Current:Home > reviewsJamie Lee Curtis discovers ‘lovely, weird’ family connection to ‘Haunted Mansion’ movie -NextFrontier Finance
Jamie Lee Curtis discovers ‘lovely, weird’ family connection to ‘Haunted Mansion’ movie
Burley Garcia View
Date:2025-04-06 21:04:55
Grim Grinning Ghosts are back to socialize.
“Haunted Mansion” (in theaters Friday) puts a bittersweet spin on the iconic Disney attraction, exactly 20 years after Eddie Murphy’s critically reviled comedy. The new movie follows a mourning paranormal expert named Ben (LaKeith Stanfield), who’s summoned to a spooky New Orleans estate to help a widow (Rosario Dawson) drive out ghosts.
The all-star film includes Tiffany Haddish as kooky medium Harriet, as well as Oscar winner Jamie Lee Curtis, playing a clairvoyant disembodied head named Madame Leota (a centerpiece of the theme park ride). The movie is filled with jokes and callbacks that Disney superfans will appreciate, but also grapples with weightier themes of family and grief.
"I've been at that attraction since I was a little, little girl," Curtis told USA TODAY in a joint interview with Haddish prior to the Screen Actors Guild strike. "We all have a tremendous emotional response to that attraction. It evokes a lot of memories."
Curtis, 64, and Haddish, 43, tell us more about “Haunted Mansion,” Groupon tours and supernatural experiences.
'Haunted Mansion' review:Don't expect a ton of chills in Disney's safe ghost ride
'Haunted Mansion' movie has a 'beautiful' connection to Janet Leigh
Eleanor Audley voiced Madame Leota in the original Haunted Mansion ride, which opened at Disneyland in 1969. (Fun fact: She also played Maleficent in Disney’s animated “Sleeping Beauty” and the wicked stepmother in “Cinderella.”) Years earlier, Audley made a brief appearance in the 1963 romantic comedy “Wives and Lovers,” starring Curtis’ late mother, Janet Leigh.
“You know what? I did not realize that. That’s interesting,” Curtis says. “That’s a lovely, weird, little connect-the-dot. And that’s the beautiful part of this (film): the connection to our memories of our past. It’s a movie about loss and letting go of spirits and reconnecting with them. So the fact that there’s a connect-the-dot back to my mother and the woman in the original crystal ball, it just tells you that we’re right where we’re supposed to be: connected back to the past in a modern way.”
More:Jamie Lee Curtis gave her Oscar a googly eye, says 'EGOT, I'm comin' for ya!'
Tiffany Haddish spent $3,000 learning to play a psychic
Haddish took her prep work for Harriet very seriously. She visited a medium to learn how they communicate with spirits, as well as a Reiki practitioner, who taught her about energy healing.
“I spent about $3,000 in research for this project,” Haddish says. “I let them do a reading, and then I asked a lot of questions about how they do what they do. I don't know if I learned much, but it's a tax write-off because it's research for work!"
“Wow. I did absolutely nothing,” Curtis quips. Although, "there was a perfume I wore that had a musk. I'm an olfactory person, so the characters that I play have very specific perfumes. It's the perfume that my friend Melanie Griffith's daughter, Stella, (makes). She produces a perfume that I thought was perfect for Madame Leota.”
Jamie Lee Curtis was fastened in place for Madame Leota scenes
Although Leota is famously trapped in a crystal ball, "Haunted Mansion" flashes back in time to explain how she got there. Curtis relished the character's "exquisite" gown, which she accessorized with an ornate headdress and cape.
“In my almost 47 years of being a professional actor, I’ve never worn costumes that beautiful,” Curtis says of the dress, designed by Jeffrey Kurland. “When it wins the Oscar, it’ll end up in the Academy Museum's permanent collection. It’s so gorgeous.”
Slightly less glamorous was the computer-generated crystal ball. To shoot those scenes, "they put 100 dots on your face, they put your head in a vise, and all the other actors around you are laughing and having a great time, and you can't move,” Curtis recalls. Leota's hair, too, was created using visual effects: “As you can tell, Mommy doesn't have giant hair."
Haddish took her castmates on an 'intoxicated' Groupon ghost tour
Haddish is no stranger to New Orleans. The actress shot 2018’s “Girls Trip” in the Big Easy, and went viral with her story of taking Will and Jada Pinkett Smith on a Groupon swamp tour. Returning to the city to shoot "Haunted Mansion," she treated her new co-stars to a Groupon ghost tour.
"You know me," Haddish says with a laugh. "It was fun! We stopped at bars and had drinks, and then the person told us stories about every building. I know a lot of the stories are probably lies, but it doesn't matter. It was entertaining because we were intoxicated. You spend $100 on a Groupon, but then you spend another $100 on everybody's drinks. So it's actually not really a deal when you think about it.”
It 'wasn't mutual':Tiffany Haddish opens up about 2021 breakup with Common
The 'Girls Trip' star got a shocking visit from her late grandma
In one of the film's most touching scenes, Harriet comforts Ben by telling him about the idea of "ghost winks": little signs from your deceased loved ones that they're still looking after you. Haddish has had her own experiences with the phenomena.
"My grandmother passed away last year while we were shooting this movie, and one of my friends told me, 'Whenever you see a white feather, that's your grandmother visiting you,' " Haddish says. "The next day, I come out of my bedroom and there are feathers all over my living room, a bird laid out dead and my cat sitting on the chair. I was like, 'Grandma, why would you do this?!' It kind of messed me up and I did not like it.
"I was like, 'If this is Grandma, don't come to me like that! Don't disrespect my house – now I've got to clean all this up! If it was the reverse, you would be mad at me, so don't do that no more!' And now my grandma shows up in my dreams almost every single night."
veryGood! (784)
Related
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Former Trump officials are among the most vocal opponents of returning him to the White House
- Buy groceries at Walmart recently? You may be eligible for a class action settlement payment
- Tourist from Minnesota who was killed by an elephant in Zambia was an adventurer, family says
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- 2024 men's NCAA Tournament expert picks: Predictions for Saturday's Final Four games
- 'Ambitious' plan to reopen channel under collapsed Baltimore bridge by May's end announced
- Timeline of events: Kansas women still missing, police suspect foul play
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Judge dismisses lawsuit of injured Dakota Access pipeline protester
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Foul play suspected in the disappearance of two Kansas women whose vehicle was found in Oklahoma
- What Sofía Vergara and Joe Manganiello Are Each Getting in Their Divorce
- Chick-fil-A via drone delivery? How the fight for sky dominance is heating up
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- LeBron's son Bronny James will enter NBA Draft, NCAA transfer portal after year at USC
- Christine Quinn's Husband Christian Dumontet Files for Divorce Following His Arrests
- RFK Jr. campaign disavows its email calling Jan. 6 defendants activists
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Man convicted in decades-long identity theft that led to his victim being jailed
Condemned inmate could face ‘surgery without anesthesia’ if good vein is elusive, lawyers say
Brazil and Colombia see remarkable decrease in forest destruction after leadership changes, data show
Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
Man convicted of hate crimes for attacking Muslim man in New York City
An appeals court blocks a debt relief plan for students who say they were misled by colleges
South Carolina women stay perfect, surge past N.C. State 78-59 to reach NCAA title game