Mardi Gras
#7
Guest
Posts: n/a
Yes, some of the newer krewes, including Tucks, btw) will sell tickets to their Balls. The tickets are quite expensive. However, you should know that these balls may not be what you are envisioning. They are more like pageants, with lots of formal presentations and ceremony, very little general dancing. Often, the tickets nonmembers can get only entitle them to watch, not participate.
The parties thrown by the Krewes after
the parades are usually the true parties, with live entertainment.
If you just want to see what a Ball looks like, the Old Mint in the Quarter has a very nice Carnival exhibit, including some costume tableaus very like those done at the balls; the difference is that the poses are struck by mannequins rather than real people.
The parties thrown by the Krewes after
the parades are usually the true parties, with live entertainment.
If you just want to see what a Ball looks like, the Old Mint in the Quarter has a very nice Carnival exhibit, including some costume tableaus very like those done at the balls; the difference is that the poses are struck by mannequins rather than real people.
#8
Guest
Posts: n/a
The Mardi Gras exhibit at the Mint is no longer there. A Mardi Gras museum has been opened in Jackson Square, and all the memorabilia at the Mint was moved there. It's a great museum that offers a lot of history on carnival.
The big Endymion ball is a huge party at the Dome. We went a few years ago. Imagine going to a parade indoors in formal wear. After the parade rolls through the Dome (at the end of its parade route), the party begins. There are bands onstage all night. The old-line balls that aren't open to the public usually include a tableaux (basically, a Mardi Gras play put on my the krewe members) and then the court is presented - followed by the Queen's breakfast at the country club or some other such location. They're pretty dull - but they're a MAJOR event for the krewes. If a lady is invited to dance by a krewe member, she dances. If not, you sit and watch. Going once was an experience but we declined the invitation to join the krewes and now leave town every year for quieter places.
The big Endymion ball is a huge party at the Dome. We went a few years ago. Imagine going to a parade indoors in formal wear. After the parade rolls through the Dome (at the end of its parade route), the party begins. There are bands onstage all night. The old-line balls that aren't open to the public usually include a tableaux (basically, a Mardi Gras play put on my the krewe members) and then the court is presented - followed by the Queen's breakfast at the country club or some other such location. They're pretty dull - but they're a MAJOR event for the krewes. If a lady is invited to dance by a krewe member, she dances. If not, you sit and watch. Going once was an experience but we declined the invitation to join the krewes and now leave town every year for quieter places.