The Louisiana Renaissance Festival (abbreviated LARF) is a renaissance fair near Hammond, Louisiana. The festival takes place on a location that emulates a historical 16th century village (Albright) in England during the 1565 fall harvest festival. Renaissance fairs began in the 1960s in California. The Louisiana Renaissance Festival started in 2000 and explores Subcultural movements in Renaissance art, crafts, music, and theatre.[1] Cast members are dressed as people would have been dressed during the 1560s.
Louisiana Renaissance Festival | |
---|---|
Genre | Renaissance fair |
Dates | November - December |
Location(s) | Robert, Louisiana |
Inaugurated | 2000 |
Attendance | 25,000 (average) |
Stages | 7 |
Website | www |
The local cast at LARF is composed of enthusiasts from all over southeast Louisiana. The cast members regularly interact with the patrons of the fair and have been known to try to marry them, dance with them, bring patrons into random shows, and other mischief. The cast members dress in renaissance inspired clothing. Females wear an underskirt or petticoat with an outer skirt and accessories such as collars. Males wear knee length trousers, stockings, and a shirt.[2]
LARF features seven stages with day-long interactive entertainment. There are over 100 merchants offering hand crafted wares.[3] These merchants also provide renaissance clothing, perfumes, ceramic horns, jewelry, and other distinct 16th century gift options.[4] The festival includes much food, drink, treats and spirits—both modern and historical. Foods such as jester chips, bread bowls, turkey legs, and gourmet mushrooms are served.[5] There is also a large "living village" reenactment with live cast members ready to show visitors a glimpse of pre-industrial life.
While still small in comparison to other older renaissance festivals including the neighboring giant Texas Renaissance Festival whose open season partly overlaps LARF, LARF enjoys a reputation of hospitality that has built a strong base of loyal visitors from all over the country.
LARF was opened in 2000 to become Louisiana's first public annual renaissance festival. It opens the first weekend in November and runs for the following six weeks, including the Friday after Thanksgiving. LARF is also the last renaissance festival of the year-long season and ends the season with a closing gate jam and firework display over the lake.
In 2002 LARF received an award for best New Event of the Year Division,[6] and it has been selected twice as one of the Southeast Tourism Society's TOP 20 Events in the Southeast.[7]
LARF is a sponsor of the Renaissance Living History Center.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ McCallister, Kathleen (2012). "Well Met: Renaissance Faires and the American Counterculture". Library Journal. 137 (17): 93.
- ^ Joost-Gaugier, Christiane (Spring 2002). "Renaissance Clothing and Materials of Memory". The Sixteenth Century Journal. 33 (1): 238–239. doi:10.2307/4144274. JSTOR 4144274.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-07-18. Retrieved 2009-04-21.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Louisiana Renaissance Festival". NewsBank. American Press (Lake Charles, LA). November 23, 2007.
- ^ "Louisiana Renaissance Festival". NewsBank. American Press (Lake Charles, LA). November 23, 2007.
- ^ "Home". la-renfest.com.
- ^ "Hidden Secrets Events Calendar – Top 20 Events in the Southeast United States". Archived from the original on 2009-02-13. Retrieved 2009-04-21.