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Published - Friday, October 24, 2003

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Boo: Behind the scenes at area haunted houses


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By day, Tracy Lindley loves kids. But when the sun begins to go down and 6 p.m. rolls around, things get a little scary.

She becomes an "insane, psycho, demented woman" who frightens her family members and loved ones.
The transformation from nice to nasty begins at 5 p.m., when she and other volunteers arrive at The House of Shadows, a haunted house run by the Boys & Girls Club in Sparta, Wis.

More than 50 people — including Boys & Girls Club staff members, students of all ages, business owners, firefighters and law enforcement officials — volunteer night after night to thrill others.

"All these volunteers give up every weekend in October," Lindley said. "It gets to be a long season, but it's fun."

A typical fright night begins with Amy Roeske, a four-year volunteer at the haunted house. She gets the evening rolling by applying her makeup techniques.

"I don't do pretty for makeup," she said. "I only do ugly."

Roeske makes Lindley's face white before using different applications of color to make her eyes appear to be sunken in. A splattering of blood serves as the finishing touch.

After Lindley is done in the make-up chair, she puts on a dark brown robe and styles her blond hair to look as though she stuck her finger in a light socket. Then she puts in her glow-in-the-dark contact lenses.

Throughout the night, Roeske, who learned how to do scary makeup through her high school drama club, assists scarers with touch-ups.

"It's fun to make people look ugly," Roeske said. "I like to scare the crap out of people."

For Lindley, it's the "sheer adrenaline of getting people to be scared" that keeps her volunteering at the house.

"We work with a lot of great people," she said. "People say we're nuts to give up every weekend, but it's definitely worth it."

As Lindley sits in a rocking chair waiting for guests to come into her room, her eyes aglow, she said the anticipation of a good scare oftentimes gets the best of her.

"It's kind of a domino effect," she said. "I can hear screams throughout the house. Scare after scare. It's hard to wait until it's my turn."

While in character at the haunted house, Mike Jamesson, a second-year House of Shadows volunteer and Monroe County Sheriff's Department detective, becomes a reverand, who has come to the house to help save lost souls, and Bobo, a fat, dorky kid who is in search of some candy and isn't allowed in the house.

"I help out, tease kids and scare adults until they wet their pants," Jamesson said. "It's very cool."

As the Rev., Jamesson walks around in front of the house, tells some true — and some not-so-true — stories and does a skit with a coffin. Jamesson said Bobo is a character that has proven to be popular with kids. He wanders around the outside of the house wondering how to get inside for treats.

"It's fun to be someone you're not," Jamesson said. "I like the acting."

Natalie Carlisle, executive director of the Boys & Girls Club of Sparta, volunteers behind the walls with a walkie talkie type system.

"We walk around throughout the house and let everyone know it's time to run," Carlisle said. "We take care of the guests outside and help set the rooms."

Once the house is open, Carlisle and other behind-the-scenes volunteers take care of quality control checks and also trouble shoot.

"We make sure everyone is OK and doing good scares. We also assist with working breaks of food and water," she said. "If the music stops, we get it started again."

The most requested item by scarers, Carlisle said, is cough drops.

"They're all screaming and yelling and need something to keep their throats wet," she said. "Sometimes water bottles just don't equal scary."

Autumn Grooms can be reached at (608) 782-9710, ext. 357, or agrooms@lacrossetribune.com.

IF YOU GO

Looking for a good scare this Halloween? Look no further. Here is a list of some of the Halloween haunts and

scares throughout the Coulee Region. For those looking for less scary, more family-friendly events, check out the Family Calendar in Sunday's La Crosse Tribune.

  • House of Shadows: Haunted house run by the Boys & Girls Club of Sparta, Wis. To accommodate the faint of heart, it is not so scary from 6 to 7 p.m. then gets scarier beginning at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are sold until 10 p.m., and the house remains open until the last ticket owner has gone through. The house is open Friday and Saturday nights in October, with a special Thursday date Oct. 30. The house is at 501 Osborne Drive, Sparta, and costs $5 to enter. For more information, call (608) 269-2582.


  • Hixon's Haunted Hollow: Haunted hike through the Hixon Forest, the forest, 6 to 9 p.m., Friday, Oct. 31, and Saturday, Nov. 1, Hixon Forest Nature Center, $5, (608) 784-0303.


  • Norskedalen Ghoulees in the Coulees: A thrilling, chilling hike through the woods, 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, Oct. 29 and 30, Norskedalen Nature and Heritage Center, Coon Valley, Wis., $5, (608) 452-3424.


  • Hidden Trails Haunted Maze: For people age 12 and older, 7 to 10 p.m. today through Friday, Oct. 31, Hidden Trails Corn Maze, W4704 Hwy. 16, West Salem, Wis., $6, (608) 784-2489.


  • Onalaska Area Jaycees Haunted House: A fun-filled house of ghouls, ghosts and general foolery, 6:30 to 10 p.m. today and Sunday, Oct. 26, and Thursday and Friday, Oct. 30-31, behind Woodman's Food Market, Hwy. 16, Onalaska, Wis., $5, (608) 783-0060.


  • "A Wild Night at Monster Mansion": Dinner theater production by Curtain Call Capers, 7:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 31, the Great Hall at Watkins Manor, Winona, $35 or $32 for students and senior citizens, tickets available at Fashions in Time, 66 E. Third St., Winona, Minn., (507) 452-1724.


  • Halloween party: With annual showing of "The Rocky Horror Picture Show," Friday, Oct. 31, The Warehouse, 328 Pearl St., (608) 784-1422.


  • n Haunted house: 8 p.m. Wednesday through Friday, Oct. 29, 30 and 31, Green Lantern Coffeehouse,

    571 E. Third St., Winona, Minn., not suitable for young

    children, (507) 453-9520.

    n Walk of Horror: 7 to 10 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 26, and

    Friday, Oct. 31, bluffs behind Saint Mary's University,

    $5 for adults, $4 for children younger than 14, $3 for

    SMU students, Winona, Minn., (507) 457-1638.
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