Disneyland’s Haunted Mansion Reveals a New Bride and Gives Her a New Ghostly Tale
The Haunted Mansion at Disneyland has reopened after its seasonal transformation into the Nightmare Before Christmas-themed Haunted Mansion Holiday.
While Jack Skellington has packed up his holiday decor, guests are stepping back into the original, classic spooky vibes of the iconic attraction, but it has reopened with a surprising twist.
One of the ride’s most memorable characters, The Bride, has gone through another change. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Kim Irvine, Disneyland’s Executive Creative Director of Imagineering, shared some insights about the bride’s revamped backstory, and it’s one that aligns more closely with the attraction’s mysterious origins when it first opened.
Irvine explained: “We thought, what if we change the story back a little bit to the original story that the Imagineers had about a lost bride in the attic mourning the loss of her husbands. It was a sad thing. It was a story about lost love.”
This update steps away from the more sinister “Black Widow Bride” story that had been part of the Haunted Mansion since its last major update in the early 2000s.
That version focused on her darkly humorous story that she was a vengeful ghost who killed her numerous husbands with an axe.
Irvine added: “The bride that used to be in there was an axe murderer, and in this day and age we have to be really careful about the sensitivities of people.
“We were celebrating someone chopping off her husbands’ heads, and it was a weird story. I know the fans—some will like it and some will say, ‘Oh, you changed something again.’ That’s our job. That’s what we’re here for.”
In her latest incarnation, the bride is a spectral figure of sorrow, a forlorn ghost whose lovers have mysteriously disappeared. Did they pass away? Did they abandon her? The details remain intentionally vague, creating an air of mystery that invites guests to interpret the story for themselves.
This shift brings a more emotional tone to the character, leaning into the gothic romance themes that defined the Haunted Mansion’s early days.
The Haunted Mansion is one of my favorite attractions at Disneyland, and while I always enjoyed the axe-murdering lore of The Bride and the delightfully dark energy it brought to the ride, I also think it’s cool to go back to the way the character was originally envisioned.
Either way, it’s clear that the Imagineers wanted to create something that would resonate with today’s audiences while respecting the mansion’s rich legacy.
The Haunted Mansion is now open at Disneyland, just in time to gear up for the park’s 70th-anniversary celebrations later this year.
I included a video below along with an image featuring the evolution of The Bride over the years.