Northern California Renaissance Faire

Last updated
Northern California Renaissance Faire
GenreRenaissance fair
Datesmid-September – mid-October
Location(s) Casa de Fruta, Hollister, California
Inaugurated2004 (orig. 1967)
Attendance150,000 (average)
Area11 acres (45,000 m2)
Website www.norcalrenfaire.com

The Northern California Renaissance Faire, owned by Play Faire Productions is a Renaissance faire in California located in Hollister about 90 miles southeast of San Francisco. The Renaissance Festival typically runs on weekends from mid-September to mid-October. It consists of five or six weekends depending on the year. It is set in the fictional village of "Willingtown" in Derbyshire, England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I in the mid-late 16th Century.

Contents

Features

The faire hosts over 200 artisans and six stages of non stop shows. A cast of 1000 performers fill the streets in costumes of the era. [1] Gate 6 at Casa de Fruta is the entrance to the faire. The faire showcases two jousting matches every day of the faire. [2] There is also a concert held every Saturday at 6pm as the faire closes.

Themed Weekends

Each of the five weekends of the festival take on a different theme, influencing the performances, costumes, food, drink, art, shops, contests, and games throughout the festival grounds.

History

The first Renaissance Faire was started by Phyllis Patterson in 1963 in Irwindale, and in 1967 the Patternsons brought it to Northern California. [3] Originally it was located in China Camp State Park in Marin County but by 1970 it had moved to Novato. [4] In 1994 the Patterns sold the fair to the Renaissance Entertainment Corporation, and subsequently it moved to Vacaville in 1999. The location at Black Point in Novato was replaced by a housing development and golf course. [5] (StoneTree Golf Club)

Then, hoping to secure a long term lease that would allow them to maintain structures in place year round, in 2002 the Fair moved again to Casa de Fruta in Hollister. [6] However after two seasons, at the end of 2003 they announced the company would be shutting down operation of the fair because the profits were not substantial enough. Not content with this, in early 2004 Fair participants led a campaign to raise money and started the first participant-owned and operated fair via the corporation Play Faire Productions. They were successful and the Fair reopened in September 2004, where it has continued to operate since. [7]

The faire was canceled in 2020 due to COVID-19. It returned in 2021.

See also

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References

  1. "Craft Fair in San Francisco, San Francisco, Bay Area, San Jose - Northern California Renaissance Faire". 29 July 2015.
  2. "The Joust".
  3. The Surprisingly Radical Roots of the Renaissance Fair
  4. History of the Renaissance Pleasure Faire
  5. https://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/article/All-s-Faire-At-Black-Point-3025563.php
  6. https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/838782/000104746903010030/a2106485z10ksb.htm
  7. The tale of the Renaissance Faire’s resurrection