Patty McArthur carries her handmade Queen Elizabeth the 1st Costumes outside the Olympic Theatre Arts building Aug.9 in Sequim. She will be the reigning monarch of the OTA “Kings and Queens and Royal Scenes Renaissance Faire” on Aug. 21-22. Emily Matthiessen/Olympic Peninsula News Group

Patty McArthur carries her handmade Queen Elizabeth the 1st Costumes outside the Olympic Theatre Arts building Aug.9 in Sequim. She will be the reigning monarch of the OTA “Kings and Queens and Royal Scenes Renaissance Faire” on Aug. 21-22. Emily Matthiessen/Olympic Peninsula News Group

Make way for the queen: OTA gears up for Kings, Queens, and Royal Scenes Renaissance Faire

  • By Emily Matthiessen Olympic Peninsula News Group
  • Sunday, August 15, 2021 1:30am
  • LifeClallam County

SEQUIM — A local actress playing Queen Elizabeth I will grace the parking lot of Sequim’s Olympia Theatre Arts next weekend.

“The Queen has come to decide if the theatre is to be opened,” said Patty McArthur last week, practicing her role as Elizabeth. “Master Shakespeare will entertain her with his many plays.”

McArthur will be dressed in a costume of her own making which she has worn in many a Renaissance Fair at Olympic Theatre Arts’ “Kings, Queens, and Royal Scenes Renaissance Faire,” set for noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 21-22.

Tickets can be purchased in advance on the OTA website at olympictheatrearts.org or at the event: adults $12, members $10, and children $5.

Producer/director Richard Stephens said that event will be, “all outside, a true English country faire.”

Activities and fun are offered for a “bit of coin”: Attendees can use their credit card in conjunction with a numbered medallion to make purchases, or they can buy a bag of coins for $5 each, four in a bag.

The event will feature a fortune-teller, a storyteller and a fairy garden. Stephens said there will be, “hay bales, shields and heraldic devices.”

He said actors will perform six scenes from the works of William Shakespeare for the court and audience.

“I pulled the scenes together and wrote the scenario for the event,” Stephens said.

All scenes will features kings or queens. The scenes were pulled from these plays: “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” “Hamlet,” “King Lear,” “Antony and Cleopatra,” “Henry V” and “A Winter’s Tale.”

Stephens said that two years ago McArthur attended as Queen Elizabeth.

“She was such a delight I invited her back to build the show around her,” Stephens said.

McArthur said she decided to go to the last Renaissance Faire in costume. No one else there had dressed like a queen. She received a warm welcome and said she “had such fun,” that she was happy to accept Stephens’ invitation.

Visitors can attend the faire in costume or plain clothes. “Time travelers are welcome,” said organizers, “but we highly encourage people to come in costume.”

Costumes need not be perfectly historically accurate, they noted, as faire members are not perfectly accurate either, just close.

“It’s anachronistic,” said one of the organizers. “Wenches in tennis shoes.”

Activities

Beefeater and experienced fencer Steve Frederickson will give a free fencing demonstration and offer lessons for a fee.

Cartoonist and Animator Jim Bradrick will raise money for the nonprofit community theatre by sketching caricatures of visitors; see a preview of his work at bradrick.com.

Stephens said that the grand procession of Queen Elizabeth and her ladies in waiting, escorted by the royal beefeaters, will be at 1:30 p.m. Her retinue will not be large.

“We are here to visit this small village of Sequim,” McAthusr said, and thus, “the full court is not here.”

Visitors can help the Queen build her court by paying $40 for a catered lunch and a seat near her in the court to watch the performance.

More food will be available from a food truck run by the Sequim Lions. Drinks will be served at the Pub.

OTA marketing director Pete Griffin said that the Lions are paying all the expenses related to the food truck and donating half of the proceeds to the theatre.

Behind the scenes

About 46 volunteers and a handful of staff are involved in pulling off the event, according to Sarah Jane Benjamin and Cathy Wagner. The pair are in charge of “atmosphere and auxiliary actors” — meaning the volunteers who work in character at the faire. These actors must improvise while attempting to use old time language while operating the attractions.

Although roles are already filled and actors have chosen their costumes, the theater “could use a bit of help with labor, Friday morning set up and Sunday teardown.”

Organizers have been planning the event since March. It was planned for outside, following safety protocols.

All volunteers will be masked except for the actors when they are on stage.

OTA recommends and encourages attendees to wear masks.

Wagner and Benjamin said that some volunteers’ masks match their costumes, but they advise people to wear what is most comfortable.

At the faire, attendees can participate in darts, card, knucklebones and other games.

Benjamin and Wagner said there will be a prize board with lots of prizes.

Services like gardening or caricature art by Bradrick could be won or a vacation package, among other prizes.

OTA also will host a paddle raise. “Raise the Paddle is like a backwards auction,” Griffin said.

The auctioneer starts out with a high amount and asks who will donate that amount, someone raises their paddle to pledge that amount, the crowd “huzzahs!” and then the amount is dropped again and again until reaching the lowest bid.

Money raised from the paddle will be used for exterior enhancements of the theatre.

They want it to look “more like a theater and less like a church building,” Griffin said.

New to the faire this year are additional “wandering minstrels,” including a lute player, a harpist and a Pied Piper, as well as children’s games, fortune-telling and even a “Plague Rat” version of Cornhole,” Griffin noted in a press release.

Attendees can park at Sequim High School or First Federal Bank. Also, the bus stop is nearby.

This is the second year of the Renaissance Faire, though OTA has been hosting Shakespeare events for much longer.

Last year’s faire was canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic; in 2019, the theme was “Shakespeare’s Wit and Wisdom.”

For more about Olympic Theatre Arts, visit olympic theatrearts.org.

________

Emily Matthiessen is an intern with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. Reach her at emily.matthiessen@sequimgazette.com.

More in Life

HORSEPLAY: Peninsula disaster volunteers

LAST NIGHT WAS the highly anticipated meeting of volunteers who are willing… Continue reading

A GROWING CONCERN: The bare facts on bare-root planting

NEXT WEEK, THAT little rodent in Pennsylvania will let us know how… Continue reading

Joseph Bednarik
OUUF plans Sunday service

Joseph Bednarik will discuss the concept of worship as… Continue reading

Ashmore guest speaker at Unity in the Olympics

Unity in the Olympics will explore the theme of… Continue reading

ISSUES OF FAITH: Striving to be in the present

JANUARY IS REALLY going by fast for me. All the work I… Continue reading

Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group
LaRue Robirts shows one of the quilts she made for Toys for Sequim Kids on Dec. 17 at Sequim Prairie Grange. By her count, she’s made and donated more than 1,400 quilts to community efforts.
Quilter uses experience to donate work to children in need

LaRue Robirts, 90, says she’s made more than 1,400 quilts

A GROWING CONCERN: Work now to avoid garden problems later

WITH THE SEVEN reasons to prune last week, you should be ready… Continue reading

Eva McGinnis
Unity speaker set for Sunday

The Rev. Eva McGinnis will present “Living Our Prime… Continue reading

Bode scheduled for OUUF weekend program

The Rev. Bruce Bode will present “Ritual Pause” at… Continue reading

ISSUES OF FAITH: A photograph of a place, a memory and a feeling

THEY SAY A picture is worth a thousand words. Recently, while looking… Continue reading

Tim Branham, left, his wife Mickey and Bill Pearl work on a 500-piece jigsaw puzzle entitled “Days to Remember.” The North Olympic Library at its main branch on South Peabody Street in Port Angeles sponsored a jigsaw puzzle contest on Saturday, and 15 contestants challenged their skills. With teams of two to four, contestants try to put together a puzzle in a two-hour time limit. Justin Senter and Rachel Cook finished their puzzle in 54 minutes to win the event. The record from past years is less than 40 minutes. The next puzzle contest will be at 10 a.m. Feb. 8. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Piece by piece

Jigsaw puzzle contest in Port Angeles

HORSEPLAY: Planning can help prevent disaster in an emergency

ISN’T IT TRUE in life, when one door closes and appears locked… Continue reading