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Showing posts with label Master Gracey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Master Gracey. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 March 2016

REVIEW: "Cadaverous Palettes"



Open this in another folder, so as
to enlarge it.
Open this in another folder, so as
to enlarge it.
Open this in another folder, so as
to enlarge it.

"Cadaverous Palettes" is not exactly part of the strip; I guess you could say it is a kind of Grand Finale to the strip series. It depicts various spooks of the Haunted Mansion, both those that have already appeared in the comics and others. Trying to review it as I'd do a story would be futile, but let it be told that it is awesomely done. Bravo bravo bravo. Now, I will give you something, though, in place of this review you won't have: I'm going to identify all the characters, and compare them to their Disneyland counterpart. There ! Happy ? 

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The Ally Gal (Miss Lilly)



The Tightrope Walker, or Lilly the Ally Gal as she has come to be called by fans, is one of the characters from the Stretching Portraits gallery. 

Marc Davis's original painting of her was this:

But the replacement you can see today
in the Mansion is based on a redesign
by David Hall, that looks more like
this:


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The Hatchet Man (The Ghost Host)


The ominous but harmless narrator of the ride and master of the Mansion, already featured in countless previous strips. His look is based on the “Hatchet Man” portrait, which you'll remember looks like this:

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The Organist (Thaddeus Morgan)


Thaddeus Morgan, better known as The Organist, plays the tune of “Grim Grinning Ghost” in loop, and can be heard throughout the Haunted Mansion. Already featured in the comics, but only once, in "Here there be ghosts".

In the concept arts, he looks like this:

In the actual ride, you don't actually see his face:

But there's this delightful merchandise item where you do:

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The Hatbox Ghost (Hattie, H. B. Ghost, Thomas Hatter, or Huit B. Ghost)


The grumpy and creepy denizen of the Haunted Mansion's attic, the Hatbox Ghost is a slightly hunchbacked old skeleton dressed in ample black clothes whose head has a tendency to disappear from his shoulders to reappear in his hatbox. He has, of course, been a major character of the comic strip series. The portrait takes place after his return, hence why he is depicted with his new colors instead of his former black-and-grey suit.

In the actual attraction, he used to be like this:

The new animatronic that you can see today is similar,
albeit recolored:

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Madame Leota (alive)


Madame Leota is a very powerful medium… or rather, that's what she was. Nowadays she's as much of a ghost as the other inhabitants of the Haunted Mansion, and her head now appears in her crystal ball. However, the addition to the Haunted Mansion of Madame Leota's tombstone, which includes her carved face, shows us what she looked like as a mere mortal. 

Here is the tombstone in question:


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The Phantom (Henry Ravenswood)


The Phantom (whom you already saw in Tragic) is the main antagonist in the French Haunted Mansion, Phantom Manor. This evil formally-dressed skeleton forever torments the ghost of Mélanie Ravenswood, a longing bride whose groom he murdered. Kelly didn't use him much but makes up for it here by giving us two renditions of the Phantom.

Here is the chilling character as you can meet him in Disneyland:


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The Phantom Manor Bride (Mélanie Ravenswood)


Speaking of which, guess who ? Mélanie, the tormented, tragic Bride. Kelly depicts her much more realistically than in Tragic and Impending Doom is Funny, I must note. 

Here is portrait of Mélanie seen in the real Phantom Manor ride.

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Madame Leota (ghost form)


Madame Leota, as previously cited, is the medium of the House, here depicted as the disembodied-head-in-a-crystal-ball that you can see in the ride.

In the ride, she is supposed to look like this, but some versions of her
make her blue instead of green.

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Aging Man/Foyer Guy (Master Dorian Gracey)


Either the Hatchet Man's brother or nephew, Master Dorian Gracey is seen in the Haunted Mansion on a changing portrait in the Foyer, where you progressively see him age and decay into a ghostly skeleton with a deathly stare. The first version is based on Step 2 of the aging process, the second on Step 1.

The original portrait, as I already showed you, is this:

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The Dread twins (Wellington and Forsythia Dread)


A couple of murderous brats who belong to the cataclysmic Dread family (a family whose members kept killing each other until no one was left, and later moved to live on in the the Haunted Mansion as ghosts). Their busts are seen in the Walt Disney World Interactive Queue of the Haunted Mansion.

The original busts:

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The Floating Candlestick


A ghost holds a Floating Chandelier in the Endless Hallway of the Haunted Mansion, forever wandering in corridors that seem to have no end or purpose. A similar effect is in play at Phantom Manor, where Mélanie (see upper) is revealed to be the one holding the chandelier.

Here is the Floating Candlestick
in the Endless Hallway:



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The Mariner (Captain Culpepper Clyne)


Captain Culpepper Clyne used to appear as one of the "Sinister Eleven" portraits — those whose eyes seemed to follow you as you walked past them — at the Walt Disney World Haunted Mansion. A new, blank-eyed version of the portrait was put in the Mansion's staircase to ensure that he was still present in the Mansion when the Sinister Eleven were removed; additionally, since 2009, his grave is part of the WDW “Interactive Queue”. 

This is the original “follow-eye” Culpepper Clyne:

And this is the new, blank-eyed version:


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“Traveler” Hitchhiking Ghost (Phineas)


Phineas is one of the three Hitchhiking Ghosts. He is the least-remembered one, but still has quite a fancies. 

In the original attraction, Phineas looks like this:

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“Skeleton” Hitchhiking Ghost (Ezra)


The most famous Hitchhiking Ghost, Ezra is a tall, snarky, skeletal man. In his original park version, he is bald, but during a redesign, they gave him white hair, which is mirrored here. This had, however, the downside of making him more similar to the Hatbox Ghost, as the two actually share the same head mold.

Bald Ezra in the attraction:


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The Opera Glasses Lady



Formerly another one of the “Sinister Eleven” portraits, now gone from the Mansion, but still dearly-remembered by some fans, including Kelly.

Here is the original “Sinister Eleven” portrait:

And, just for fun, here is another striking Kelly rendition
 of the same character:


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The Werecat Lady


The Werecat Lady is among the Changing Portraits. She originally flashed (or, later, slowly morphed) from the white-gowned for mimicked by Kelly into a black panther. However, when the effect was rebooted with a new trick, they repainted her; in the current version, she wears a black dress, but turns into a white tiger.


Old, morphing set (in the actual attraction, only Step 1
and Step 6 were visible):

Current version of the Werecat Lady:

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Well… it looks like I have covered everything in the Haunted Mansion Comic Strips series by KellyM-Mortal. But be sure to check her gallery, where you will find many more illustrations and sketches of the Haunted Mansion happy haunts. Farewell !

Saturday, 26 March 2016

REVIEW: "Gracey, please"

“Please”, open this in a
new folder to enjoy it in all
its details.

“Once upon a time, there was an attraction named the Haunted Mansion in Disneyland. Every year, thousands of people visited the house, and gazed at the ghosts and their portraits, wondering how they had come to be ghosts in the first place. But no one knew for sure who was who.”

Thus began the trend of fan-made backstories and names for the Haunted Mansion spooks. A very popular one is that "Master Dorian Gracey", the young dandy whose portrait decays before your very eyes into that of a skeleton, was actually once the master of the House. This was supported by the fact that his formal portrait was hanging on its own in the entrance, apart from all the other paintings. And there was also the fact that he had Master in his name — although this is actually a mistake, as "Master" was actually what a young nobleman who was precisely not yet the master of the house he lived in would be called in the 19th century. 

But then, why wasn't it he who was giving the tours, instead of the Ghost Host ? Well, head canons quickly got mad from that point onward. There actually five characters in the equation.

The Ghost Host:
The disembodied voice you hear narrating your tour
whenever you visit the Haunted Mansion. In a rejected
version of the narration, he introduced himself as
“The Ghost Host, Lord and Master of the House”,
but whether this is still canonical or not  in 
the finished ride is up to debate.

The Hanging Man:
The lifeless corpse hanging from the
rafters of the cupola in the Stretching Room
tableau. The Ghost Host says that to get out
of the Mansion, there's “always… his way”
just before we see the Hanging Man,
which many have taken as a hint
that the Ghost Host committed suicide by
hanging in an attempt to leave
the Mansion, and that the Hanging Man
is his corpse.


The Hatchet Man:
This character appears in various
portraits that usually hung in the
Corridor of Doors. His basic structure
is always the same, but details
(such as his skin, which can
either be blue as above, or
of a natural colour; the colours
of his clothes; whether or not his
shadow is brandishing the hatchet in
a menacing manner; and whether
he looks like an evil maniac like here,
or just a little ominous) change
a LOT from one version
to another.

The Foyer Changing Portrait Guy:
Basically, the Haunted Mansion's
take on Dorian Gray. But whether
he's really supposed to be Dorian Gray
is unclassified. His portrait hangs
in the entrance, leading
some people to think it is
the Master of the House.

Master Gracey:
Named after Disney Imagineer Yale Gracey,
Master Gracey's name appears on a tombstone
in the Family Plot in front of the Mansion.

The Original Official Version:

The way it was intended, the Hanging Man and the Hatchet Man are the same character, seeing how their suit and appearance are strikingly similar. The Hatchet Man has even still got a noose around his neck ! And the Hatchet Man is known from written treatments to have always been intended to be what the Ghost Host looked like when he was alive. And the Ghost Host seems to have been intended to be the Master of the House, judging from the cut dialogue. So the official equation is:

Ghost Host = Hatchet Man = Hanging Man = Master of the House

Meanwhile, Master Gracey and the Foyer Guy don't have anything to do with anything. 

The Fanon:

Lots of fans remained unaware of the Hatchet Man until the Internet. What they did know was this truncated version:

Ghost Host = Hanging Man = Master of the House.

Now, some fans saw the portrait of the Foyer Guy who seems like a predominant character, probably the Master of the House. They developed the idea that:

Foyer Guy = Master of the House

However, neither Foyer Guy or Master of the House are “names”, so they looked for an official named that would suit the "Master of the House", and they came across Master Gracey.

Their idea from that point onward was:

Foyer Guy = Master Gracey = Master of the House

The fans that had made the Ghost Host/Master of the House connection contacted those who had cooked up the Master Gracey/Foyer Guy/Master of the House one,  and the fanon story became:

Master of the House = Foyer Guy = Master Gracey = Hanging Man = Ghost Host

Then they cooked up more stories about how Master Gracey had come to hang himself and whatnot, usually revolving around a tragic love story with the Bride in the attic.

The Movie:

The Haunted Mansion spin-off movie borrowed various ideas from the fanon, and its equation was:

  Master of the House = Foyer Guy = Edward Gracey

Their Edward Gracey having had, obviously, a tragic love story with the Bride, Elizabeth, interrupted when the evil Ramble = Butler = Ghost Host murdered her.

The Merchandise:

Either merchandise designers are also fan-theorists, or they want to sell stuff to fan-theorists, because the Ghost Host/Foyer Guy/Master Gracey connection was used in several merchandise items. The real Imagineers who knew the real stories kept fighting the merchandise guys who used the fanon story, resulting in various items being taken back from shops by the Imagineers, only to be put back there by the Merchandisers, etc.

Still following ? Okay.

Where does Kelly come in ?

So, nowadays, the real story has surfaced and everyone pretty much accepted that Ghost Host = Hatchet Man. However, old habits are hard to change and they just won't give up that Foyer Guy = Master Gracey and that this Foyer Master Gracey must still be someone important. So the new trend is that Master Gracey was either the Hatchet Man's brother or nephew.

Kelly seems to use this idea, though it's not quite clear. But my point with telling you this long story  about fan theories was that it's pretty much where the point of Kelly's gag lies: Master Gracey is, literally, trying to be the Ghost Host, and the Ghost host just won't let him.


On a less serious note, that little “inhale” bit before the long "PLEAEEEEEEEEAAAAAAAASE" adds a great deal of hilarious nonsensicality to the piece — additionally, you've got to wonder how Master Gracey, a skeleton, can inhale anything.

Also, the Ghost Host's stern expression, which is reminding of "The Best pal he'll ever have", is hilarious, as usual. Kelly seems to have slightly changed her rendering of him, too; his chin is much less pointy than in, say, "Rude". 

So yes, it's a good strip ! Bravo again.