The Haunted Mansion Caretaker's Dog.

FettFan

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
When you drop out of the attic, your Doombuggie moves past the only living souls of Gracey Manor....the frightened, nameless Caretaker and his dog.
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But...the dog is seen again, older and grayer casting a mournful head toward the Mummy...
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So what's the story here?

A few thoughts...
- Perhaps the dog died and the Caretaker buried him near the mummy. The dog then came back to look for his master?

- Or maybe the Caretaker heard a rumor of a treasure buried near the Mummy's tomb, so he went searching for it (hence the shovel)? After years of searching, he and his old gray dog found it....and a rather unhappy Mummy who didn't like people touching his stuff . The mummy then killed the Caretaker.
 

Kuhio

Well-Known Member
That's an astute observation, and I rather like your first hypothesis -- it's kind of the reverse of the real-life stories of dogs who continued to look or wait for their masters for years after the latter died.

However, I'm going to guess that the real story is Disney wanted to save some money, so rather than creating two separate, distinct-looking dogs, they just made two dogs based on the same model, painted one grey, and hoped no one would notice or try to come up with an explanation for the similarity within the context of the attraction's narrative.
 

Rob562

Well-Known Member
I never noticed that the second dog was a different color. I'd always presumed that it was intended to be the same dog, and that he had made his way over to that point before you got there.

-Rob
 

sydney

Active Member
I never noticed that the second dog was a different color. I'd always presumed that it was intended to be the same dog, and that he had made his way over to that point before you got there.

-Rob

That's what I always thought
 

jayhawkmickey

Well-Known Member
Is it grey from the color of the dogs fur or from the spot lighting?? The ground and the mummy look a little washed out too. CM's? I always wondered about the dog's back story? Always just assumed it was the same dog later on.
 

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
I think it is either the graveyard dogs father or his brother...the one that got hit by the runaway train just across the river. But the, "heck, we have the mold", we might as well use it for Disney is the most likely answer. I don't even remember ever seeing the gray dog.:oops:
 

JIMINYCR

Well-Known Member
I found this, describing the caretaker and his dog. Also in a book that I have, The Secrets of Disney's Haunted Mansion, the dog is also described as being alive in the second scene.

Caretaker

The terrified caretaker and his emaciated, whimpering dog stand at the open gates of the cemetery, wide-eyed and shivering at the sight of the ghostly multitudes. He and his dog are some of the only "living" characters in the entire attraction, and as such they are lit with incandescent light rather than fluorescent or black light. The caretaker's dog (or a very similar looking dog) is also seen moments later near the mummy, sniffing his sarcophagus. In Collin Campbell's artwork for The Story and Song from the Haunted Mansion album, the caretaker stands at the gates of Whispering Glade Cemetery, a reference to the 1965 film The Loved One. The caretaker is sometimes referred to as the groundskeeper, the gravedigger, or the night watchman. The footprints (and paw prints) of the caretaker and his dog can be found in the queue outside of the Walt Disney World Mansion.
The caretaker and his dog make a brief appearance in the 2003 film, but as ghosts themselves. In early drafts of the screenplay, the caretaker had a small speaking role. Don Knotts reportedly signed on to play the character, but dropped out before filming began.
In the comics, the character is named Horace Fusslebottom in some stories and Dick in others. Accompanied by his dog Boney, he works as groundskeeper so he can dine with his wife's ghost every night, on her gravesite.
Zeke Holloway, the cowardly lantern-holding protagonist of the video game, was inspired by the character. He initially comes to the house to inquire about an assistant caretaker position. In the epilogue narration, Zeke reveals that he became caretaker of the estate for a time before continuing to pursue his dream of becoming a writer. The original caretaker from the attraction (sans dog) appears as a disgruntled ghost in the winter garden, who complains that no one is ever around to pay him for his work.

Mummy & Oracle
A resurrected Egyptian mummy (voiced by Allan Davies) with a cup of tea sits upright in his sarcophagus, mumbling the song Grim Grinning Ghosts through his bandages. A venerable, bearded oracle of the Renaissance period (Dal McKennon) stands nearby, holding a hearing horn to his ear. The old man attempts to understand the mummy but can't quite make out what he's saying, which frustrates the mummy. A thin dog (probably the caretaker's dog) sniffs the mummy's sarcophagus. The mummy makes an appearance in thevideo game, in the mausoleum.
 

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