Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
New Jersey Renaissance Faire: New York Renaissance Faire: New York: Tuxedo; permanent The fictional Town of Sterling in late 16th-century Elizabethan England: 1977 20 stages; 65 acres [22] (08a) August–September (6 weekends) 140k (2010) [23] Ren Faire–NY: Northern California Renaissance Faire: California: Hollister: Village of Willingtown ...
A Renaissance Festival (medieval fair or ren faire) is an outdoor gathering that aims to entertain its guests by recreating a historical setting, most often the English Renaissance. Renaissance festivals generally include costumed entertainers or fair-goers, musical and theatrical acts, art and handicrafts for sale, and festival food.
In 1993, RPFS was purchased by Renaissance Entertainment Corp (REC), a for-profit corporation, and later by its current owners, Renaissance Entertainment Productions (REP) (also a for-profit corporation), under which the Faire has claimed to be more family oriented. [5] [9] The COVID-19 pandemic caused the faire to go on hiatus from 2020 to ...
The Philadelphia Renaissance Faire is taking over the historic Fort Mifflin for three days of family-friendly adventure this Memorial Day Weekend. Philadelphia Renaissance Faire: Everything you ...
The New York Renaissance Faire is a Renaissance faire located in Tuxedo, New York off New York State Route 17A that was first held in 1978. The 65-acre (260,000 m 2) faire [1] comprises permanent structures and has twenty stages and more than 100 shops. [2] As of 2024, the fair runs on Saturdays and Sundays beginning in mid-August, plus Labor ...
Following the day-to-day of Coulam’s theme-park Xanadu, “Ren Faire” unfolds with a highly theatrical presentation, reflecting the transportive fantasy that the fest itself promises visitors.
And George Coulam, known to the thousands of the faire’s attendees as King George, is keeping his crown. The 86-year-old festival leader was the subject of “Ren Faire,” an HBO docuseries ...
Jousting at the Renaissance Festival. The English Tudor village is 27 acres (110,000 m 2) [1] of woods and fields. There are more than 130 craft shops and 42 food outlets.. More than 1,300 participants populate the village, 400 work directly for the company, 700 for the other vendors and 200 as performers [7] on stages or as characters throughout the village.