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A final horror fest from House of Shock

Jay Gracianette and Ross Karpelman started House of Shock  22 years ago.

Jay Gracianette and Ross Karpelman started House of Shock 22 years ago. (Photo: Hanna Rasanen)

Editor’s note: After shuttering after October 2014, volunteers from the House of Shock have recently rallied together to bring back New Orleans’ festive and beloved haunted house, House of Shock, for the 2015 Halloween season by launching a Kickstarter campaign. Led by House of Shock Production Manager and long-time volunteer Ashley Fallon-Shenton, the Resurrection Kickstarter’s goal is to bring back the attraction for at least one more year. The $25,000 Kickstarter campaign, launched on May 6, will run through June 5. 

Back in the fall of 1992, 22-year-olds Ross Karpelman and Jay Gracianette were knocking back a few drinks in the back yard, contemplating all the fun they used to have on Halloween growing up in New Orleans. They were too old for trick or treating, and not into bar hopping. They recalled the back-yard haunted houses they’d enjoyed as kids, and decided a little regression was in order.

The House of Shock was born.

“We pooled $800 to build the first one in a local back yard,” says Karpelman. They figured they’d make it back by charging a couple of bucks a head – but then discovered the reality of things like fire codes and building permits.

“So the next year we moved to a bigger back yard and I put up $2,000 of my own money. We built all the walls and created the sets, just like we do now in the big warehouse,” Karpelman says.

Jefferson Parish officials weren’t pleased. Oh, not because of the permits or the hammering, but because the theme of House of Shock always was, and always has been, things Satanic, celebrating all the dark forces of Hell.

“We were judged on content, and told we couldn’t do it because it was offensive,” says Karpelman, whose own House of Shock character is Lord Belial. “We always were looking to push the boundaries – I mean it is House of Shock (the name pays homage to the ultimate New Orleans Halloween character, Morgus the Magnificent). People really thought we were Satanists. They bought into it, and we sold it. We really were possessed.

“There was nothing else like what we were doing. We were young and intense and filled with the bravado of metal musicians. But we had to move it inside.”

house of shock (2 of 2)

The House of Shock will close its doors after the Nov. 1 performance. (Photo: Hanna Rasanen)

So in year three a warehouse was found, and stages and sets and walls and ghoulish, devilish things created. Personas invented, storylines spun. Rituals, incantations, mock child beatings, all realistically realized. Pantera frontman Philip Anselmo got involved, as did Steve Joseph, the pyrotechnician of the group. Heavy metal musicians all, they played up the occult to the hilt.

“Scoot in the Morning on local radio took the subject on, and it got to be quite the conversation,” Karpelman recalls. “It was the start of our notoriety.”

And for the next decade or so, notoriety of the best kind followed the House of Shock, as it established itself as one of the most spectacular haunted attractions in the county. Writeups (Rolling Stone, Playboy), awards, TV specials and more followed.

By the end of 2004, House of Shock was having a great run.

“We were at a turning point,” says Karpelman. “Our warehouse lease was up, and we had a decision to make.”

They decided to roll the dice, and rented another Jefferson warehouse an eyeball or so throw from the first one, where they began creating lavish new backdrops, stages, sets, pyrotechnics.

House of Shock’s 13th season would be the biggest and most theatrical ever.

That, of course, was the year of Hurricane Katrina. And while the House of Shock property did not sit in the flood zone (unlike Karpelman’s Lakeview house, which got 12 feet of water), wind and water damage decimated the new digs.

“The wind did some kind of suction thing with the doors and everything got wet. The entire graveyard scene was blown away.”

On Halloween night in 2005, with Karpelman in exile in Houston, co-founder Gracianette went to the bedraggled House of Shock and threw open the doors, just to see if anyone would turn up. No one did.

But this is New Orleans. So Karpelman and his wife and their daughter returned, moved into the House of Shock office, and parked a FEMA trailer out front. They and the hundreds of volunteers who had, over the years, become a tightly knit House of Shock family, worked together to resurrect, literally, the dead.

“We opened in ’06 and had the best year we’d ever had,” Karpelman says. “People were ready to restart the party.”

Hell's Kitchen offers fiendish libations to the 2500-plus nightly visitors.

Hell’s Kitchen offers fiendish libations to the 2500-plus nightly visitors. (Photo: Hanna Rasanen)

House of Shock has weathered ups and downs ever since. Volunteering became so sought-after that Karpelman made a rule: Anyone new had to be nominated by a veteran. “The only exception were people with skill sets, like Dr. B Dangerous, who can swallow a screwdriver.”

Nowadays, entire families – mom, dad, three kids – look forward to annual turns as various macabre characters at the warehouse on Butterworth Street, just under the Huey P. Long Bridge, in Jefferson. And veterans return year after year to breathe new life into standing demonic personas like Levi the Preacher, or the Captain of the Psych Ward. Live music and nightly stage shows are House of Shock hallmarks.

“Having the volunteers get into it worked better than if we’d had paid actors,” Karpelman says of the live productions. “Because if you sell it with your eyes, you can pull off anything. And they do.”

But all good, or, well, evil things must come to an end, and this will be the final year for House of Shock. When the last scream pierces the night on the evening after Halloween, the warehouse doors will shut for good.

The haunted house business is expensive – House of Shock costs hundreds of thousands of dollars to produce. The pyrotechnic show alone, if produced for a concert, would run $100,000 or more, says Karpelman. The past couple of years, with a tropical storm threatening and rainouts for much of the run, the attraction took some big hits.

“Unless it’s a passion, it’s hard to run as a business,” Karpelman says. “It is a passion for us, but we all have day jobs, too.”

Beyond the economic considerations, he adds, are the psychological ones.

“With the onset of the Internet it has become harder to shock people,” he explains. “How do you outshock ISIS?

Not too long ago, when The Exorcist was re-released, Karpelman and the House of Shock family went as a group to see it. “There were these 14-year-old girls behind us, and during what were all the most shocking parts to us as kids, they were laughing.”

The all-things-haunted industry remains strong, but so is the competition for thrill-seekers’ attention. “Our niche is not such a niche any more,” says Karpelman. “We were ground-breaking when we started this, but not so much any more.”

But. It’s hard to say goodbye. So, while Karpelman confirms that the House of Shock as New Orleanians have known and loved it for 22 years will close come All Saints Day, he’s leaving the door to otherworldly pursuits a tiny bit ajar.

“There’s nothing on the drawing board. This was not in the plans. It’s a really big decision. I’ve thought about that the past week, when I see all our volunteers all sweaty and working together and it reminds me of why we did this in the first place.

“The only thing that could change our minds would be to have a really great season and then maybe come back with something new.”

These days, as preparations go into a nightly show that still draws upward of 2,500 people, Karpelman is nostalgic. And sad.

“They always said this day was coming. I never believed it,” he says. “I still love Halloween as much as I did when I was a kid.”

The House of Shock’s Final Haunted House and Festival

  • Where: 319 Butterworth St., Jefferson, La
  • When: Every Friday and Saturday during the month of October. Halloween week open Sunday, October 26, and nightly Wednesday, October 29 through Saturday, November 1. The House of Shock operates from 8–11 p.m.
  • Tickets: General admission to the haunted house is $25 and VIP admission is $50, allowing patrons to bypass the line. Tickets are available for purchase online at www.houseofshock.com and at the gate at 7 p.m. on show days only.
  • Music lineup: 
    Oct 24 – 90 To Nothing
    Oct 25 – Trouble (Legendary DOOM band from Chicago! Featuring Kyle Thomas)
    Oct 26 – 90 To Nothing
    Oct 29 – Consortium Of Genius (C.O.G)
    Oct 30 – The Topcats
    Oct 31 – Good Friends And A Bottle Of Whiskey (Pantera Tribute from Gainesville)
    Nov 1 – Good Friends And A Bottle Of Whiskey (Pantera Tribute from Gainesville)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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