Frankenstein's Fort: The scary days before Halloween

STANFORDVILLE — Children of all ages who enjoy being frightened out of their wits should go to the last performances this year at Peter Wing’s Frankenstein’s Fortress, on Friday or Saturday night, Oct. 29 and 30, between 6:30 and 9:30 p.m., at 86 Creamery Road in Stanfordville.

Martha Stewart has proclaimed it the creepiest haunted house she’s ever seen. Every year and every night is different; it’s a community theater program staffed by hundreds of volunteers of all ages with all of the proceeds going to the town of Stanford Recreation Department.

The idea of a haunted house began in the basement of the Millbrook Village Hall 25 years ago; however, its popularity and complexity outgrew its seasonal space, and Peter Wing’s creative dark vision found a permanent home in an abandoned milk factory in Stanfordville with the enthusiastic support of the town’s supervisor, Thomas Kelly.

During the last 13 years, the crumbling building and its surrounding, eerie marsh landscape have gradually transformed into a Halloween theme park utilizing an all-community-based volunteer labor force of actors, ticket takers, set decorators and landscapers, and 95 percent recycled materials. Everything from costumes to hospital stretchers, concrete drainage pipes, boilers, rusty tractors, old books and a decaying piano have been saved and assembled to create a frightening night of terror where witches, ghosts, nuns and murderers pop out of the shadows. Think Tim Burton meets Kurt Schwitters with improv actors.

Visitors follow the spooky, dark path though the woods, walk over the bridge with concrete turrets past the pirate galleon and rusty crashed car to meet a scary guide who escorts small groups the rest of the way. Jack the Ripper and his latest victim are waiting. The witches are busy at a cauldron and the nuns are brandishing rulers.

A set designer and entertainer at heart, Wing studies old photographs to create an authentic Felliniesque effect. Because it’s Halloween everything is exaggerated.

“At Halloween we dance and dance and laugh at death,â€� Wing said, adding he himself is terrified. “Every night I have 250 kids in the dark. That’s scary. Every year I’m the most frightened person.â€�  

Wing believes that the most frightening fact of all is that, “If a small town can build a theme park from its Dumpsters, what is this country wasting every day, day in and day out?  That should scare you.â€�

The admission price of $15 — $5 for children under 10 — makes it affordable for the family.

While everyone else can trick-or-treat on Oct. 31, Wing and his community volunteers will be storing the props and more than 5,000 costumes from Frankenstein’s Fortress to be ready for next year.

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