Archive for the ‘News’ Category

October is the Perfect Time to Plan Mardi Gras Costume

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

When shopping for your or your loved ones’ Halloween costume, be sure to keep in mind that Mardi Gras is right around the corner.

Mardi Gras, especially in New Orleans, is a great excuse to dress up, and residents of the Crescent City sometimes go decades without missing the chance to don a crazy costume.

After you have decided what to be, or what to dress your children as for the 2008 Halloween festivities, start thinking about costume ideas for February of next year. Be careful not to buy any costume materials until after Halloween, however, to make sure you get your costume gear at the lowest prices.

Mardi Gras is a great opportunity to step outside yourself and partake in a community of celebration. Don’t miss out on the chance to have a great costume while doing so!

Mardi Gras 2009: Don’t Miss Out on your Holiday Collectibles!

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Although the next Fat Tuesday is over 9 months away, it can never hurt to plan ahead.

Since Mardi Gras is celebrated in only certain places of the world, with each their own tradition, many items or “take-aways” have and will become hot commodities for collectors.

The next time you visit New Orleans to catch beads, see parades, eat king cake and take in some culture, be mindful of the unique items you encounter. There are collectors who scour Ebay for particular year or parade doubloons, a gold Zulu coconut or an ornate flashing string of beads. At any time, there are framed posters or parade krewe memorabilia that go for hundreds, if not thousands of dollars each.

It’s the little things that come together to make Mardi Gras in New Orleans one of the best free shows on Earth, so if you find yourself in the Crescent City during carnival time, think twice about stepping over that plastic souvenir cup or trading some beads. Who knows? It could pay off. And in any case, you’ll be left with a little piece of history.

Compucast Interactive – Hosting Mardi Gras New Orleans Website

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

We want to let you know briefly about Compucast Interactive, the New Orleans-based web design company behind Mardi Gras New Orleans. Compucast designs and hosts sites for many prominent and well-known New Orleans restaurants, hotels, and other businesses and has been doing so since the company was started by Judy Weitz in the late 1990’s.

Compucast is committed to New Orleans’ culture, food, and festivals, and we are honored to bring you information about New Orleans most famous event – Mardi Gras!

So we hope you enjoy the site, we hope you find the information helpful, and we urge you to call or email us if you have any questions.

Mardi Gras 2008 was early but still great fun for all!

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

Mardi Gras Day, 2008, was February 5…the earliest it’s been in a very long time and the earliest it will be for quite a while (thank goodness!). Since the nightly parades begin two weeks prior to Fat Tuesday, the parades this year began in mid-January…which can be quite cold. However, the weather didn’t stop parade revelers from having a fabulous time.

Kevin Costner thrilled the massive crowds that lined the streets of Mid-City for the Krewe of Endymion. 2008 was the first year this extremely popular parade returned to their traditional route (since Hurricane Katrina). The pre-parade party on Orleans Avenue was a festival by itself…but then the parade started rolling at City Park & Orleans which brought tears to the eyes of everyone as this was yet another sign that New Orleans is recovering and life is back to normal.

Based on the crowds that lined St. Charles Avenue Mardi Gras Day and the traditional Mardi Gras madness in the French Quarter, the early arrival of Mardi Gras didn’t affect the spirit of Carnival that is unique to New Orleans!

ERROL LABORDE’S COMMENTARY: TWELFTH NIGHT

Tuesday, December 26th, 2006

New Orleanians who do it right never have to worry about post Christmas letdown. That’s because the day that to most of the world is the twelfth and final day of Christmas is recognized here as Twelfth Night, the first day of the Carnival season. Quite literally, Carnival begins at the moment when Christmas ends. In other places, people have long ditched their Christmas trees by January 6, but in New Orleans the trees stand, at least until that date, when their sagging limbs and shedding needles seem unable to contain the old season any longer.

In places where Carnival is not practiced, Twelfth Night is just another winter evening, but in New Orleans, the night is alive with subtle native rituals that are still spared the gaudiness and encroaching commercialism found as the season reaches its end on Mardi Gras. For almost a century and a half, The Twelfth Night Revelers have held their society ball on that evening, quietly and privately recognizing the season. On that same evening a group called the Phunny Phorty Phellows has, for the last two decades, taken to a streetcar. The banners tied to the side announce to the world, or at least to those waiting for a trolley that “It’s Carnival Time!” Watching for TV news coverage of the ride has become for some people the harbinger of the season.

As Carnival has grown and become marketed and manipulated, and in an age when positions on floats are promoted as visitor packages, much of the mystery, magic and spontaneity have been lost. But in the dawning hours of each Carnival season the spirit manifests itself.

For the last several years, the Phellows have experienced that spirit in terms of three to four mystery maskers who appear at the spot where their ride begins. The maskers wear full-face masks and overcoats. They carry signs with tongue- in- cheek messages about the Carnival season. None of the Phellows have been able to identify the maskers.

Once the streetcar leaves, the maskers disappear, only to reappear at different spots along the route.

Before Katrina interrupted the St. Charles route, the maskers’ final appearance was when the streetcar approached Gallier Hall. There they stopped the vehicle long enough for a quick toast and an exchange of gifts. After that they were gone- for another year. As one Phellow explains, “those maskers are one of the few things that are real and magic about Carnival. One year they won’t be there and we’re all going to feel pretty sad.”

With the St. Charles route still denied them, this year the vagabond Phellows will take an alternate route by loading on the streetcar at N. Carrollton by City Park and then going up Canal Street to the river and back.

Prior to the Phellows, not much, other than the private soiree of Twelfth Night Revelers, happened on January 6th. The Phellows have made the day more popular and brought publicity to the opening of the carnival season. There have since been many followers. This year, for example, the Kenner-based Krewe of Zeus will celebrate its 50th anniversary by staging a special Twelfth Night parade along Metairie Road. Because the evening will be on a Saturday, expect a lot more activity this year. But, give credit to the Phellows. They have been there regardless of anniversaries, days of the week, or weather conditions.

Carnival has suffered losses through the years, but a city with endangered tradition at least has more soul that a city with no traditions at all.

Among those traditions is the king cake. Carnival’s beginning, Twelfth Night, is a fixed date, but its ending, midnight on Mardi Gras, is movable. This year Mardi Gras is February 20, which means the season will last a little more than six weeks – that means a month and a half of being exposed to king cakes. The cakes tend to show up most everywhere during the season. Once they were baked so dry and undistinguished that they were easy to ignore; now they are injected with various flavors of globby stuff that make a bust out of New Years diet resolutions but that are nevertheless tempting.

Few confections are as rich in rituals as they are in calories. For the Twelfth Night Revelers (known simply as “TNR” to society insiders) slices from a mock king cake are served to the waiting debutantes. Each slice has a silver bean, except one, delivered to the girl who must feign surprise as the gold bean within is her sign that she is Queen.

For the Phellows, wobbling along on a streetcar, real king cakes are used to determine the royalty for that year. One year the Queen-select was so excited that, after the ride, she called her father long distance to announce the news. The last time the father had heard from the daughter was when she had called to complain that the pipes in her home had been broken by a recent freeze. On this evening of Twelfth Night the old man, not used to the ways of New Orleans, seemed confused by his daughter’s announcement. “Oh, so you’re clean?” he replied. “No,” the daughter replied, “I didn’t say I’m clean, I said I’m Queen.”

Pity those places where on January 6, it is more important to be clean than to be Queen. In New Orleans we know better.

Reprinted with permission of the author.

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