The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror

The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, commonly refered to as The Tower of Terror, is a simulated freefall drop tower thrill ride at Disney's Hollywood Studios in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, Disney California Adventure in Anaheim, California and at Walt Disney Studios Park in Paris, France. It is based on the classic anthology television series, The Twilight Zone and is hosted by the series' creator, Rod Serling. The original incarnation of the attraction opened in Disney's Hollywood Studios in 1994, with the California version opening in 2004 and the Paris version, in 2007. A similar attraction without the Twilight Zone theme opened at Tokyo DisneySea in Japan in 2006. The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror has since become one of the most classic and popular Disney attractions ever. In it's popularity spawned a 1997 TV film adaptation, becoming the first film to be based on a theme park ride.

In the attraction's storyline, adapted from elements of the television series; guests enter the legendary Hollywood Tower Hotel. Once a lively resort for the Hollywood elite, it closed after a disasterous accident where lightning had struck the building causing an elevator carrying 5 people and several wings of the hotel to mysteriously vanish on October 31st, 1939. The hotel, now dilapidated and haunted, beckons guests to relive the events of that fateful night aboard one of the basement freight elevators, as they part-take in their own "episode" of The Twilight Zone.

The hotel's exterior features a big, blackened scorch mark across the front of the facade where lightning had struck. Elevator doors leading to the missing floors of the building are exposed, opening and closing upon the arrival of screaming riders. All of the cast members wear a costume that resembles that of a 1930s bellhop. At over one thousand dollars (US) per uniform, it is the most expensive costume in the entire chain.

At 199 feet, it is the second tallest attraction at the Walt Disney World Resort, shorter only than Expedition: Everest's 199.5 feet. (From 1999 to 2007, Tower of Terror was third tallest, as the wand decorating Spaceship Earth temporarily added 41 feet to that 180-foot tall attraction.) The Tower of Terror is 199 feet high at Walt Disney World because of FAA regulations that require a fixed red light beacon to be added to the top of any 200-foot or taller building. Imagineers thought that the beacon would take away from the hotel's 1939 theme. At the Disneyland Resort, the 183-foot attraction is the tallest attraction at the resort, as well as the tallest building in Anaheim.

CBS licenses rights to The Twilight Zone™ to Disney Theme Parks.

Queue & Pre-Show
In both versions of the attraction, guests enter the once-luxurious Hollywood Tower Hotel through its main entrance gate. The outdoor queue winds itself through the hotel's overgrown gardens, where ghostly 30s jazz music is playing, and enters the lobby. The lobby is filled with decades worth of dust, cobwebs and various items left by guests from the night of the accident. From this point, guests are lead into the hotel's library to wait as their "rooms are still being prepped". Through the window, guests can observe that there is a thunderstorm going on outside. Lightning strikes and the television set comes on, apparently of its own accord. The opening sequence of Season 4 of The Twilight Zone television series plays, followed by an explanation of the events hosted by Rod Serling: the story is that the hotel's elevator plummeted after being struck by lightning and the five people that were inside that elevator (Claire Poulet, Gilbert London, Dewey Todd, Sally Shine and Emeline Partridge) disappeared. He then invites the guests, if they dare, to step aboard the maintenance service elevator, which is the only elevator in the hotel that is still in operation. With that, the TV abruptly shuts off and a sliding wall in the back of the library opens. The guests exit the library and enter the boiler room, where they wait until their elevator is ready.

Although the ride is designed to feel like a freefall, the elevator is actually accelerated downward faster than the pull of gravity for extra thrills.

In an effort to be true to the spirit of The Twilight Zone, Disney Imagineers reportedly watched every episode of the original television show at least twice. The attraction is littered with references to various Twilight Zone episodes.

Disney's Hollywood Studios version
The ride system employs specialized technology developed specifically for Disney, particularly the ability to move the vehicle in and out of the vertical motion shaft. The elevator cars are self-propelled, automated vehicles which lock into the vertical motion cabs. The cabs move into and out of the elevators horizontally, move through the "Fifth Dimension" scene and into the drop shaft. After the vehicle has completed its drop profile, the vehicle propels itself to the unload area and then back to the show shaft. The Floridian ride system runs on a loop, though it's not as efficient as the newer "franchise" versions used in California, Paris and Tokyo. The self-propulsion system used in the vehicles often causes some long and complicated downtimes which are, of course, frustrating to cast members and guests.

In this version of the attraction, the voice of Rod Serling greets the now-seated passengers the moment the elevator doors close, saying "You are the passengers on a most uncommon elevator about to ascend into your very own episode of The Twilight Zone". The elevator rises for a few seconds before coming to a stop.

The doors open to reveal a corridor populated by the five lost ghostly occupants from 1939, who then disappear. The corridor fades to a starlit night sky, except the window at the end of the corridor. The window then morphs into a more ghostly black-and-white version and shatters (like in the opening sequence of each episode).

The elevator doors close again and the car continues ascending. Serling's voice continues: "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".

At the top, the doors open again and the car mysteriously moves forward out of the shaft, through a section of the ride called The Fifth Dimension: a surreal collection of objects and sights, once again in the style of the television show's opening sequence.

A field of stars appear at the end of the corridor. After the segment is done, the stars fade, forming a hidden Mickey right before disappearing, then reveals a vertical line, which splits in half and opens like elevator doors. Serling's voice is heard again, saying "You are about to discover what lies beyond the fifth dimension, beyond the deepest, darkest corner of the imagination, in the Tower of Terror".

After the elevator moves into the shaft, the randomly-selected drop sequence begins. At one point, doors in front of the riders open to reveal a view of the park from a height of 13 stories.

In the years since the attraction's initial opening, a randomized pattern of drops and lifts have been added, where the ride vehicle will drop or rise various distances at different intervals. Other effects were also added, including new projection images of the breaking window, wind effects and ominous black-lit figures of the five ghostly original riders. These changes were made to make every trip to the Twilight Zone a different experience.

After a series of these drops have been made, the opening sequence of the show's third season plays (showing images of the objects from Season 5's opening, the lost passengers and Serling) as the vehicle enters the hotel's basement. Then Rod Serling's voice says "A warm welcome back to those of you who made it and a friendly word of warning; something you won't find in any guidebook. 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 may find yourself a permanent resident...of The Twilight Zone." The elevator doors reopen for the last time and the guests disembark, making their way into the hotel's gift shop, Tower Hotel Gifts.

The current slogan for the ride is "Never the Same Fear Twice!!"

Disney California Adventure version
While similar in concept and theme to the original attraction in Florida, the version of this attraction in Disney California Adventure Park does have some differences.

In order to conserve space and money, Imagineers redesigned the entire ride system for the west coast incarnation of the attraction and made some general changes to the show scenes. The attraction features three elevator shafts. Each shaft, in theory, is its own separate ride with its own separate operating system. Doing this made it easier to repair individual areas of the attraction without causing the entire attraction to go down. Each shaft has two vehicles and two loading levels. It is designed so that the lower vehicle can be in profile while the upper vehicle is loading, making the attraction much more efficient. Since each vehicle loads and unloads from the same point, it also saves space. Since this system works so much more efficiently, it is the system used in both the Paris and Tokyo versions of the ride as well.

When the show cycle starts, the vehicle pushes backwards away from the elevator door while a starfield appears around it and a purple spiral appears on the doors. The voice of Rod Serling says "You are the passengers of 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". A door closes, placing riders in darkness as the elevator rises.

The first stop for the elevator is a hallway with a large mirror. Rod Serling tells the riders to "wave goodbye to the real world". As they do, lightning strikes and electricity begins to arc around the mirror and the reflection of the riders is replaced by a ghostly silhouette of themselves. The passengers' reflection then disappears as Serling says "For you have just entered...The Twilight Zone!" This is actually a thermal-mirror, which shuts off to reveal the dummy vehicle behind it. The elevator door closes as it moves to the next show scene.

As the door reopens, it reveals a corridor of the hotel, with an elevator door located on the far end of it. Here, Serling says "What happened here to dim the lights of Hollywood's brightest showplace is about to unfold once again", which is followed by an appearance of the 5 lost passengers. Electricity courses through the hallway after their disappearance as Serling says "One stormy night long ago, five people stepped through the door of an elevator and into a nightmare." The hallway slowly fades away into a starfield with the lost passengers standing in the now-open elevator that was at the end of the hallway. Serling then says "That door is opening once again, but this time, it's opening for you." The ghostly elevator then drops.

A second later, the guests' elevator begins its drop sequence: a drop from the show scene to the first floor, then a rise to the "13th" floor. After flashing strobe lights and the photo opportunity, the elevator has a short drop, followed by a longer one, then a rise that goes 2/3 of the way up to the top and an immediate fall down to "B3." The lights flicker as the elevator goes all the way back up to the top. It is then that the top floor doors open and you are treated to a sky-high overview of both Disneyland and California Adventure. It pauses there for a moment and falls into place between the load levels (so that both load levels give the same ride) and a door opens again and you see an elevator door. The vehicle begins moving toward the door. The Twilight Zone theme begins to play again as Rod Serling says "The next time you check into a deserted hotel on the dark side of Hollywood, be sure you know just what kind of vacancy you're filling or you may find yourself a permanent resident...of The Twilight Zone."

The door opens and the guests disembark from the ride vehicle, making their way to the Tower Hotel Gifts shop.

Seasonal enhancement
For the Disneyland Resort's HalloweenTime events, the exterior of The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror at Disney California Adventure receives special sound and lighting effects.

Walt Disney Studios Park version
The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror at Walt Disney Studios Park is based on the same designs as the version at the Disney California Adventure. However, it was originally "Imagineered" for the Paris park at the same time as Tokyo's tower and planned to open just 2 years after the opening of the park itself.

When financial troubles again hit Disney's Parisian theme park resort, the attraction was put on hold. In the mean time, it was constructed for Disney's California Adventure as an added crowd-puller.

The attraction was finally green-lit in 2005 and opened officially in January fo 2008 right in the middle of the park, behind the "La Terrasse" seating area. It has been joined by a major new theme development producing an outdoor Hollywood Boulevard of faux movie sets. Unlike its American cousins, the Paris Tower was constructed using concrete rather than steel due to French construction guidelines and standards.

The Paris and California versions were originally believed to become identical versions upon completion, but construction in Paris showed several differences and additions when compared to the 2004 Californian version.

The official name of the attraction in all French copy and publicty (but not at the attraction itself) will be La Tour de la Terreur - Un Plongeon dans la Quatrième Dimension.

Some sections of the attraction's audio narration and pre-show videos have be translated into French, including a new voice recording from an impersonator of The Twilight Zone's original French host, with separate English and French versions being presented.

Tokyo DisneySea version


The Tower of Terror at Tokyo DisneySea has no connection or tie-ins with The Twilight Zone, and is instead themed as the Hotel Hightower, a New York City 1890s hotel owned by eccentric billionaire Harrison Hightower III who disappeared while taking the elevator up to his private quarters shortly after taking a mysterious idol of a trickster spirit called Shiriki Utundu from an ancient civilization in Africa. A similar thing happened with the Disneyland Paris' version of The Haunted Mansion, which was instead called Phantom Manor. The facade is more gothic in architecture, and is located in the American Waterfront area of the park, opposite the S.S. Columbia cruise liner.

Twilight Zone References and Design Information
In an effort to be true to the spirit of The Twilight Zone, Imagineers reportedly watched every episode of the original television show at least twice. The attraction buildings are littered with references to various Twilight Zone episodes, including:
 * In the hotel lobby in the California Adventure version, there is a door with "22" in brass numbering. This is a reference to the episode "Twenty Two".
 * In the lobby of the hotel at California Adventure and Walt Disney Studios Paris, on a couch sits a dusty old doll. Some say the doll is supposed to be Talky Tina from the episode "Living Doll," but others say it's Sally Shine, the little girl in the pre-show and ride experience, from the 1997 TV movie Tower of Terror. Others think the doll is simply a Shirley Temple doll.
 * Following the Twilight Zone television opening sequence, Rod Serling's opening lines in the introduction video in the pre-show are as follows:"Tonight's story on The Twilight Zone is somewhat unique and calls for a different kind of introduction. This as you may recognize is a..."In the original episode, "It's a Good Life," Rod Serling says "...is a map of the United States." In the Tower of Terror opening lines, he says "...is a maintenance service elevator, still in operation, waiting for you..." Mark Silverman provided the entire voice impersonation of Serling for this particular dialogue sequence for both the Walt Disney World and California Adventure versions of the ride.
 * At all versions besides Tokyo's, the pre-show includes the little girl holding a Mickey Mouse plush toy, along with her still holding it in the hallway scene during the ride. At California Adventure, there is a picture behind the counter in the gift shop that is said to be of Walt Disney at a Tip Top Club party holding a Mickey Mouse plush toy as well.
 * Outside the libraries at California Adventure, in the glass case adjacent to the doors, there is a gold thimble accompanied by a card that reads, "Looking for a gift for Mother? Find it in our Gift Shop!" This is a reference to the episode "The After Hours".
 * In the library, the Mystic Seer fortune-telling machine from the episode "Nick of Time" can be seen sitting on the high shelf.
 * In the Florida library, there is the book titled To Serve Man from the episode of the same name.
 * At California Adventure, envelopes with the names Rod Serling and Victoria West can be found in both libraries, near the sliding wall--a reference to the episode "A World of His Own". In Library 1, it sticks out of the top of the green books. In Library 2, it sits in front of the books. The green books contain titles of select Twilight Zone episodes. Other books in the libraries are in various languages from around the world, including German and Danish.
 * The trumpet from the episode "A Passage for Trumpet" can be seen in the display while exiting the libraries.
 * The queue at both the California Adventure and Paris versions features a reference to the episode "Little Girl Lost". Chalk marks on the walls are in the same style that they were in the episode when trying to find where the portal to find the girl was. This can be found in the upper level of the boiler room next to the attraction warning signage at each of the 2 versions. Periodically, the girl's voice can be heard calling out for help from the wall and from the radios around the boiler room.
 * The elevator has a plaque that says the last time the elevator was checked. Its number is 10259, which is a nod to the date October 2, 1959, the date The Twilight Zone first aired. The plaque also states the elevator was checked by Mr. Cadwallader, the sinister deal-maker from the episode "Escape Clause."
 * After guests are loaded onto the elevator, the needle indicating which floor the elevator is on moves past the 12th floor. This is a reference to the 9th floor in the episode "The After Hours".
 * As the ride vehicles arrive at the unload area in the Florida version, the slot machine from the episode "The Fever" can be seen.
 * Upon exiting the Paris version, the display cases on the ground floor contain advertisements for, among other things, a "Housemaid Wanted" (a reference to the episode "I Sing The Body Electric") and for "A Pair of Reading Glasses Wanted" (from the episode "Time Enough At Last"). There are some 20 advertisements of this nature at the exit of the Paris version.
 * As the ride vehicles arrive at the unload area in the Florida version, the flying saucer from the episode "The Invaders" is hanging from the ceiling. The eponymous characters of that same episode can be found on display in the libraries at the Florida and California versions.
 * Both of the elevator unload areas of the Florida ride contain a display featuring, among other things, the ventriloquist dummy "Caesar" from the episode "Caesar and Me".
 * There is a display case in the photo gallery of the California Adventure version that contains two items relating to the episode "A Thing about Machines"; one is a typewriter (with the GET OUT OF HERE FINCHLEY message)--the card next to it reads "Almost Writes By Itself", there is also an electric razor--its card reads "Has A Long Cord - Can Follow You Everywhere." There is also a toy telephone from the episode "Long Distance Call" with a card saying "Perfect for the children's room and those late night calls from Grandma."
 * "Picture If You Will...", a phrase Rod Serling used in more than one Twilight Zone episode, appears in the gift shop where guests can buy their on-ride photos.
 * While exiting the California Adventure version, there is a display window for "Willoughby Travel", a nod to the episode "A Stop at Willoughby".
 * In the photo gallery of the California Adventure version, there is a poster advertising "Anthony Fremont's Orchestra." Anthony Fremont is the young boy with god-like powers from the episode "It's a Good Life". The poster also appears in the lobby of the Florida version.
 * One of the shafts at California (called the "Charlie" shaft by its cast members) features the mirror scene below the hallway scene while the other two ("Alpha" and "Bravo") feature it in the opposite position. This is because the engineering room (which contains all the computers that operate the attraction) is located behind the mirror scenes for Alpha and Bravo.
 * According to Imagineers, the California version contains no Hidden Mickeys. This is because Imagineers wanted to put more effort into references from The Twilight Zone.
 * In Florida's queue, just before the library, there is a board with white letters that announce various events scheduled at the hotel. Some of the letters have fallen to the bottom, and if you peer into the case, you can see that they spell out "EVIL TOWER U R DOOMED." These letters have since been removed. Several petitions on the Internet are active in hopes of returning the letters to the directory in the Florida lobby.

Soundtrack
The ride's main title was conducted by Richard Bellis and incorporates Marius Constant's iconic Twilight Zone theme, along the season one theme by Bernard Hermann. It can be found on several theme park albums:

In the queue for all versions of The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, over 20 tracks of classic jazz music from popular artists of the 1930s are played to accent the tower's 1939 setting.
 * Disneyland/Walt Disney World Music Vacation (as part of a medley)
 * Walt Disney World Resort: The Official Album (1999 CD)
 * Walt Disney World Resort: Official Album (2000 CD)
 * Official Album: Walt Disney World Resort Celebrating 100 Years of Magic (2001 CD)

The tracks played include:


 * 1) "I Can't Get Started" - Bunny Berigan
 * 2) "Mood Indigo" - Duke Ellington
 * 3) "Remember" - Red Norvo
 * 4) "Uptown Blues" - Jimmy Lunceford
 * 5) "Deep Purple" - Turner Layton
 * 6) "Jeep's Blues" - Johnny Hodges
 * 7) "Jungle Drums" - Sidney Bechet
 * 8) "Wishing (We'll Make it So) - Vera Lynn
 * 9) "There's A House In Harlem For Sale" - Red Allen
 * 10) "Sleepy Time Gal" - Glenn Miller
 * 11) "Pyramid" - Johnny Hodges
 * 12) "There's No Two Ways About It" - Frankie Newton
 * 13) "Alabam Home" - The Gotham Stompers
 * 14) "When The Sun Sets Down South" - Sidney Bechet
 * 15) "Inside (This Heart Of Mine)" - Fats Waller
 * 16) "Delta Mood" - Cootie Williams
 * 17) "I'm In Another World" - Johnny Hodges
 * 18) "Dear Old Southland" - Noble Sissle
 * 19) "Jitterbug Lullaby" - Johnny Hodges
 * 20) "We'll Meet Again" - Vera Lynn

Historical site
In Hollywood, California, visible from Highway 101, are the Hollywood Tower apartments on Franklin Avenue. A plaque by the front door reads:

"HOLLYWOOD TOWER. 1929. SOPHISTICATED LIVING FOR FILM LUMINARIES DURING THE 'GOLDEN AGE' OF HOLLYWOOD. PLACED ON THE REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR."

In 'Epic Mickey'
In one of the drawings from Epic Mickey, there was a large gothic building representing the Hollywood Tower Hotel.