Come out and See the Faire before the Season Ends.
"A fun time for the whole family,
bring a camera and
have fun." Oak
Park Journal 2003
The Knights Prepare for Battle.
Oak Park Journal photo
FAIRE FACTS:
WHAT THOU MIGHT’ST EXPECT
Who: More than 1,200 period artisans,
merchants and performers, including jousting knights, ravishing rogues,
willful wenches and bawdy beggars.
What: A rollicking romp
through Elizabethan England, complete with 16th Century games, rides, arts,
crafts, food, music and dance, recreating the summer day in
1574 when Queen Elizabeth visited the English hamlet of Bristol.
Gallantry and Valor on the Field of Honor
Oak Park Journal photo
Entertainment
Sixteen stages of nonstop entertainment featuring Faire favorites
such as Dirk and Guido (“The Swordsmen”), The Sturdy Beggars Mud ShowTM,
and MooNiE the Magnif’Cent – Juggler, Ropewalker and Foolish Mortal.
International guest artists such as the four-time Grammy nominated Scottish
Rogues, a.k.a. “the bad boys of bagpipes,” Kaminari Daiko Drummers, and
Germany’s Wolgemut band with its unique brand of “Renaissance Rock ‘n’
Roll.”
Marketplace
Wondrous wares ranging from jewelry and hand-crafted leatherworks
to hickory sparring weapons, tapestries and bent willow furniture.
Demonstrations by potters, glass blowers, broom caners, forgers and other
working artisans.
Food & Drynke
Roasted turkey legs, fish and chips, garlic sautéed mushrooms,
corn on the cob, steak sandwiches, grilled chicken, ice cream, fruit crepes
and other delicacies. Hearty ales, fine wines, iced tea and fresh-squeezed
lemonade.
When: Saturdays and Sundays,
June 28 through August 24
10 a.m. - 7 p.m., rain or shine
Where: Kenosha, Wis., west of
I-94 near Illinois/Wisconsin border (Russell Road exit)
Tickets $17.50 for adults and
$8.50 for children (ages 5-12) at gate; parking $3 per car. & Info:
Discounts available online at renfair.com or by phone, (847) 395-7773.
The Many Town Folk in Costumes are Marvelous for the kids and
photographers. Come dressed yourself, but don't wear purple-that
is the Queens color.
Oak Park Journal photos
The Tory Steller is Worth the Price of Admission all by Himself.
Oak Park Journal photo
Oak Park Journal animation
Visit the Dungeons and protect yourself by
observing the Law.
Oak Park Journal photo
Look at Some of the Items to See
and Do
SPEAK THEE, PRITHEE
ELIZABETHAN SPEAK
KENOSHA, Wis. (May 20, 2003) – The Bristol Renaissance Faire is hardly
a spectator event. Bombarded by the sights, sounds and characters
of the era at every turn, visitors find themselves in the thick of 16th
Century England. For those who take this trip in time, the ability
to pull a few choice period phrases out of their nether hose can make the
journey all the more enjoyable.
Aye, nay: Yes, no
Carlot: Male peasant of
the lowest order
Come thee hither: Come
here.
Cony: Rabbit or young girl
Fancy-Sick: Love-sick,
infatuated
Fie on thee!: Shame on
you!
Figure-Flinger: A fortune
teller, astrologer
Flibberty-Gibbet: A gossipy
or frivolous woman, a devil
Funumbulant: A rope walker
God ye good den: Good day,
good afternoon
Gruntle: The snout of a
pig, hence disrespectfully, a person’s face
Habit: Dress, attire
Hedgepriest: An illiterate
person
How standeth the hour?:
What time is it?
Laron: Robber
Lease of Nature: Lifetime
Monger: A street peddler
Mumblecrust: A toothless
person, a beggar
Nether hose: Long pants
Popinjay: One who dresses
gaudily
Prithee: Please
Runyon: Scurvy old woman,
witch
This be too dear: This
is too expensive.
Thou art lily-livered!:
You’re chicken!
Tregatry: Juggling, deception,
trickery
Turtle: Short for Turtle-dove,
a term for endearment
Wither goest thou?: Where
are you going?
Zymurgy: The art of fermentation,
as in winemaking
FAIRE FACTS:
WHAT THOU MIGHT’ST EXPECT NOT
· Between 30,000 and 45,000 turkey legs are sold during a
single, nine-week season of the Bristol Renaissance Faire.
· Approximately 100,000 gallons of ale are consumed each season.
· Queen Elizabeth’s gown weighs 40 pounds and is decorated
with 3,700 beads.
· It takes the Queen two hours to get dressed.
· The Queen knights somewhere in the neighborhood of 1,080
children every season.
· The oldest performer at the Faire is 65. The youngest
is four.
· Faire-goers can enjoy 70 different musical performances
in a single nine-hour day.
· First-year performers are required to complete 45 hours
of classes in the Bristol Academy of Performing Arts prior to the start
of the season.
· Merchants travel from as far away as California, New York
and Florida to display their wares at the Bristol Renaissance Faire.
· The longest-standing merchant, Mack’s Canes, has been a
part of the Faire for 25 years (dating back to Bristol’s predecessor, King
Richard’s Faire).
· Seventy-three different food items are sold at the Bristol
Renaissance Faire.
· There are 670 members in Friends of Faire – sort of a Bristol
Renaissance Faire fan club.
ALL THE WOODS, A STAGE
Faire Folk Get Schooled in Renaissance
Ways
KENOSHA, Wis. (May 20, 2003) – There’s more to being a vendor at the
Bristol Renaissance Faire than grilling up a few thousand turkey legs.
And there’s certainly more to being a street performer than donning a pair
of tights. Every person who interacts with the public at the nine-week
festival, from box office clerk to glass blower, attends workshops in Elizabethan
language, period dress and customs.
For those 1,000-plus performers whose job it is to fill the 30-acre
“stage” of the Renaissance Faire with nine hours of in-character color,
every Saturday and Sunday, June 28 through August 24, training comes in
the form of an intensive, five-Saturday theatrical boot camp called BAPA
(b?h?-p?h) or Bristol Academy of Performing Arts.
“At the Renaissance Faire, the size of an actor’s stage is determined
by how far he can be seen and heard,” said Bristol’s Artistic Director
Ron Scot Fry, also referred to as the “BAPA Papa,” but rarely within his
ear-shot. “The lights are always up, and the house is always open.
The heating and cooling are eccentric at best, the floor is never swept,
and the sprinkler system has a mind of its own. There is no greenroom,
actors rest ‘on-stage’ in full view of the audience.”
To prepare performers for their roles, Fry and fellow BAPA faculty
conduct a rigorous class schedule of street theater, improvisation, costuming,
Elizabethan history, manners, music, dialect, and vocal and physical survival.
And those are just the required courses, the curriculum also includes 38
different electives, including stage combat, swordplay, artillery through
the ages, commedia del arte, court dancing, juggling, and 16th Century
medicine.
Despite its admittedly playful name, there’s nothing trivial about BAPA.
Fry brings together some of the nation’s premiere authorities in their
fields to instruct the Bristol Renaissance Faire cast. Brian Posen,
improv coach for Chicago’s Second City and Steppenwolf theater companies,
teaches BAPA’s improvisation classes. Mary Mascari brings her perspectives
as a clown with Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus to BAPA’s
physical humor curriculum.
“Amidst all the noise and bustle, Renaissance Faire performers are
the pegs for a unique show,” said Fry. “The success of that show
depends on our cast’s ability to create a brand new world that is four
centuries old and half a continent away. When we approach our roles
with skill, spirit and integrity, we have the power to touch hearts and
stir imaginations.”
Located in Kenosha, Wis., just west of I-94 at the Illinois/Wisconsin
border, the Bristol Renaissance Faire recreates the summer day in 1574
when Queen Elizabeth visited the English hamlet of Bristol. Jousting
knights, ravishing rogues, willful wenches and bawdy beggars take guests
on a rollicking romp through 16th Century England, down bustling lanes
of colorful shoppes, spirited games, and a never-ending procession of pageants,
plays, comedy, music and dance. The Faire is open rain or shine,
10 a.m. to 7 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday, June 28 through August 24.
For more information, call (847) 395-7773 or visit renfair.com. Bristol
Renaissance Faire: Where Fantasy Rules!
Saturdays & Sundays
June 28 - August 24, 2003
10:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Entertainment Schedule - August 9th & 10th, 2003
Special Events: Welcome WMYX Singles Mixer on Saturday
The Royal Joust Arena
The Joust of Skill 11:00
The Royal Joust and Challenge for Queen's Favour 3:00
(Queen Sighting!)
The Joust to the Death 5:30
The Royal Falconer 1:30 · 4:00
The International Globe Stage
Breakfast with the Brass 10:20
MooNiE the Magnif'Cent 11:00 · 12:00 · 2:00 3:30 ·
4:30
The Rogues 11:30 · 1:30 3:00 · 5:30
Her Majesty's Revel 1:00 - ASL Interpreted
(Queen Sighting!)
Lord Mayors Forum Stage
Consorte Bella Donna 10:30
Zilch the Torysteller
11:00 · 3:30 - All ages
1:00 · 2:00 · 5:00 - PG-13
Prattle and Pratfall 12:00 · 3:00 · 5:30
Costume Contest 4:00
Lady Ettie's Me Place
Tea Time With Lady Ettie 1:30 and 4:00
Mud Pit
* The Mud Show®
11:30 · 1:00 · 2:00 3:30 · 5:00 * PG-13
Bessie's Harbour Stage
Washing Well Wenches 10:30 · 12:00 2:30 · 4:00
Cheshire Chase Action Theatre
Dirk & Guido: The Swordsmen!
11:30 · 1:00 · 3:30
The Wedding of Maid Marian and the Sheriff
2:00 - ASL Interpreted
(Robin Hood Sighting!)
The Hanging of Robin Hood
4:30 - ASL Interpreted
(Robin Hood Sighting!)
Midsummer Stage
Minstrels of Mayhem
10:30 · 12:00 2:00 · 5:00
Consorte Bella Donna 11:30
William Shakespeare's The Wit of Will
1:00 · 2:30 · 4:00
Seelie Court
3:30 (Sunday only)
Dirk & Guido: The Swordsmen! 5:30
Musicians' Revel 6:10
Her Majesty's Closing Parade 6:50
(Queen Sighting!)
Front Gate
Opening Ceremonies
9:45 - ASL Interpreted
(Robin Hood Sighting!)
Guilde of St. Michael Shire Patrol 10:15
Royal Parade 12:45
(Queen and Robin Hood Sighting!)
Closing Ceremonies 7:00
Queen Sighting!
Around the Shire...
Robin Hood and His Merry Men!
Meet Robin! 1:50 and 4:20
Cheshire Chase Action Stage Kids!!!
Join Robin's
Merry Band in the Queen's Parade!
Meet at 12:30
Front Gate
Note: Children must be old enough to march without parents and to
keep a goodly pace. Maximum of 10 children.
Fountainside Gazebo
CrossRogues 11:00 · 1:30 · 2:30 3:30 · 5:00
Bounding Main
11:30 · 3:00 · 5:30 Seelie Court (Sunday only)
1:00 · 4:30 Consorte Bella Donna 4:00
Guildehall Center Stage
Old Soles 11:00 · 1:00 2:00 · 3:00 5:00
Billy Miller and Friends
11:30 · 2:30 · 4:00
Craig of Farrington 12:00
Corey of Kent 1:30 · 5:30
Farley the Fiddler
3:30 · 4:30
Tuscany Taverne
Gypsy Guerrilla Band
1:00 to 4:00 4:30 · 5:30
A Faire Noyse
12:00 · 4:00 5:00
Pig n' Whistle Tavern
Seelie Court 11:30 - Sunday only
Rafferty the Piper 12:00 · 1:00 · 2:30 3:30 ·
5:30
Minstrels of Mayhem 4:00
The Rogues 4:30
Consorte Bella Donna 5:00
Maypole
Dancing with the Bristol Buskin Frolic 10:10 · 5:00
The Hamlet
Bristol Buskin Frolic Tumblers 11:30
Royal Recorders 3:30 · 5:00
Farnham Way
Drum Jam Hosted by Antone the Great 6:15
Shoplatch Lane
Bristol Buskin Frolic Mummer's Play 11:00
Royal Recorders 11;30 · 1:00 · 2:30
Queen's Kitchens
Bristol Buskin Frolic Irish Steppers 12:00
Bristol Buskin Frolic Tumblers 4:00
Old Trader's Wharf
Bristol Buskin Frolic Mummer's Play 3:00
Dirty Duck Inn / Guilde of St. Lawrence
11:30 Lollygagging and Chores
12:00 Denizens and Citizens of Bristol Luncheon
2:00 Cleanliness is Next to Godliness
3:00 Lollygagging and Chores
4:00 Games - Welcome to Join in the FUN!
Thistle Croft - Celtic Living History
Daily Life / Arts and Crafts Demonstrations. Most demonstrations
take place throughout the day. Specific crafts are featured at time liste.
New this year! Metal casting!
11:00 Leather Crafts, Woodwork and Metalwork
12:00 Prairie's Edge Scottish Dancers
12:00 Cookery
2:00 Lacemaking, Spinning, Weaving and Illumination
2:30 Prairie's Edge Scottish Dancers
3:15 The Great Kilt Fold
5:00 Prairie's Edge Scottish Dancers
5:30 Irish Steppers with the Bristol Buskin Frolic and Music, Games
and Stories
St. James' Priory / The Guilde of St. George
10:30 Sunday Church Service - near Fountainside Gazebo
11:30 Courtly Music and Dance
1:00 Her Majesty's Table Setting Ceremony
1:30 Presentation of the Nobility (Queen Sighting!)
1:45 Her Majesty's Feast (Queen Sighting!)
2:00 Entertainments, Festivities features dancing with the Bristol
Buskin Frolic (Queen Sighting!)
2:30 Courtly Music and Dance (Queen Sighting!)
3:30 Elizabethan Court Clothing Presented
6:00 Audience with the Queen (Queen Sighting!)
English Military Camp / The Guilde of St.Michael
11:00 Trebuchet Firing
12:00 Weapons of War / Parade Muster
1:30 Barber Surgeon Demonstration
2:30 Bristol Buskin Frolic Entertaining the Troops
3:00 Pike Drills
3:25 Musket Patrol
4:00 Trebuchet Firing / Musket Firing
4:30 Kiddie Pike Drills - Kids Welcome!
6:00 Weapons of War / Morality Play