“I have a really
dumb question,” I said last weekend. "What year are we supposed to be in?”
I had been walking
around the Louisiana Renaissance Fair for about 15 minutes and had no
clue.
I saw castles and people serving port wine, women in corsets and a group of guys with furry foxtails attached to their pants.
“Somewhere around
the 1400s,” my friend Aaron said, an avid Renaissance Fair Fan.
He was dressed as some
sort of monk and had his own fox tail. I sheepishly looked down at my 21st century outfit and was glad I had the foresight to wear a necklace
with a feather on it.
1400s? Really?
“Huh.” I said.
Was this supposed to be the time frame of Robin Hood (Men in Tights)?? Or more like the
Headless Horseman?
Pirates of the Caribbean??
Monk and warrior.
My friends and I
wandered around the massive grounds that host the month-long Reniassance
Fair each year, a circular space surrounding a large pond
with little village stores, primitive rides and plenty of lace up boots.
It’s an hour away
from New Orleans, but the time change is way longer.
Ha.
It surprised me
how much in costume everyone was, not just wearing traditional Reniassance outfits, but how they fully embodied their characters. Everyone had English accents. (Pirates of the Caribbean!!)
“All I won't (want) is a piece of choc’late,” said a woman, who was cleary some sort of
maid/pauper following around a fancy lady who was wearing a big dress.
I wondered what
made her decide to be a servant in this make believe life. And then I wondered who they were putting this ruse on
for.
They were simply walking in front of us, not putting on a show on anything.
“NO, YOU WILL NEVER GET CHOC’LATE!” The fair lady said,
and they both started laughing and walked up the hill.
Huh.
We walked into
little pop-up shops that sold all kinds of Renaissance gear, everything from hand-woven leather
bracelets to blacksmith knives, to harps and larps. It was a bustling little
village.
The masks for sale
were my favorite, although I was thinking, “this would be perfect for Mardi
Gras” rather than, “This would be most excellent for viewing a joust.”
(Can’t
take the city out the girl.)
It surprised me at
the time all the different characters one could be at a Renaissance Fair.
But now I get it; in
this fully-visioned different world, every person has their place.
There were
the fancy ladies, the ones who wore heavy dresses and fake curls had lads
following them around holding baskets of flowers.
There were wenches, the ladies whose bosoms runneth over out the top of their bustiers and who
screeched a lot.
We took in a wench
show, where the ladies embarrassed male audience participants by licking the tops of their bald heads as they kneeled before the crowd.
Then there were your “Fringe” characters, the
animal people who dressed as foxes and raccoons and other animals that I’m sure
were skinned back in the 1400s; the fairies and pixies and people
who wore a lot of feathers (chickens?)
And then there was this guy:
Aye, ogre.
“Who are you, a messenger?” my friend asked a
guy who had come up to us while we were admiring the pond view.
This guy had fake, big pointy ears that came
out from either side of his green felt hat.
“A hobbit?” I offered, to no one’s amusement.
I was impressed with the attractions at the
fair; the rides, performers and people who worked there.
They all stayed in character (probably actors
and actresses in their 21st century lives) and wore great period
clothing. They performed magic tricks with knives, did comedy shows and recited
off limericks that I didn't understand, except that lass rhymes with ass.
One game that I did not play had a man (pauper) with his face through a wooden hole and encouraged you to buy
three tomatoes for $1 to throw at his face.
“Ye probably couldn’t hit me if ye’tried!” he
jeered.
(I was told later that these people are called “barkers.”)
One barker followed me up a hill when I got
separated from my friends, pestering me to take a rickshaw ride, which was
literally two ox-like men pulling a cart.
"I promise a good ride!" Ha.
Lunch consisted of Shepard’s Pie, because they
were all out of turkey legs.
We ate as we saw a comedian on a
nearby stage with a billowy top juggle knives while balancing on a ball.
Then we saw the combat fighting. Or, the MMMA (medieval
mixed martial arts)
Ha.
Dressed in HOMEMADE armor (one guy made his
chest piece out of SPOONS, Y’ALL) they fought each other with fake swords and spears or whatever (“weapon of choice”) and were awarded a point when they got a clean hit on the other person.
It got pretty gruesome when one knight/fighter
(...whatever) ended up winning the match by sitting on his brother’s face.
The spoons won't save ye now!!!
All the rides at the fair had a medieval/Renaissance theme,
and I was presented with the opportunity to slay a dragon. For $2, it was a deal.
The grounds had constructed these wooden horses,
very basic (they didn’t have eyes) that rolled down a decline and at the
bottom, you were supposed to put your “sword” through a hole that killed the
dragon.
When the ride was done, the workers pushed the
wooden horses back up to the top. No need for electricity or safety measures. This
is the 1400s.
I mounted the horse as my friend, Scott, took
another.
“Now, what is your name?” A worker-wench asked
me.
“Genevieve,” I said, trying to be a proper
RenFair lady.
“Is that your real name or are you just getting
into character?” she asked.
She then asked me to come up with an alliterative
adjective to announce aloud to the crowd. She frowned when I suggested “Gentle
Genevieve.”
“GENTLE DOESN’T KILL A DRAGON!” she said in all
seriousness.
We settled on Glorious Genevieve and we were
off.
“On the count of, ‘Kill!’ ONE! TWO! KILL!!” the
wenches said and down we went.
I killed the dragon NO PROBLEM, but then
mistakenly dropped my sword because nobody told me the rules of dragon-slaying.
Arrrr??
At the end of the day, all the lords and
ladies, including the QUEEN-elect gathered at the front of the grounds to bid
everyone adieu (Good 'morrow) and rode off in carts pulled by horses.
(I saw those horses make a three point turn
with those carts, they weren’t messing around).
Then, large cannons shot off three, maybe four BOOMS, marking
the end of the festival for that weekend.
The foxes scampered home, the fairies flitted
away and we returned to 21st century New Orleans.
Fare thee well! we were told. I promised
to kill any and all dragons I came in contact with from this day forward.
Same goes for any bottle of port wine. :)
Good 'morrow.
-Jenny