Login
Forgot Password?

OR

Login with Google Login with Twitter Login with Facebook
  • Join
  • Profiles
  • Groups
  • SuicideGirls
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Shop
Vital Stats

bradmax

Somewhere a little north of sanity

Member Since 2019

Followers 31 Following 67

  • Everything
  • Photos
  • Video
  • Blogs
  • Groups
  • From Others

RenFaire Season and Memories Forever

Jun 12, 2022
9
  • Facebook
  • Tweet
  • Email

Mood: ‘Sake of the Song’ and ‘Song and Dance, Pt. 2’ by Blackmore’s Night

SERENDIPITY

It always amazes me how sometimes thoughts and events seem to ‘conspire’ to make a thing Reality.

For the last few weeks the RenFaire has been on my mind. The reason lay behind the time of year, as this weekend and last were when I would participate in a Faire in Alaska. In fact, I directed and co-directed for 18 years, and was involved in other ways for a good 5 years before then, possibly even more; solid memories only go back for 20 years.

It was maybe last week that I thought I might post something about this. Four and a half years after my move out of Alaska and 7 years after no longer being a part of the Faire, it has been much on my mind this year, more than any other, barring that first summer. The reason is obvious: time; the time of year and the time away from participating. The idea of posting something seemed like a good idea, of course.

The other ‘thing’ about the whole Faire and this time of year is that the story I have invested the last seven years in, on and off, is the story of my RenFaire character after the time he left, so it is never too far from my mind, though the writing of the character is not all Faire-related.

Yesterday, Saturday was always the big after party in the on-site pirate-themed open-air tavern. Although the time difference between the East Coast and Alaska is 4 hours, I tipped a few adult bevvies in honor of the memories and night. I had also been going through al of the photos I have to hand, thinking ahead to what I was thinking of eventually posting here, still not quite certain if I would or not.

I could not fall asleep last night, though I had originally been tired enough to do so. After 30 minutes of laying there, I decided to get up and maybe invest a bit more time in writing. Would up being mesmerized by YouTube instead.Turned out that my inability to fall asleep was fortunate, in that almost Midnight my time I receive a Facebook Messenger video call from one of my RenFaire group members! Who is at the Faire!! And it is time for the closing ceremony at 8pm Alaska time!!! The song, which is a staple at such Faires, is ‘Here’s A Health To The Company”.

Kind friends and companions, come join me in rhyme
Come lift up your voices in chorus with mine
Come lift up your voices all grief to refrain
For we may or might never all meet here again
Here's a health to the company and one to my lass
Let us drink and be merry all out of one glass
Let us drink and be merry all grief to refrain
For we may or might never all meet here again
Here's a health to the dear lass that I love so well
For her style and her beauty, sure none can excel
There's a smile on her countenance as she sits on my knee
There's no man in this wide world as happy as me
Here's a health to the company and one to my lass
Let us drink and be merry all out of one glass
Let us drink and be merry all grief to refrain
For we may or might never all meet here again
Our ship lies at anchor, she's ready to dock
I wish her safe landing, without any shock
If ever I should meet you by land or by sea
I will always remember your kindness to me
Here's a health to the company and one to my lass
Let us drink and be merry all out of one glass
Let us drink and be merry all grief to refrain
For we may or might never all meet here again
Here's a health to the company and one to my lass
Let us drink and be merry all out of one glass
Let us drink and be merry all grief to refrain
For we may or might never all meet here again!
Not only did it bring back memories, of course, but as I saw one of the usual photographer’s there who I knew, I asked for my friend to let me say ‘hallooo!’ to him. This led to a walk around the admittedly small Fairegrounds and a video visit to friends I haven’t seen in many a year. It was bittersweet, of course, and heartening in that almost all of them told me I was missed as was my group.
It took me some time to fall asleep, so filled with with happiness and an emotional high. But before I fell asleep, i knew I was going to post about the Faire and my group, The Wild Rovers, today!
Early Faire Years.
In college I was in a theater program as a minor, and part of that was learning stage combat. I loved it! There were not many opportunities in the Anchorage bowl to use the skills, but as a few of the people who were in the same class as I decided to put together a ‘live steel’ show of Battle Chess on for the Faire, I was contacted if I’d like to be a part. Of course, the answer was a resounding YES! At that time, in the early-to-mid 1990s, the show was a separate entity, not affiliated in the lore of the Faire with any of the baronies, so with two shows a day I could come and go as long as I was there for warm-ups before showtime. I have one existing woodcarving depicting this show:

That is I, all the way on the extreme left side, axe and shield, seeming half asleep! Two Baron’s would be the Kings on opposing sides and choose the scripted moves; any pieces that met would then ‘fight’ it out, determining which side took the square. Pretty straight forward. Being a barrel-chested young fella, I was always cast as a Rook, I think only once being a Knight. Thinking back, I believe I missed being in three years of the show from early on to my last year, which was something like 20 years of performing in the ‘live steel’ show. It changed from Battle Chess (this was, by the way, YEARS before Harry Potter) to Tournament of Champions, where supposed grievances would be brought before the Barons to be determined through combat, and then back to Chess in that time.
After some three or so years of being a separate entity, it was determined that the show needed to be incorporated into the full story of the Faire, which meant auditioning for one of the Baronies. The idea behind the whole Faire were that three barons would meet at summertime in this shire to compete for trade agreements and such, and there were the good guys, or Red Baron (yep!) and bad guys, the Green Baron, and the wise mediator guys, or Blue Baron, and the fighters would come from these. THis was to change later when Guilds were evolved into the story of the Faire, but more on that later..
I joined the Green that first year as part of the story of the Faire as a Guard for the Baroness. I chose the character I had been playing a role-playing game as, a kind of lovable rat-bastard named Donny Brooke, taking on originally an Irish accent which wound up going between Irish and Scottish without my realizing it, which brought about the background that his mother was Irish and his father was Scottish. At any rate, that year was the last year for the director of that court, and the next year the new director asked me to be the Baron! 😲 Hell, yes, I’d do it!

Did that for two years, making the Bad Guys ‘Craggies’, barbarians that would celebrate their victories by mass slaughter and such, but not the mustache twirling, angry all the time, snarling, spitting evil that had become the norm. That’s why we only had two years of Green Baron-ness; the Powers That Be wanted the Bad Guys to be impotent Disney-like villains that could not follow through on any threats. my opinion, anyway. I did get to wear a ‘whole nine yards’ kilt that was pleated by hand, the Olde Way, every day; being 100% wool, it turned out to be very comfortable and cool in summer! The Baron’s never actually fought during the chess game, but on that second year, the white shirt, I did get to clear the board in a fit of barbaric rage!
But that ‘firing’ led to the Better Thing.
The Wild Rovers
The shire the barons came to each summer needed a name and inhabitants. It was decided to incorporate Guilds into the Faire, which would be townspeople, magistrates, merchants and so forth. Taking much of what was developed for the Craggies, my co-director and I envisioned a mixture of Gypsies and Tinkers, both being of wandering peoples, and it gave us a grand opportunity to invite characters for many and diverse cultures to join, leaning into the idea of educating the patrons on the cultures of the East and the West, as we could.
The main Idea was to be a more Hollywood looking Gypsy and Gypsy encampment, bright colors and such, while also being able to impart historical references along with having several placards about the encampment with more in-depth info. I was very ambitious that first year of the Rovers, too. I had mentioned that it would be incredible if we could have a Gypsy wagon that could stand out. We, and I as director(s) were always very fortunate to have wonderfully creative people in the group; The week after I mentioned the wagon, one of my group, a very handyman kinda guy, shows me a plan for building one! That first year, it was perhaps 60% complete with no roof but for two plywood sheets, but that second year….

Myself and the fellow who wrote up the plan were the ‘horses’ that pulled that sucker around and about the Faire, too!
We went from very small to bigger and grander in both the encampment size and membership.


After a summer where the food that the Faire provided for it’s actors for lunch, a brown bag affair, also had mayonnaise that had turned brown in the heat, the Rovers began their own feast every day of the Faire. We could not allow patrons to join, for obvious reasons, but we would invite the Baron’s to partake, and we always had a lot of food that many of the Rover actors would make and bring. A few years, we even had a whole roasted pig, complete with apple in the mouth! Unfortunately, I have no picture of that…


It was endless fun to portray the character of Donny Brooke. In fact, during the course of the many years of rehearsals, a character questionnaire was mandatory for every actor to fully flesh out their character so the assuming of the role became secondary. We may never get the opportunity to tell patron or other actor of our character background, but it was there and ‘alive’ if needed.

In fact, over the course of about 10 years, I had compiled a ‘Wild Rovers Handbook’ for rehearsals that ran almost 140 pages, from the history of Gypsy and Tinker to what interactive theater is and how to do it, improvisational skills, acting skills, FaireSpeak and so on. There were also a 12-week set of templates for rehearsals and what needed to happen by those weeks to be on track to be ready for Faire days so the next director could follow them, should it come to pass.

There was a slight evolution of all characters, but other than one other person, I and Donny were the longest running characters in The Wild Rovers.

As there a LOT of photos, I limit the number: Donny didn’t change TOO much. Better boots, better doublet, expanding waist, graying and thinning hair…😎 Then, of course, there were the fight shows. I mentioned how I loved doing them and some of these photos show the intensity and commitment. Again, there are SO many, I restrict myself to a few:

After a few years we had semi-professional belly dancers join with us..

…and we shared our dart game wealth on the last Sunday of the Faire by going to the final performance of ‘The Tomato Show’ wherein rotten tomatoes were purchased and thrown at ‘rotten actors’ slaughtering any one of Shakespeare’s plays

We would buy baskets and baskets of tomatoes, form a firing line and at times begin a count, very loudly, of “One….two…three!!’encouraging the whole audience to throw when at least 10 of the Rovers along the back of the audience would then launch their barrage! Yeah, there were some casualties in the audience who were hit with tomato guts, but most were absolutely there for it!

Many organizations seem to have to deal with politics of one kind or another, and this RenFaire was no exception. There were difficulties with becoming almost ‘too big’ and rivaling the actual courts. I think is started when patrons began asking where the ‘Purple Court’ was. We wore purple, as you’ve seen, but we never put ourselves forward as a ‘court’. I will never understand why people let things fester in their minds than let someone know they’ve done something to annoy them. That seems to have been the case with the board of directors, as I would hear things through the grapevine that this person or that had a problem with the way I was running the Rovers or the group itself. When I’d meet with and ask them, no, everything was just fine!

Well, I had promised myself that as soon as the Faire stopped being fun, or at least more trouble than fun, I would pack it up and turn over the directorship. 2015 was that year when I found myself yelling at my actors during rehearsals not once, but on three different occasions. For nothing that was their fault, either. It was more dealing with the board, especially after having a group of fine people join with us who were going to portray faeries. This was to be mostly as a part of a booth they purchased as a vendor, but they wanted to be also a part of the Faire. Faeries running a shop, if you will. I was run through the ringer by the board on this because over a decade ago they had a group of fairies (note the difference in spelling) that went badly. Apparently so badly that even ten years on there were board members that were resistant to the idea, even after two in-depth meeting with me and the booth runner. And then I was called in because someone had come to them with a rumor that was absolutely false and they refused to let me know and speak to who brought the rumor to them to make sure things were straight from my mouth! It was stressful enough that it cause my outbursts. As things had gotten more bizarre dealing with the board the previous five or so years, the writing seemed to be on the proverbial wall.

I informed my group that it would be my last year as part of the Wild Rovers.

Even as I let the board know that I had been grooming two of my performers to take over the directorship, they chose someone else with a terrible directing record, forced changes upon them fairly gutting my 17 years of creation. Two years later, the Rovers were gone, no longer a part of the Faire.

That took a while for me to accept, even as I let it go. As with the loss of a loved one, we must accept and move on. In my case, move away! 😁 Still and all, I have so many incredible memories that I still share with many of my friends in Alaska, and hope for a return to get them together and have one last Wild Rover feast!

The Last Good-bye

I saw the light fade from the sky
On the wind I heard a sigh
As the snowflakes cover my fallen brothers
I will say this last goodbye
Night is now falling
So ends this day
The road is now calling and I must away
Over hill and under tree
Through lands where never light has shone
By silver streams that run down to the Sea
Under cloud, beneath the stars
Over snow and winter's morn
I turn at last to paths that lead home
And though where the road then takes me
I cannot tell
We came all this way
But now comes the day
To bid you farewell
Many places I have been
Many sorrows I have seen
But I don't regret
Nor will I forget
All who took that road with me
Night is now falling
So ends this day
The road is now calling
And I must away
Over hill and under tree
Through lands where never light has shone
By silver streams that run down to the Sea
To these memories I will hold
With your blessing I will go
To turn at last to paths that lead home
And though where the road then takes me
I cannot tell
We came all this way
But now comes the day
To bid you farewell
I bid you all a very fond farewell
libris:
Oooooh, this is a spectacular blog!  How fortuitist it was that your friend called you from the Faire, and you were able to see it again.  Perhaps you should plan a trip to go up there again.  The photos look like they're straight out of a movie, I love it!
Jun 18, 2022

More Blogs

  • 12.14.24
    1

    Seven Weeks of Engagement, Week 5

    Mood: ‘All Day Music’ by War Question #5. A book or book…
  • 12.08.24
    2

    Seven Weeks of Engagement, Week 4

    Mood: ‘Nathan’s Theme’ From the Video Game “Uncharted: Drake’s Fort…
  • 11.30.24
    1

    Seven Weeks of Engagement, Week 3

    Mood: ‘It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World Soundtrack, Opening Titles’…
  • 11.29.24
    2

    Seven Weeks of Engagement, Week 2

    Mood: ‘Whisper Not’ by Quincy Jones 2. What is a piece of…
  • 11.24.24
    4

    Seven Weeks of Engagement: Week One

    Mood: ‘It’s A Long Way There’ by Little River Band Week 1. Te…
  • 10.13.24
    2

    Book Number One IS DONE!

    Mood: ‘A Path Through The Mountains’ by Scott Buckley The Final S…
  • 10.03.24
    2

    Aftermath Of A Hurricane

    Mood: ‘So Small’, or Hope by Thomas Bergersen All Is Well With Me…
  • 09.22.24
    6

    The Best Laid Plans May Never Come To Pass

    Mood: ‘Letting Go’ by James Dooley Oh, Life, Sometimes You Ca…
  • 08.11.24
    1

    Finally, Almost Done With Writing Book One!

    Mood: “Leaving Lemuria” by Jo Blankenburg Done and…Done?…
  • 07.28.24
    3

    Give A Little Bit of My Life…Update

    Mood: ‘Give A little Bit’, by Supertramp Life Has Been A Bit…

We at SuicideGirls have been celebrating alternative pin-up girls for:

23
years
9
months
2
days
  • 5,509,826 fans
  • 41,393 fans
  • 10,327,617 followers
  • 4,593 SuicideGirls
  • 1,120,847 followers
  • 14,917,937 photos
  • 321,315 followers
  • 61,385,044 comments
  • Join
  • Profiles
  • Groups
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Shop
  • Help
  • About
  • Press
  • LIVE

Legal/Tos | DMCA | Privacy Policy | 18 U.S.C. 2257 Record-Keeping Requirements Compliance Statement | Contact Us | Vendo Payment Support
©SuicideGirls 2001-2025

Press enter to search
Fast Hi-res

Click here to join & see it all...

Crop your photo