Guarding the Ghostbusters: Source material for Hollywood blockbuster preserved in Winnipeg - Action News
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Manitoba

Guarding the Ghostbusters: Source material for Hollywood blockbuster preserved in Winnipeg

When there's something strangethat you need to research, who ya gonna call? The University of Manitoba archives is probably the best place to start. The documents that helped create the smash hit movie Ghostbusters are located in Winnipeg.

'University of Manitoba is becoming the locus for material on the paranormal': Peter Aykroyd

Four men stand shoulder to shoulder in matching grey coveralls. They all hold devices that have electrical impulses blasting out from them.
The 1984 film Ghostbusters stars, from left, Ernie Hudson, Dan Aykroyd, Bill Murray and Harold Ramis. It was written by Aykroyd and Ramis. (Columbia Pictures)

When there's something strangethat you need to research, who ya gonna call? The University of Manitoba's archives is probably the best place to start.

After all, part of its collection on psychic phenomena and spiritualism is the source material Canadian actor and screenwriter Dan Aykroydused as the catalyst forthe 1984 blockbustermovie Ghostbusters, featuringproton pack-wearing spectre-hunters.

"I think probably the general public might be surprised to know that the basis for the film Ghostbustersthe Aykroyd family's archives into psychical research and spiritualism is in Winnipeg.It's not well known," saidWalter Meyer zu Erpen, who helped transfer the materials to the U of M from Ontario.

The material was donated by Dan's father, Peter Aykroyd, whosefamily was infatuatedwith the paranormal.

Peterlater wrote a book,A History of Ghosts,in which he talks aboutwatching his family's parlour seances through the crack of a basement door in their Ontario home and even participating in some.

A woman with longer grey hair sits at a desk and looks at pages of writing.
Shelley Sweeney looks over the Peter Hugh Aykroyd fonds in the University of Manitoba archives and special collections room. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

The activities were hosted by Peter's grandfather (Dan's great-grandfather) Samuel Augustus Aykroyd, whosejournals and other papersdetailinghis experiences from 1921 to 1934 were found by Peter in the 1990s,inside a locked trunk.

The items includeseancemessages greetingsfrom the beyond that Samuelgathered during those events and stacks of letters that he wrote to his children, describing theseances and other experiments.

Dan has said in many interviews over the years that hisfamily's history and stories forgedhisimagination and led himto co-write Ghostbusters. (Hewas not available for an interview for this storydue to the ongoing Hollywood writers' strike, his publicist said in an email.)

A man covered in a slimy substance lays on the ground
Bill Murray, as Peter Venkman, makes a face after being slimed with ectoplasm in Ghostbusters. (Columbia Pictures)

Samuel believed in mediumship that some individuals could be induced into a trance and act as a channel between the living and the dead.

He also believed the dead could produceectoplasm, aphysical manifestation of a ghostly apparition. Ghostbusters popularized the term, but made ectoplasm a green slimy substance.

ThePeter Hugh Aykroyd Fondsarrived in Winnipeg in 2014, but arrangements had been underway for some time before that, with Peter saying Winnipeg's reputation for spiritualism convinced him it was the right place.

"The University of Manitoba is becoming the locus for material on the paranormal of Canadian origin.It's a very, very rich archive," he said during a media tour in Toronto for his book in 2009.

The Aykroyd fonds, which include the "journals, letters and philosophical musings" of Samuel from 1855-1933, are contained in two storage boxes. It is a mix of original items and typed-out copies.

Shelley Sweeney, U of Marchivist emerita, said no one seems to know where those missingoriginals areor if they even exist. It's possible they remain with Dan, but Sweeney is positive the U of M has the only publicly accessible collection.

The materials are availablefor anyone to peruse, though Sweeney said some of the items arefragile.

"People have to handle it gently, but otherwise, there are no restrictions on access," she said.

Samuel's and Peter's items are part ofthe U of M archives spiritualism collection,which has material from dozens of other people.

Two men pose side by side, wearing suits and smiling at the camera.
Peter Hugh Aykroyd, left, and his son, actor Dan Aykroyd, pose for a photograph in Toronto in October 2009. Ghostbusters star Dan Aykroyd says he's often asked where he got the inspiration for his blockbuster '80s comedy and he says it's simple his own family. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

The largest part of the collection is theHamilton family fonds, with more than 700 images andreams ofdocuments.

There's no doubt both Peter, who died in 2020, and Samuel, who died in 1933, were familiar with the Hamiltons, Sweeney said.

Thomas Glendenning Hamilton and his wife, Lillian, experimented in psychic phenomena in their home on Henderson Highway in Winnipeg between 1918 and 1945.

Their activities attractedthe likes ofSherlock Holmes author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle andformer prime minister William Lyon Mackenzie King.

"I came away with the conclusion that Winnipeg stands very high among the places we have visited for its psychic possibilities," Conan Doyle said after a visit in 1923.

Thomas Hamilton died in 1935 but Lillian continued the activitiesuntil 1945, working to prove, scientifically, that ghosts are real and communication with them is possible.

Two pages of old papers, one at left with handwriting, and one on the right with typewritten words.
The U of M collection includes messages from beyond greetings from ghosts that Samuel Augustus Aykroyd gathered during seances. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

"Winnipegis, in Canada, is the largest archival repository for such material because of the Hamilton recordshaving beendonated in 1979.Shelley has written several times it was kind of like a magnet after that," said Meyer zu Erpen, who is president and archivist of the B.C.-basedSurvival Research Institute of Canada, which investigates whethersome aspect of a person can survivephysical death, and whether such a spiritcan communicate with the living.

There are only two larger collections in the world that he is aware of, one in Germany and onein Baltimore.

The U of Mcollection is a vital body of research materialinto spiritualism and the existential questionabout life after death, Meyer zu Erpensaid.

But the appeal is much wider than that. The Aykroyd fonds, like theHamilton collection, document a movementduring its peak in the early 20th century, Sweeney said.

"This is a slice of life in Canada at the time period.I think that people can go back into this material and mine it for a lot of different reasons[and] social history," she said.

Apart from that, "there is a huge popular cultural component in the fact that it was the inspiration for the Ghostbusters movies."

The wild success of the original Ghostbustersgenerated three sequels; the most recent came out in 2020.

In 2015, Ghostbusters was among 25 films the U.S. Library of Congressput into its National Film Registry a collection of films selected for preservation based on their historical, culturaland esthetic contributions.