Lovin Life After 50: Tucson February 2020

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Medieval Talent Performers show their unique skills at Renaissance Festival BY CONNOR DZIAWURA Renaissance fairs around the nation are breeding grounds for people with interesting talents. From unique skills to thrilling performances, these popular events tap the best they can find in medieval entertainment. The Arizona Renaissance Festival— open Saturdays and Sundays from February 8 to March 29, as well as on Presidents Day, Monday, February 17. On this year’s docket are talented folks like Adam “Crack” Winrich, who developed a skill working with flaming whips; The Angels, who fuse their vocal talents with the thrill of sword-fighting, all put through a comedic lens; Cirque du Sewer, the acrobat with rats and cats; The Danseries, a historical dance crew; and The Jousters. Quick thinking has been handy to performer Terry Foy, better known as Zilch the Torysteller, who will return for this year’s festivities. Known as a master of spoonerisms and storytelling, Foy has a knack for reconstructing words on the spot. “If you’re doing a whole story like ‘Little Red Riding Hood,’ it comes out, ‘Rittle Led

Hiding Rood, the gittle lirl in the ced roat, went out for a falk in the worest, met a wig wad bolf,’ and so on and so on and so on,” he explains. The term “spoonerism,” he says, is named after 19th and 20th century Oxford don William Archibald Spooner, who was known for this “art of switching.” Using his mastery of the skill, Foy tells tales such as “Parunzel” and Spilliam Wakesheare’s “Jomeo & Ruliet.” He mixes in music, too, and is experienced with the mandolin. He has also played viola, violin and guitar. “I found out when I was 12 years old I had a facility for this citching of swonsonants,” he says, adding with practice, “I’ve been able to put these stories together and use my rather odd sense of humor to present a comedy routine.” He credits elementary English for teaching him about spoonerisms, malapropisms and pig Latin, as does he his dad, who loved comedian Archie Campbell on “Hee Haw.” Campbell has done spoonerisms. “I’m not the first; I won’t be the last to do this kind of thing,” Foy says. “I happen to

Another festivalgoer favorite, Lord Robert Chessman, the queen’s royal falconer, is also returning to the Gold Canyon event. (Submitted photo)

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FEBRUARY 2020

Zilch the Torysteller, known for his “spoonerism” - the art of switching constants and vowels, and a crowd favorite returns this year to the Renaissance Festival. (Submitted photo)

be pretty good at it.” Talented bunch Modeled as a 30-acre, 16th-century European village, the Arizona Renaissance Festival has 14 stages boasting talented acts like Foy. Medieval enthusiasts can wander the festival grounds and check out all sorts of other performances, activities and arts and crafts, maybe even picking up a turkey leg along the way. As is tradition, the king and queen will be paramount to the yearly festivities.

Robby Sinkler knows this all too well, as he serves as Lord Robert Chessman, the queen’s royal falconer. Festivalgoers can check out his Art of Falconry show. In this show, which he calls a “family affair,” he is aided by his wife, his daughter and local volunteers. Together, they work with a variety of birds of prey—from eagles to owls, vultures and falcons—showing their natural behaviors while explaining the medieval history of falconry. This includes flying over the audience, or even just groundwork. In one display, Sinkler has a vulture trained to spot a particular egg based on its color; in another, he demonstrates an eagle’s speed with an amphitheater fly-by. “We don’t have them ride a bicycle or anything like that like you might see in a parrot show,” he says with a laugh. “It’s really a close encounter of animals you usually see at a distance.” Sinkler heads up Wild Sky Productions, through which he acquires birds from zoos, rehabilitation centers and captive-breeding projects. He says his organization is a last resort for nonreleasable birds. “They may have handicaps or mental disabilities,” he admits. “Depending on the year, there’s a lot of different types of birds we might work with.” The Florida native and 30-plus-year falconer remembers gaining an appreciation for animals from his father at a young age, before doing zoo work in college. There he learned about falconry and birds of prey. He first signed on to a Renaissance festival gig around 25 years ago, at the Georgia one. www.LovinLife.com


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