Rocky Point Haunted House
Rocky
Point Haunted House was one of the greatest haunted houses in our
industries history. Sadly this attraction closed after nearly 30
years of operation in Salt Lake City, Utah. Rocky Point closed after
Halloween season of 2006. Below is an interview with the attraction
owner Cydney Neil.
Q: It’s been a long road for you in the
haunted house industry. How did you get into the business, give us
some background history.
A: I grew up wanting to be a model, a
dancer, an actress, and I was doing all of those things. I loved
beautiful things and surrounded myself with everything glamorous. I
do remember creating a haunted house inside of our family home every
year. And the Munsters, the Adams Family, the Twilight Zone and
Nightmare Theatre were some of my favorite television shows growing
up. In spite of that; as an adult, Halloween or anything haunted
held absolutely no interest for me. In the beginning, I thought my
involvement in this industry came by accident, default. However, I
no longer believe in accidents and I have come to understand that
this has been more about fate. I realized some time ago that I had a
purpose to fulfill, a mission to accomplish, and that where I was,
was exactly where I was meant to be. And now, after feeling I have
truly completed my “assignment”, I will look back on my “long road”
over the past twenty years in this business as some of the most
valuable of my life.
Q: Early on did you think you’d stay
with it that this could be a career for you?
A: Not in a million years! I went back
to Utah for what I thought was a two week stay to help my father
with our family building, I was horrified to find a haunted house
taking place there and tried to shut it down. But instead of closing
it, I found myself taking it over! Frankly, early on, it was like a
nightmare for me that I couldn’t wait to wake up from! As many
people know, I tried to get out of it and away from it for many
years. It took me a long time, but once I finally accepted it as
where I was meant to be and began giving it my heart and soul,
things changed drastically, for me, my business and everyone
involved. It was an amazing transformation that taught me a lot
about the power of our attitude and perspective. I came to find out
that my unconventional business provided everything I ever wanted
and much, much more. So, did I become a star? No, thank God. My tiny
taste of fame has taught me that I would never have been happy with
that. I feel very blessed as I believe I have experienced and
created something far more valuable. I have had the opportunity to
make a difference in the world, to help change people’s lives, to
contribute in ways I never expected, to work harder than I ever
could have imagined and to create something far beyond what I even
knew I was capable of. Ironically, as I now understand, in order for
me to grow in the ways I needed to, it had to be within a business
that didn’t appear to suit me. And the kids I believe I was called
to serve could only be found and gathered in the dark, seemingly
rebellious atmosphere of a haunted house. So I guess you could say,
don’t judge a career by its cover! It may have hard for me to
understand in the beginning, but in the end, my haunted house career
was perfect for me! 
Q: Considering almost ALL haunt owners
are men, have you ever felt out of place either from the industry or
locals who think its crazy that a woman owns a haunted house?
A: I don’t believe I have felt “out of
place” because I was a woman. I wasn’t raised to believe that men
and women couldn’t do the same things. My business was my own, I
didn’t answer to anyone or have to prove myself to anyone and being
a woman in this business has actually had several advantages. The
press never tired of the story of a glamorous woman in a seemingly
unglamorous industry. I was able to make a lot of connections and
gain a lot of support because I wasn’t who people expected to see
when they scheduled a meeting with the owner of a haunted
attraction. And to have a woman’s ability to create a home, with a
heart, I believe was the biggest advantage. My haunted house ended
up being a home of sorts for many people and my entire cast and crew
became a family. Few men appreciate the power of love in a business.
But as a woman, love was the foundation of my business, and
consequentially its success. I have, of course, been painfully aware
at times of the challenge it has been for the men in this industry
to accept me and especially in the position I assumed. Men are
naturally competitive I think, and can compete with each other
pretty civilly. But I don’t think they like to compete with a woman,
we play by different rules and frankly, I always feel competing is a
waste of time. Honestly, I wish it would have been different. I
believe that attitude, the fear and the egos cost the industry
dearly. I expect there are more than a few men happy to see me
retire!
Q: From what I understand you’ve never
liked horror, Halloween, or any of that stuff. So how is it that you
ever stayed in the haunted house industry this long if you don’t
have a love of the industry or holiday.
A: One of the big lessons I needed to
learn in life is that the cover, the façade, the outside of anything
or anyone can be deceiving and to look underneath the surface to
find true meaning and beauty. So to learn that lesson, it makes
sense I would be placed in a business that appeared so different on
the outside than what I felt I wanted and who I thought I was. I
stayed in it so long because underneath the surface, I discovered it
held everything I loved and everything I wanted. I could utilize
every one of my skills from acting and make-up to costume and set
design in creating the event. Creatively, because of its darkness,
it became far more interesting in its textures and depth than the
beautiful things that compared, now seem almost boring. I could use
my marketing, pr, my organizational skills and even my accounting
skills to establish the business aspect, an area that has been
essential for my long-term growth and success. I also had an
opportunity to get to know and associate with thousands of kids,
most of who I needed to look beyond their surfaces to appreciate who
they are. I ended up finding some of the most beautiful people in
the world who I have been inspired by, humbled by and changed from
knowing. I am grateful for the wisdom and foresight of God who
understands us and what we need far beyond what we ever could. I
have learned that lesson well, along with many others that will no
doubt be determining factors in my future and how I look at the
world from now on.
Q: You’ve had the privilege to have many
professional make-up artists work on your show. From my
understanding Michael Burnett had a major role in the early years of
RPH. Tell us about that?
A: Michael Burnett was introduced to me
in 1991 by a friend who was the entertainment director of Knotts
Berry Farm. I was looking for skeletons and corpses and Michael was
making some really nice kits for both at the time. We became
friends, he loved haunted houses and I brought him to Utah to teach
some make-up effects classes to my artists. He came up for about 3
or 4 years. At the same time, Chris Hanson, who lived in Utah, was
dabbling in special effects and after an introduction to Michael,
Chris quickly moved to Hollywood and started working with Michael.
Chris then went on to work for nearly every major effects studio in
LA, including Rick Baker. Once Chris had honed his skills, I hired
him to head up my make-up effects department for my show. We
continued my training program for local artists and through the
years have watched several talented people realize their own dreams
of going to Hollywood. I have several friends in the industry, Brian
Penikas is another who comes up every year and does a workshop. But
as far as having “many make-up artists working on my show”, that’s
not the case. Chris and I design all the main make-ups and then we
work with a group of talented, eager to learn people who apply the
100 plus make-ups our show requires every night.
Q: From my understanding many of your
set pieces, props and other items come from real Hollywood movies or
television shows. The façade on your haunt was the façade in a real
television show. Tell us more about how you acquired so many awesome
props. 
A: I have been very fortunate to have
many dear friends in the film industry and they have been very
generous in donating to me hundreds of movie props through the
years. Some of the props I have used in my show, but most I have
sold to raise money for charity. I have used props and set pieces
from Disneyland, Universal, The Mummy Returns, Flatliners, Bats,
Hellraiser, and many more. The façade of my Haunted Mansion set came
from the television show, Promised Land that was produced in Salt
Lake. We actually took a section of it and rebuilt it to fit our
set. Its really beautiful. Recently, I heard someone say that sure,
if they had connections in Hollywood they could have a “killer show”
too. Obviously, that person has never seen my show. My connections
are more of personal friendships and while its true, I have movie
props scattered throughout my sets, it hardly make my show what it
is! I really haven’t needed to bring Hollywood in to create my show.
My crew and I are basically from that industry and work at that same
level. And actually, my film friends who have visited are far more
impressed with my show than much of what they see in Hollywood!
Q: Back in the old days you had two RPHH.
What happened to the other one and why did you consolidate down to
one?
A: Both shows were growing so rapidly
and I didn’t have a permanent location for either. It was way too
much work having two shows that had to be torn down and rebuilt and
managed each year. I lived in Salt Lake and I wanted to concentrate
my efforts on one show closer to my home. I sold the props from the
Ogden show in 1999. The Ogden show had been going 20 years and
within two years after I sold it, it had closed. On the other side,
the first year after I sold the Ogden show the Salt Lake show
produced the same income the two had produced combined. It was the
right move.
Q: For years now you have been speaking
about getting out of the business, specifically Hanf-o-domas aka
Rich Hanf has been predicting for years you’d say you’re quitting
only to return another year. Why have you said for so many years the
next one will be the last one, and never quit but finally did.
A: Regardless of all my insight into the
value and purpose of what I was doing and all the lessons I was
learning and the contributions I was making to the community, it
remained a business that I just didn’t feel connected to. The “Queen
of Haunts” is not who I am. It was kind of like being in school and
feeling like a school kid who wants to graduate. It was interesting
that as soon after I totally surrendered to and accepted the
possibility that this may be a lifelong calling, I began to feel
like that calling was coming to and end. As much as we feel want to
control things, God’s timetable is not our own. It was a longer
process than I ever could have imagined, but looking back, I am
grateful for every minute and wouldn’t have wanted it to end any
sooner. But you also have to let go when you’re told its time. Its
time now. Its complete. I guess as much as it has bothered me that
Rich and others have made a joke about it, I knew they couldn’t
understand, nor did I feel inclined to defend myself or explain. It
was a spiritual journey I was on. How could they have related to
that and would they have made a joke about that too? It’s likely
they still will. But that is a reflection on them, not me.
Q: I know you have some very specific
views on our industry both positive and negative. What are your
views both negative and positive about our industry? What do you
think is going right and what is going wrong?
A: Well, the positive side is that I
feel the industry, and I mean everything to do with Halloween and
Haunting, is just beginning to take shape, to become what it will,
that it has tremendous potential on a global scale to become a
massive industry, much more so that it already is. Those people who
have positioned themselves as professionals and who have developed a
business and created quality products will very soon begin to
seriously reap the rewards. I was just getting to the point where my
show was not only running perfectly; it was making a lot of money.
In many ways it is the worst time for me to exit, but I have never
been motivated by the money and my purpose in my own life and in the
lives of my staff has been served. I believe that as long as they
establish a solid foundation of quality and safety, even the small
haunts also have much to gain and can ride that same wave to
tremendous success. Ultimately, it is the theme parks I predict will
be the leaders as they just have the ability (the real estate!) to
handle the growth and they have the budgets and the organization to
sustain that growth long term. The negative side of this or any
industry is when egos have the opportunity to supercede excellence.
In my opinion, this industry has been crippled and damaged by this
problem and its growth rate has been much slower than was necessary
as a result but again, the positive side is that ultimately, in the
end, excellence always wins out! 
Q: Has it ever bothered you that from
time to time you’ve been perceived a certain way in the industry,
and or mentioned by Hanf-o-damos countless times? Who is the real
Cydney Neil and what do people have wrong about you?
A: Again, their opinions and remarks have always said more about
them than me. Confidence, experience, professionalism and a
commitment to excellence has been perceived as arrogance, and once
again, that attitude has not benefited the industry they say they
care about. What people don’t know about me I guess is that, first,
I know how to do more than just sell sponsorships! In fact, that is
probably my weakest area! I am a designer, a producer, a manager, a
creator and I have designed and created everything that makes up my
haunted house from the sets to the sound, the make-up, the costumes,
to all of its programs. I have an amazing support staff who are my
hands, who I give so much credit to, but my haunt was my creation.
My spiritual side is something few people in this industry know
about me, but then I still don’t feel comfortable sharing much of
that in this forum. But if Halloween is not who I am, my spiritual
side is who I am.
Q: You’ve done a fantastic job of
finding sponsorships to your haunted house. For those not on your
level what advice can you give them?
A: First, to realize that sponsorship is
a small part of your overall puzzle. That it should be looked at as
a marketing tool and possibly some budget relief, but never counted
on to take the place of a great marketing plan and or a sufficient
budget. Sponsorship has changed over the years. Ultimately, if you
can sell someone’s product, bring them customers or in any way, show
a return on their investment, that is what they are looking for. Few
sponsors care much about logos being placed on posters and t-shirts.
Know your market, know what your product is and what you have to
offer, research suitable sponsors based on your own event and get
creative in how to create win-win situations. My advice on many
levels is to first establish your business and create an amazing
product. Sponsorships are much easier to sell with your own
foundation in place!
Q: What advice can you give a haunt owner who desires to have a
haunt on your level?
A: Start with a good sound business
plan, you are in business. Think twenty years down the road, buy
property, establish a foundation, know you have enough budget to do
it right, prepare to work very, very hard for a long, long time,
hire quality people with integrity who are team players and then
treat them really well, put on your best suit when you attend
meetings, be professional, gain the support of your community, find
a way to give back from the beginning, make friends with your
inspectors by doing everything they ask you to and then some, make
safety a priority, always think quality and strive for excellence in
every area, be honest in your business, always pay your bills on
time, learn how to write, follow through on your commitments and
don’t plan on having a successful personal relationship at the same
time! Just a few things off the top of my head!
Q: You’ve always had a unique operation
in that you run your business as a charity. Can you tell us some
pros and cons and how this is set up? What are the benefits and do
you suggest others follow your lead?
A:
My set up is actually quite unique and involved, but there are many
different ways of creating win-win situations with charities. I
spoke about partnering with a charity years ago, but few people
understood what I was talking about or even wanted to listen. My
philosophy is more about a way of life, rather than an actual
business strategy, although in the end it has been a great one;
believing that as you give, so shall you receive. As a result of
that belief, my business has made a lot of money over the years, and
at the same time we have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for
charity and established an incredible youth program that has changed
literally thousands of kids lives. I have given much but in the end,
I have received much, much more.
Q: What would you consider some of your
most costly mistakes or failures? And what do you consider to be
your greatest successes?
A: If I would have known I was going to
be in the business twenty years, I would have done nearly everything
with that in mind from the beginning. I would have purchased
property I have spent a fortune leasing, I would have purchased
equipment I have spent much more renting over the years. I would
have established a business from the beginning instead of putting it
together piece by piece or years thinking each year would be my
last!
Although I am extremely proud of what I
have accomplished in every area, there is no question that the youth
programs I established and the people’s lives they have affected
will have the most lasting value and ultimately, along with my own
life changing lessons, what the past twenty years has been about.
Q: Tell us exactly how many people
visited RPHH over the whole run? How many combined ad dollars did
you spend, sponsorship dollars you raised, even some odd and end
figures to blow our minds, much like McDonalds (20 billion served).
LOL!
A: Well, it hasn’t been 20 billion,
although some nights it felt like it! In 2006 we put through 65,349
people. In the four or five years previous, we put through between
50-60,000 people, always increasing every year. I actually have the
records but I will guess that we have “served” nearly a million
people over our 27 year run.
Q: Will you miss this?
A: I am not normally a person who looks
back much or misses things. There is always too much to focus on in
the moment and look forward to in the future. But then, I have never
done anything so wholeheartedly for twenty years so I don’t know
exactly what to expect. I guess I will find out down the road…I
believe that when you give something everything you have, when you
couldn’t have done any more or done anything differently, when you
have no regrets and have so much success to look back on and
momentum from that success to move forward with, there isn’t much
reason to look back or miss something. I am feeling like it as
complete in every way, so there isn’t anything missing.
If anything, I will miss the kids, who I
love as my own children. And I may miss creating on such a grand
scale and pushing myself to my limits. I guess if I miss it, I can
always start again!
Q: In the future will you still be
involved with the haunt industry? Will you attend TW or other
haunted functions? Will you do consulting? Just will you do?
A: I have been asked to do some
consulting and I expect I will try to assist others as much as I can
while my experience is still fresh. I have learned a lot over the
years and I would like to share that before I completely disappear.
But since Haunting is not really my love, I am really looking
forward to beginning again, in an area where I feel like I belong.
I am still very focused on my business
and the kids and finishing this chapter of my life, so I haven’t
started thinking much about or writing the next chapter. I am kind
of looking forward to life surprising me again as it did with this!
In a big way though, I am retiring from
work as I have known it. I want a personal life, I want to spend
time with my boyfriend, my friends, my parents and family, I want to
golf and ski, go hiking and put some miles on my motorcycle, go to
dinner, travel, read and write; all of the things I have set aside
to in order to see this mission through. It is important to me that
I have truly earned this time in my life and I am going to enjoy it!
Q: Will it hurt to finally see your
haunt torn down and auctioned off knowing its gone forever? How much
of your heart is in this attraction?
A: I think I have prepared myself
somewhat. I cried for weeks after I made the decision to close. I
couldn’t imagine someone else having any of it. I guess that is
still nearly impossible for me to imagine. The industry may not have
had much of my heart but my haunt has had all of it. This is the
first question that got me all choked up. Thanks Larry! It will be
one of the hardest things I have ever done to tear it all apart and
I am not looking forward to it. I will do it though as I know it is
the right thing and the right time and they are all just things in
the end. We can’t take them with us when we go so we probably ought
not get attached to them while we’re here!
Q: Over the years you’ve met a lot of
industry people and been considered a giant in the industry. Who are
some of your favorite people in this industry and why? Tell us any
of your favorite moments with others in this industry?
A: I’m glad you asked this because I
have talked about my heart not really being in the industry and I
have been afraid it would sound like I meant the people in the
industry. It really is the whole horror genre I don’t relate to. But
I have met many people who I have enjoyed getting to know and feel
privileged to have met.
Larry, in spite of everything, you
remain one of my favorite characters. If I were writing a screenplay
about the industry, you would no doubt be one of, if not the main
player! Your ego is both your worst downfall and your greatest
asset! Unlike mine, your heart is and always has been in this
industry and you have contributed a great deal to it. I think in the
end, being a father will prove to be your greatest teacher and
achievement. Congratulations on your success in both areas.
Of course, there are so many others in
the industry who I have met and gotten to know, some of whom are now
very dear friends who I wouldn’t have met otherwise. I wish I had
more time to spend with all of them on a more personal level.
Perhaps now I will!
Q: Tell us some of your strangest stories from operating your
haunted house.
A:
I guess if you consider ghost stories strange, which I don’t, my
experiences with many different spirits in my buildings have been
strange, but actually pretty amazing. One year I brought in a person
who channels spirits as I had a dark energy in one of my rooms that
I was keenly aware of but couldn’t seem to clear out myself. She
walked through my entire haunted house and in nearly every room she
encountered entities who all had stories about when they came to the
haunt and why they were there. It was pretty fascinating. She ended
up finding the dark spirit exactly in the room I felt him in and
began to tell me his story. To this day, I wish I would have
recorded her that day. It would have made an incredible movie. I
have had a few strange customers over the years, fans, well,
stalkers to be more accurate! And strange people who seriously get
so scared by a fake chainsaw they pass out! Okay now that’s just
strange!
Q: Over the years you’ve loved showing off your haunted house to
others in the industry. Why?
A: First, because it is my creation and
I have been extremely proud of it, the same way parents are
compelled to show you a wallet full of their kids’ pictures! And
second, because I knew it wouldn’t be around for long and I
genuinely wanted to share it with others as a means of possibly
inspiring them to reach to another level, to give them ideas and to
ultimately help the industry improve the quality of their shows.
Q: You love to do themed area’s in your
haunted house, what has been your favorites and why?
A: Always hard to pick a favorite as
once again, they are all like my children, every one different and
unique. But I have to say that the Pirates of the Scare-ibbean sets
we built for our 2006 show are pretty incredible. They will be our
best effort yet and one I was very happy I spent the money to
create. I also love the original Texas Chainsaw sets with all of the
bone furniture just like in the movie and our Creature from the
Black Lagoon set is really beautiful. Of course, although my
customers love all those sets, their all time favorite will remain
the entire Psycho Circus. There is just something really creepy
about clowns, especially in 3-D!
Q: What will you miss most about the
haunted house industry?
A: It’s uniqueness, it’s edginess, it’s
dichotomies. No matter what I do in the future, I don’t think I will
replace the amazing mix it has been for me of spirituality and
darkness, of fear and love, of beauty and horror, or the depth of
creativity required to do great rotting and blood and decomposition.
I will miss my employees and seeing the kid’s light up inside when
they achieve their goals. I guess I will miss more than I think.
Thanks again, Larry! Okay, no more what will you miss questions!
Q: Would you ever consider opening another haunted house in the
future? If so how would it be different than what you do now? I
can’t honestly answer that for certain. I don’t have any plans for
it, but if I decided to, the next level of what I would do is
already created in my head down to the tiniest detail! I guess time
will tell, but right now I would say no, I am not considering it.
Q: What has the biggest key to your success?
A: Being skilled in every area of what
the business required and an unwaivering commitment to make it not
only successful but the best.
Q: So now that it’s over, what are the
final plans for RPHH? Are you having another event, auction or
selling it out right?
A: I am planning our last Scream Break
for March/April of 2007, which will be our very last shows, ever. I
am still not certain where the show will end up.
Q: Any final thoughts?
A: Just to say thank you to you, Larry,
and to the entire industry for all the support I have been given and
shown over the years. It has been a journey that I will forever
value cherish as my most challenging and consequentially, cherish as
my most rewarding. I wish everyone the very best in all they do.
|