And then right back to the bottom, before bouncing
back up, right to the top. At the very highest point of
the tower, the doors open and you’re given a final
glimpse of the real world. Then, for a final time, you’re
plunged back into the darkness of the tower and driven all
the way down into the deepest depths of the basement, where
the forces propel you upwards once again. Soon, your nightmare
is over, and the elevator is moving back to the Boiler Room
as familiar images from The Twilight Zone float all around.
"The
next time you check into a deserted hotel on the dark side
of Hollywood, make sure you know just what kind of vacancy
you’re filling, or you could find yourself a permanent
resident... of The Twilight Zone"
The
doors finally open and your bellhop greets you with a pleasant
smile. After being ushered out of the elevator, you leave
through a labyrinth of deserted corridors that lead you
back to the glamorous façade of the bustling hotel.
Past the video screens showing souvenir photos from your
time in The Twilight Zone, you enter the luxurious hotel
gift shop to pick up some souvenirs from your unforgettable
Hollywood holiday.
Outside
the hotel, the sun is still shining and the palm trees swaying,
as Vera Lynn’s "We’ll meet again"
echoes around from a ghostly ballroom high up in the tower...
Production footnotes

The attraction features three drop shafts, each used by
two elevators. Boarding takes place across two floors, with
elevators moving horizontally into and out of the drop shaft
from their boarding point. Whilst one elevator is boarding,
the other is ascending into The Twilight Zone. In the elevator,
guests are seated in rows of three or four, with 21 guests
per vehicle. The elevator cars use seatbelts for restraints,
but are infact not elevators in the common sense of the
word. Classed as ‘Verticle Conveyance Vehicles’,
they are able to drop guests faster than the speed of gravity.
The tower reaches a height of 183ft, with a 40ft basement,
but the elevators do not travel right to the top of the
tower, since a large amount of the space is used by the
winch mechanisms which drive the drop shaft cabin. The attraction
is by far the tallest building at Disneyland Resort Paris.
The mirror scene uses digital projection on a plate of thermal
glass to achieve the effect of guests disappearing. As the
doors open, a high-definition video camera captures guests
and projects this onto the electronically-activated ‘mirror’.
A computer separates the guests from the normal, generic
elevator background and allows their silhouette to come
loose and shimmer in wavy form before the ‘mirror’
projection screen is de-activated and guests are simply
looking straight through to a dummy ride vehicle.
The corridor scene uses the same glass projection screen
technique to create the effects of ghosts, with the corridor
using a steep forced perspective to allow the effect to
work. It only extends around 10ft in front of your elevator,
with a height of just 4ft.
The Twilight Zone television series originally ran for five
years on CBS, from 1959 to 1964. Rod Serling, its creator
and host, a six-time Emmy winner, wrote 92 of the original
156 episodes.
The Parisian/Californian attraction uses a style known as
‘Pueblo Deco’. Pueblo Deco, popular when the
hotel was fictionally built in the 1920's, is characterized
by the clean, geometric shapes common to the Art Deco style.
However, from southwestern Native American art, it borrows
elements such as radial sunbursts, arrowhead shapes, and
simplified thunderbird motifs. A prime southern California
landmark in the Pueblo Deco style is the L.A. City Hall
Building.
The episode from which Rod Serling's appearance was taken
for the ‘lost episode’ guests see in the Library
is entitled " It's A Good Life ," written by Rod
Serling. This episode tells the story of a little boy who
can read minds and control people. His new lines here (and
throughout the attraction) was provided by Mark Silverman,
chosen from hundreds who auditioned for the role by Rod
Serling’s widow.
The Lobby features an extensive array of period props and
furniture that creates a bygone era of Hollywood splendor.
Magazines and newspapers from 1939 are casually placed just
where the guests left them. At the front desk, a set of
luggage remains where a guest was about to register. On
a table, a deck of cards, a cribbage board, two wine glasses…all
carefully placed to indicate that the people in this lobby
left in a hurry without a thought of taking anything with
them - and never came back. The Boiler Room is especially
rich in prop and set details that suggest an actual working
facility, from the time clock to the maintenance man's desk
filled with photos and personal effects. Throughout these
areas, hidden details and props were carefully chosen to
pay homage to certain famous Twilight Zone episodes, such
as a gold thimble in a glass case to reference the episode
‘The After Hours’, or a broken stopwatch to
reference ‘A Kind of Stopwatch’. (Exact props
not guaranteed to be present in the finished Paris attraction)
A January 2007 article in French daily newspaper Le Parisien
interviewed the Head of Construction for the three major
new Walt Disney Studios attractions. Upon recounting the
story of the Hollywood Tower Hotel, Roland Kleve describes
a family trapped by fire on the fateful night of 31st October
1939. Either Roland told the story incorrectly, or the Paris
version could feature an altered story and some "hot"
new movie effects...
History

Construction began May 2005, with foundations laid and,
eventually, a huge reinforced pit dug for the attraction’s
40ft basement. The attraction is due to open sometime in
the resort’s 2008 season, which begins October 2007.
The attraction will be almost identical to the version already
in operation at Disney’s California Adventure. Unlike
this version, however, the Paris edition has been constructed
using formed concrete rather than a steel skeleton, following
French construction standards. The finished product will,
though, be eerily familiar.
Infact, this version of the Tower was originally designed
for Walt Disney Studios Park during the park’s construction,
with the ‘La Terrasse’ area built in preparation
for this. It was due to open in 2004/2005, but was quickly
postponed as the park experienced a poor opening season
and the resort’s operating company underwent another
major financial restructuring. At the same time, Disney’s
California Adventure park at Disneyland Resort had attendance
troubles of its own. In need of a quick-fix E-Ticket to
save the park, the Imagineers pulled out the plans for the
Paris tower and hastily affixed them to the Californian
park’s ‘Hollywood Pictures Backlot’ zone,
with the attraction officially opening 5th May 2004.
Disneyland Resort Paris finally got its long-planned Tower
confirmed on 11th January 2005, as Euro Disney SCA, the
resort’s operating company, announced the fruits of
their financial restructuring – €230m for major
new attractions, of which around €110m will have likely
been budgeted immediately for the Tower.
The original version of The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror
opened at Disney-MGM Studios on 22nd July 1994 as part of
the massive ‘Sunset Boulevard’ expansion of
the park. Unlike the Paris, California and Tokyo Towers
(which all share the same basic ride design), this version
features two pairs of drop shafts, separate load and unload
points and a unique horizontal movement between the “up”
shaft and the “down” shaft, known as the ‘Fifth
Dimension Room’. In designing the Paris/California
Tower, the Imagineers were pushed to create a Tower with
higher throughput (and more affordable budget), and so removed
this element as they believed it was never as successful
as they had originally hoped.
In 1997, Disney produced a made-for-TV movie based on the
story of The Hollywood Tower Hotel. More information can
be found at the Internet
Movie DataBase.
© WDS Fans 2006
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