By C.J. Hirschfield
Halloween is more than just one night at
the nation’s theme and amusement parks: it’s an entire season. Starting even
before Labor Day in some places, Halloween festivities – including special
experiences that usually require separate admission – allow parks to extend their typical summer season and to keep
earning money well into the fall. As a result, Halloween is now huge business
at parks.
At Fairyland? Well, we offer Jack o’Lantern
Jamboree the weekend before Halloween – October 27 and 28 this year. No extra
charge, half off for members, with tons of treat giveaways and special events. We also “theme out” parts of the park with special designs.
Last year, for the first time, we created
a Días de los Muertos environment in our Alice in Wonderland Tunnel. It worked
so well for us that Fairyland’s director of art and restoration, Shannon
Taylor, is bringing it back this year.
The White Rabbit in front of the Alice in Wonderland Tunnel wearing a Dias de los Muertos mask |
Pixar’s 2017 animated hit, Coco, brought greater visibility to the Days of the Dead, the Mexican multi-day
holiday during which family and friends gather to pray for and remember friends
and family members who have died, and to support them on their spiritual
journey. That’s one reason Shannon thought the
theme would be a good match for our sweet, “more delightful than frightful”
Halloween event.
But is a theme that deals with death appropriate
for kids?
“Definitely!” says Shannon.
It’s a family holiday, she explains, and “a
really positive way to remember and acknowledge loss in the most beautiful,
sincere way.” She believes that Fairyland is a sweet and kind space to do
that.
Our display offers an explanation of the
holiday, so even families who don’t celebrate it can open a dialogue about lost
loved ones in a space that couldn’t be more safe, positive and colorful.
A Dias de los Muertos tableau outside the Alice in Wonderland Tunnel |
Shannon and the rest of Team Fairyland feel
it’s important to be representative of, and welcoming to, the diverse community
we serve at the park. For us, Jamboree is an opportunity to continue the
conversation about inclusivity.
For Shannon, it’s also personal. She lost
friends in the December
2016 Ghost Ship fire, and she annually celebrates Días de los Muertos with members of her community. She says the celebration gives
her a particular sense of peace.
Fairyland’s Days of the Dead shrine is
constructed with advice from friends of Mexican heritage, in a way that’s culturally
competent. We shopped at the Corazón del Pueblo store on International Blvd. and 48th
Ave. for the colorful papél picado tissue paper flags that lead the way through the tunnel, and for other items for the shrine. But
there are distinctly Fairyland touches as well: figs, oranges and grapes from
the park’s organic gardens, and special masks worn by our White Rabbit and
other Alice characters.
Last year, we placed notecards and pens
near the altar for people to honor and remember loved ones. More than 200 were
created by our guests.
Dias de los Muertos shrine inside the Alice in Wonderland Tunnel |
The response to our 2017 Días de los Muertos display was so overwhelmingly
positive that we’re thinking of making it a regular part of our Jack o’Lantern
Jamboree for years to come.
But unlike at many other theme parks—all of
which we love—this special Halloween experience will not cost you extra. In
fact, it may give you and your family more than you expected.
Jack o’Lantern Jamboree takes place October
27 and 28 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets available at the entrance: $10
general, $5 Fairyland members.
C.J. Hirschfield has served for 16 years as executive director of Children's Fairyland, where she is charged with the overall operation of the nation's oldest storybook theme park.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.