Maryland Renaissance Festival
Nine weekends in a virtual 16th century village, the annual Maryland Renaissance Festival features hundreds of professional entertainers — King Henry VIII and his entourage, jousts on horseback, 12 stages of continuous entertainment, comedy and skills, swordswallower extraordinaire Johnny Fox, magicians, acrobats, authentic costumes, music, taverns, yummy foods, and superb craftspeople. For a closer, more intimate look at many of the individual performers, visit the Revel Grove unofficial but clearly very loving site. It's the next best thing to being there.


Photograph by R. H. Grainger. Click for larger view (51KB).

The Kadon gamepuzzles booth is aptly named "Ye Olde Gamery" and provides an arcane arcade atmosphere with challenges and laughs galore. There is a $1.00 playing fee per puzzle, refunded upon purchase. Our award-winning pavilion (above), constructed in 1998, is a spacious 20x24x24 ft. and replaced the long-outgrown original booth used since 1985. This Festival is our home show. We've been a fixture with fairgoers for 28 years as of the 2011 season.

Photograph by Arthur Blumberg, 2011


Photograph by Dick Jones, 2010

The spacious interior of the Kadon booth has lots of room for displaying many puzzles on the walls, and plenty of seating for players and puzzlers to be entertained. In 2010 we added new chandeliers.

During the 2010 and 2011 seasons, we had the lovely assistance of the talented Meshele Merchant—bellydancer, fortune teller, master chef, artist/painter, serving wench, and puzzle instructor. This day she wore a jingly outfit in honor of the festival's Pirate Invasion theme. The shy gent in white shirt is our resident game master, Richard Grainger.


Photo by Dick Jones


Photograph by Dick Jones


Mistress Katrina, the proprietress, is seen here in her Renaissance regalia, with bodice laced, ready for visitors to test their wits on the puzzles.


Photograph by Art Blumberg

Dick Jones is part of the Saturday crew. He's especially good with the kids who eagerly come in to try the puzzles.


Photographs by Art Blumberg, 2008

Rolinda Collinson, our lovely and vivacious goose mistress who came on board in the 2008 season, brings fun and delight to visitors of all ages in experiencing an authentic Renaissance game, The Royal Game of the Goose, a unique and exclusive feature at Ye Olde Gamery. Even the King and his court succumbed to her charms and visited repeatedly to engage in gaming and royal banter.
 


Photograph by Art Blumberg, 2009


Photograph by Dick Jones, 2010


Photograph by Art Blumberg, 2011

Gorgeous in any garb — Rolinda in pirate scarf or wreath.

  Photograph by Arthur Blumberg, 2009



Sir Richard takes on a young challenger in the game of Squint. The challenges are a popular and suspenseful attraction for onlookers and contestants alike. Winners get special tokens to redeem in the booth or keep as trophies. Quaint factoid — notice the unfinished walls. This was the new booth's first weekend.


Photograph by Kimberly Kiddoo, 1998

As Kadon's resident gamemaster, Sir Richard is one of the most colorful and esteemed characters of the "village." Here he is again, a year later, this time with longer hair and shorter beard, pondering a particularly strategic move. Note the now-finished stucco walls. At right, an even longer beard to approach the Gandalf look.

 

Sir Richard keeps careful logs of his seasonal wins and losses. With his non-leaky quill he's recording the day's scores. On a good day, challengers have a 15% chance of victory.


Photograph by Arthur Blumberg, 2011

An award-winning 28-page "Renaissance" edition of the Kadon catalog is printed on parchment-like paper, in Shakespearean style, rhymes and all (copyrights 1996, 1998 and 2000). It won a special publication award in October 2003 from Festival management. For a close-up view of the cover page of this unusual document, click on this miniature:






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