The Jester (roller coaster)

The Jester
Previously known as The Joker's Revenge at Six Flags Fiesta Texas (1996-2002)
Six Flags New Orleans
Park sectionMardi Gras
Coordinates30°03′16″N 89°56′12″W / 30.054485°N 89.936552°W / 30.054485; -89.936552
StatusClosed
Opening dateApril 13, 2003 (2003-04-13)
Closing dateAugust 21, 2005 (2005-08-21)
The Jester at Six Flags New Orleans at RCDB
Six Flags Fiesta Texas
NameThe Joker's Revenge
Park sectionFiesta Bay Boardwalk
Coordinates29°35′58″N 98°36′34″W / 29.5995°N 98.6094°W / 29.5995; -98.6094
StatusRemoved
Opening dateMay 10, 1996 (1996-05-10)
Closing date2001 (2001)
Cost$4,300,000 USD
Replaced byPandemonium
The Joker's Revenge at Six Flags Fiesta Texas at RCDB
General statistics
TypeSteel
ManufacturerVekoma
ModelHurricane
Lift/launch systemChain lift hill
Height79 ft (24 m)
Drop69 ft (21 m)
Length1,936 ft (590 m)
Speed40 mph (64 km/h)
Inversions3
Duration1:24
Max vertical angle40°
Capacity1200 riders per hour
G-force3.5
Height restriction48 in (122 cm)
Trains2 trains with 7 cars. Riders are arranged 2 across in 2 rows for a total of 28 riders per train.

The Jester is a steel roller coaster located at the abandoned Six Flags New Orleans amusement park in New Orleans. Built and designed by Vekoma, the ride originally opened at Six Flags Fiesta Texas in 1996 as The Joker's Revenge. After its closure in 2001, the coaster was sent to Six Flags New Orleans where it became The Jester. The ride opened to the public at Six Flags New Orleans on April 13, 2003. Following the devastation to the amusement park in August 2005 by Hurricane Katrina, the roller coaster ceased operation following the park's closure but remains standing.

History

Six Flags Fiesta Texas (1996–2002)

The ride was originally planned to open with the park in 1992.[citation needed] The ride was then canceled until 1993 when the ride was announced to open in 1996 to be called "The Wacky Twister".[citation needed] When Fiesta Texas in San Antonio, Texas was bought out from Time Warner in 1996 (the owner of Six Flags at the time), they helped rebrand the park into Six Flags Fiesta Texas. Time Warner saw the opportunity to advertise and promote their latest movies through their Six Flags parks, so they added The Joker's Revenge, the first Vekoma Hurricane roller coaster in the United States and the first Vekoma roller coaster to run backwards a full circuit. It would be placed towards the back of the park in the Fiesta Bay Boardwalk section next to the quarry wall.[1]

Construction of Joker's Revenge began in late 1995 and was completed in April 1996.[citation needed] On May 10, 1996, the ride officially made its debut.[2] It was the park's first roller coaster to be themed to a DC Comics character and feature inversions. During the opening week, park employees were dressed in yellow jackets and green colored hair.[3] One defining feature of the ride was its funhouse queue line, which featured flashing lights and upside down furniture. It had magenta track, magenta supports and light yellow trains manufactured by Arrow Dynamics.

While it was one of the best rides at Fiesta Texas when it opened in 1996, Joker's Revenge would not fare well by the early 2000s as guests would complain about how rough the ride experience had become.[citation needed] Plus, the ride was facing mechanical issues.[citation needed] The coaster was closed down in 2001 and did not operate at all during the 2002 season. Then in late 2002, it was dismantled and moved to Six Flags New Orleans. The funhouse queue line was reused for the park's Brutal Planet Haunted House during Fright Fest that year.[1] In 2007, Pandemonium opened in the former spot of Joker's Revenge. The attraction would reuse its predecessor's queue bridge and funhouse. The latter was used as an extended indoor queue area.[4]

Another Joker-themed attraction opened in 2019 called The Joker: Carnival of Chaos. It is a Zamperla Giant Discovery frisbee ride that features a funhouse queue just like the original attraction.[5]

Six Flags New Orleans (2003–2005)

One of The Jester's trains going through a corkscrew

Six Flags took over the lease of Jazzland in 2002, operating it as "Jazzland" for the 2002 season, before changing the park's name in 2003 to Six Flags New Orleans[6] for the 2003 season. Before the 2003 season, the park opened a whole new selection of rides including moving The Joker's Revenge roller coaster from Fiesta Texas in San Antonio to the park in New Orleans and renamed it The Jester in the Mardi Gras section of the park.[7] The coaster, which still ran backwards, was given a new color scheme of Green and Blue.

When Hurricane Katrina hit the park on August 29, 2005, the park was severely flooded, causing Six Flags New Orleans to permanently shut down. It is now owned by the city of New Orleans.[8]

Ruins of The Jester in 2009.

In 2007 Six Flags began the process of moving rides from the park to their other properties. While Batman: The Ride, Bayou Blaster, Sonic Slam and Road Runner Express had all been removed by 2009 and sent to other Six Flags parks, The Jester still stands abandoned at the New Orleans park, along with Mega Zeph and other coasters and attractions. Some of the Jester's green and blue paint is peeling away, revealing the old Joker's pink paint scheme.

Ride experience

Once riders would board one of the Jester's two trains, a train would then take riders up a 79-foot (24 m) tall lift hill. After the train went up the lift hill, it would then loop around and drop at speeds up to 40 miles per hour (64 km/h) through a 58-foot (18 m) vertical loop and then the train would loop around over the station to the ride's 24-foot (7.3 m) double corkscrew. Once the train passed the double corkscrews it would then take riders through a double helix's before entering the brake run that took rides back to the station.[7] There are two Vekoma Hurricane's in the world and The Jester was the only one to take riders backwards throughout the whole course of the coaster. The other Vekoma Hurricane is located at Walygator Parc as The Comet which only travels riders forwards and not backwards.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b Marden, Duane. "Joker's Revenge  (Six Flags Fiesta Texas)". Roller Coaster DataBase.
  2. ^ Straach, Kathryn (May 5, 1996). "Amusement parks beckon thrill seekers". El Paso Times. p. 57. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  3. ^ "'Joker's Revenge' has its ups and downs". Fond Du Lac Commonwealth Reporter. May 14, 1996. Retrieved July 5, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ "Pandemonium Six Flags Fiesta Texas - SFFT Source".
  5. ^ "The Joker: Carnival of Chaos debuts at Six Flags Fiesta Texas". 9 August 2019.
  6. ^ Six Flags New Orleans (14 November 2002). "Six Flags to Fly Over The Crescent City in 2003". Press Release. RCDB. Archived from the original on 19 September 2012. Retrieved 13 November 2010.
  7. ^ a b Marden, Duane. "Jester  (Six Flags New Orleans)". Roller Coaster DataBase.
  8. ^ "Six Flags Wants Out". Times Picayune. July 1, 2006. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  9. ^ Marden, Duane. "Waly Coaster  (Walygator Parc)". Roller Coaster DataBase.
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