Vanishing Hotel Room

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The Paris Exposition of 1889 Tour Eiffel 3b40739.jpg
The Paris Exposition of 1889

The Vanishing Hotel Room (also known as The Vanishing Lady) is an urban legend which alleges that during an international exposition in Paris, a daughter who returned after leaving her mother in a hotel room found the woman gone, and the hotel staff professed to have no knowledge of the missing woman.

Contents

Legend

According to the legend, a woman was taken ill while traveling in a foreign country with her daughter. While she lay down in her hotel bed, the daughter made a trip across town to pick up a needed prescription. When she returned, she found that both her mother and the hotel room that they stayed in had disappeared. No one remembered having seen either her or her mother.

Origin

According to the Quote Investigator website and urban legend researcher Bonnie Taylor-Blake, the author of the earliest known instance of the legend was Nancy Vincent McClelland, who wrote a version in an article titled A Mystery of the Paris Exposition in The Philadelphia Inquirer of November 14, 1897. In this version, at the end, the daughter is told the truth by a French policeman about her mother's death from disease. The Quote Investigator and Taylor-Blake also found a version of the legend run in the Detroit Free Press in 1898 titled Porch Tales: The Disappearance of Mrs. Kneeb, written by Kenneth Herford. It is theorised that "Kenneth Herford" was a pen name for Karl Harriman. [1]

Variations

There are multiple variations of the Vanishing Hotel Room story. Usually, the story is set in Paris, France, during the Paris Exposition of 1889 or that of 1900, whither, most commonly, a woman with her daughter have just traveled. Sometimes, the women in the story aren't related, but are traveling companions of roughly the same age; rarely, both are male. In some versions, the daughter gets sent to a mental hospital, where she spends the rest of her days. [2]

In a version printed in the July 6 and July 13, 1929, issues of The New Yorker written by Alexander Woolcott and included in his book While Rome Burns (1934), [3] it is revealed that the mother died of the Black Plague and that the hotel management and the police have kept her death a secret so as to prevent mass panic and hysteria throughout the city, and so that visitors will not leave, thus ensuring and maintaining the hotel's large financial income. [4]

The story inspired several novels, including The End of Her Honeymoon by Marie Belloc Lowndes (1913), She Who Was Helena Cass by Lawrence Rising (1920), The Vanishing Of Mrs. Fraser by Basil Thomson (1925), The Torrents of Spring by Ernest Hemingway (1926) and films such as The Midnight Warning (1932), The Lady Vanishes (1938), Covered Tracks (1938), So Long at the Fair (1950), Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Into Thin Air/The Lady Vanishes (1955), Bunny Lake Is Missing (1965), The Forgotten (2004), and Flightplan (2005). [3] [2] It was also featured as a "true story" in a 2002 episode of the Fox television program Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction . [5]

There are also adaptations of it in the Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark book trilogy titled Maybe You Will Remember from Scary Stories 3: More Tales to Chill your Bones (1991) and in the short story Hotel Splendide by Australian author Kerry Greenwood, written for a January issue of Women's Weekly magazine. It features one of Greenwood's most notable characters, the wealthy aristocrat and private investigator Phryne Fisher. [3]

Similar themes have been explored in, but are not officially credited to, the novel (2006) and TV series (2023) Therapy by German author Sebastian Fitzek.

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References

  1. "Legend: The Vanishing Lady and the Vanishing Hotel Room". Quote Investigator . 14 September 2010. Retrieved 2022-02-05.
  2. 1 2 "The Vanishing Hotel Room". Snopes.com. 21 May 1999. Retrieved 2022-02-05.
  3. 1 2 3 "Sometimes Crime Writing is Not a Classic Whodunit". TheAge.com. 25 February 2003. Retrieved 2023-12-02.
  4. Woollcott, Alexander (1929-06-29). "The Vanishing Lady". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2022-02-05.
  5. Lê, Paul (2020-10-30). "10 Classic Urban Legends as Seen in "Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction". Bloody Disgusting!. Retrieved 2022-02-05.