Taft Broadcasting, interested in finding a way to promote its recently acquired
Hanna-Barbera division, purchased
Cincinnati's
Coney Island in 1969 with the intent of expanding and moving the park. Construction of
Kings Island began in 1970, and the most expensive attraction erected for the park's inaugural year was a
dark ride called
Enchanted Voyage, which cost approximately $2 million to construct. It played throughout the ride, reciting themes from familiar characters such as
Fred Flintstone,
Scooby-Doo, and
Yogi Bear. Less common shows such as
Wacky Races and
The Banana Splits were also alluded to. The first room introduced the song while the second room changed to a western accent, the third utilized a Caribbean flavor and the fourth had a "spooky" theme. The fifth and final room reverted to the original music with a circus-like ambiance. The rides final exit was at the "mouth" of a giant clown as each boat would travel a few feet up an inclined lift hill before splashing down the drop into the water on the other side.
Smurf's Enchanted Voyage (1984-1991) For the 1984 season, Kings Island updated the ride's theme to Hanna-Barbera's
The Smurfs, and it was renamed ''Smurf's Enchanted Voyage''. New animatronics were used for various characters and decorations, and the song playing throughout the ride was changed to coincide with the cartoon. Smurf's Enchanted Voyage consisted of several rooms, each themed to a different season of the year focusing on holidays such as Christmas and Halloween.
Phantom Theater (1992–2002) At the end of the 1991 season, the building housing the attraction was gutted, and the water transportation system was removed. Installed in its place was an Omnimover-type dark ride created by D.H. Morgan Manufacturing, similar in style to
The Haunted Mansion attractions at various Disney parks around the world. An
Anaheim-based theming company, R&R Creative Amusement Designs, Inc., developed the concept of the ride including its sets, props, and music. R&R, in conjunction with AVG Technologies of
Valencia, also designed and fabricated the animatronic characters. The original boat loading area used on previous versions of the ride was retained and converted into a queue area for a
kiddie roller coaster named Scooby Zoom, which later became
Great Pumpkin Coaster. A new entrance was constructed for Phantom Theater at the opposite corner of the building, and a small, unused section of the building was converted into a children's theater called the "Enchanted Theater". Phantom Theater officially opened to the public on April 11, 1992. It was themed as a behind-the-scenes tour of an abandoned theater haunted by the ghosts of
vaudevillian-era performers, staff, and theatergoers who frequented the venue long ago. The exterior of the building was stylized as a dilapidated and crumbling opera theater. The queue area was dimly lit with a pair of electrical chandeliers above. The ride featured 17 separate scenes, some of which utilized a
Pepper's ghost trick – a famous and widely used dark ride trick – to display ghostly illusions. The guests were welcomed into the theater by the Phantom Maestro, who were then led on a tour by Legless Larry through the Theaters dressing rooms, prop rooms, technical backstage areas, before viewing the Theater Production, when the guests were then told to escape, the ill fated guests were led to the boiler room and thrown into the hot coals.
Removal Phantom Theater closed on July 14, 2002. Nearly all thematic elements were removed and replaced with new scenes created by
Sally Dark Rides. 28 of the 55 ride vehicles were also removed, while the remaining were retrofitted with laser
light guns that riders would use to point and shoot at various targets throughout the ride. The attraction reopened in 2003 as
Scooby-Doo and the Haunted Castle. Due to a licensing concern, the ride was slightly altered in 2010 and renamed
Boo Blasters on Boo Hill. In the years following Phantom Theater's removal, leftover ride components were used as props during the park's fall event, known as FearFest through 2006 and Halloween Haunt beginning in 2007, including placements in the Paramount Action FX Theater queue, along the Coney Maul midway, outside the entrance, and on the International Street bandstand. Ride vehicles, characters, and other items were occasionally displayed at various attractions and locations across the park; for example, working Phantom Theater animatronics were set outside the line for Dracula's Haunted Castle at Paramount Action FX Theater during FearFest 2004, and other props such as a sarcophagus and cannon were installed in Madame Fatale’s Cavern of Terror, with the furnace placed in Slaughterhouse. == Ride experience ==