The Stanley Hotel - Part 1: The Shining, King, and Kubrick

Published: Oct. 27, 2020, 7 a.m.

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In 2006, Passport host Neil Innes found himself outside the house of Stephen King in Bangor Maine. He didn\\u2019t get to meet King that day\\u2026 but it didn\\u2019t change how he felt about his work. A lifelong fan of King and Kubrick, The Shining has always held a special place in his heart. And so this Halloween, Passport traces the legacy of a single nightmare - one that still echoes 45 years later - all the way back to the place it all began: The Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, Colorado.

Stephen and Tabitha King only spent one night in The Stanley - The only guests in an old hotel the night before it closed for the winter. That night, King awoke from a nightmare, smoked a cigarette, and outlined The Shining - one of the biggest horror novels of all time. But that\\u2019s not all that happened. King\\u2019s The Shining changed the genre, Kubrick\\u2019s film adaptation changed horror cinema. But The Stanley has a remarkable story of its own.

In part 1 of Passport\'s 2-part Halloween special, Neil checks into The Stanley to investigate that story with the people who know it best - historian and writer Rebecca Pittman and filmmaker and paranormal expert Karl Pfeiffer. It\\u2019s a ghost story that stretches from 1909 to King\\u2019s only night in the infamous Room 217. And for those of you wondering about Room 237, Neil and Andr\\xe9s also journey into the hedge maze of the definitive adaptation - Stanley Kubrick\\u2019s The Shining.

For more, including links to the things we talked about, and the places we visited, plus a full transcript, visit: https://frequencymachine.com/passport

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