Bringing History to Life: Live Historical Interpretation ft Kathy Hipperson and Hana DeHart

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  • čas přidán 17. 01. 2020
  • Visit Audley End: www.english-heritage.org.uk/v...
    Mrs Crocombe appears in the English Heritage “Victorian Way” series: • The Victorian Way
    Historical interpretation at Audley End is run by Past Pleasures Ltd,
    / past_pleasures_ltd
    pastpleasures.co.uk/
    More Kathy: / historicalhippo1
    More Hana: / hana.dehart
    Kathy’s historical theatre company, Time Will Tell: / twttheatre
    Want to get started with hand sewing?
    🧵
    🕯Check out my Skillshare original course, “Hand Sewing Basics: Working Wonders with Fabric, Needle & Thread”. To sign up for a free trial and take the class, visit skl.sh/bernadettebanner1
    This channel is made possible through the generous support of Patreon members. To become a patron, visit / bernadettebanner (although videos will remain free for you here regardless).
    Beyond CZcams:
    IG @bernadettebanner / bernadettebanner
    Management contact for business enquiries:
    bernadette@helmtalentgroup.com
    bernadettebanner.co.uk/
    Music:
    “Found by the River” [Melody stem] by Trabant 33, epidemicsound.com
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @noorazraq2245
    @noorazraq2245 Před 4 lety +1065

    Bernadette: I hope you got some hand sewing done
    Me,stitching together the stuffed penguin that I’ve spent the last few hours knitting with my hand because I lost my yarn needle: .. *yes*
    Update:The penguin has been completed and is a success.

    • @lindseystein9676
      @lindseystein9676 Před 4 lety +37

      That sounds like an adorable project, penguins are my favorite

    • @sharonfernandez2739
      @sharonfernandez2739 Před 4 lety +12

      Noor Azraq we love penguins

    • @noorazraq2245
      @noorazraq2245 Před 4 lety +24

      Lindsey Stein They are adorable. This is actually my second one,mostly because the first one was in blue and pink and didn’t really look like a penguin. Everyone thought it was a turtle or something. It got me a good grade in art,though.

    • @raeesmerelda
      @raeesmerelda Před 4 lety +12

      Penguin! (sorry, love penguins.)

    • @vhehl698
      @vhehl698 Před 4 lety +4

      I continued pinning the hem of my skirt that I finally want to finish and am now finishing by hand (heavily inspired by Bernadettes apathy to sewing machines :D). I would love to see a picture of that penguin, it sounds lovely!

  • @Renaid13
    @Renaid13 Před 4 lety +642

    I love watching Bernadette the Producer try to ensure the end product is something worth putting on the CZcamss: making sure the microphone is catching all the audio and being incredibly concerned about the ambient noise in the pub wrecking the recording while still engaging in the conversation!

    • @bernadettebanner
      @bernadettebanner  Před 4 lety +267

      Oh yes can you tell I'm dying internally when the phone starts ringing at an important moment in the conversation 😂

    • @jannawalzschink775
      @jannawalzschink775 Před 4 lety +44

      I only really got distracted when Pentatonix started playing in the background. Love them, but my brain couldn't fit them into the actual, wonderful conversation happening.

    • @norwegianwiking
      @norwegianwiking Před 4 lety +49

      @@bernadettebanner but for future reference the audio level was fine regardless where the mic was.

    • @inerlogic
      @inerlogic Před 4 lety +32

      @@bernadettebanner i kept waiting for Kathy to look over her shoulder "OI! ANSWER THE FECKIN PHONE YA TWAT!"
      I mean.... that's what *i* was yelling at the screen :)

    • @MargaretPinard
      @MargaretPinard Před 4 lety +11

      That side-eye at 21:30ish...LOLOLOL

  • @shaggy0917
    @shaggy0917 Před 4 lety +500

    "I struggle with the interaction ... interactions with all humans in general", and "...people are scary." Big mood.

    • @wonderwend1
      @wonderwend1 Před 4 lety +25

      I disagree with her there. I think she just finds it difficult to make small talk with people who dont share the same interests as her. I'm the same. When shes chatting to people and she is interested in the subject she is very engaging and supportive of those people and brings out the best in them.

    • @wwaxwork
      @wwaxwork Před 4 lety +18

      One of the best things I did for that was become a Tour Guide, it was 6 months of sheer terror until I gained my confidence, then one day it was like a switch clicked and the fear was gone.

    • @carajames6696
      @carajames6696 Před 4 lety +8

      Completely empathize and share this thought.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před 2 lety +1

      @Matt Lapierre - It must be especially scary for Ms Banner since she has gained so much CZcams fame. So many people wanting chunks of her time and assuming that they will become her best friend, etc. >_

    • @battlebear437
      @battlebear437 Před rokem +1

      @@wonderwend1 don’t get me wrong. While I like people, it’s difficult for me to interact for a long period of time even with friends. I need private space to recharge my social battery quite often.

  • @dan339dan
    @dan339dan Před 4 lety +457

    "There are 6 Mrs Crocombes" 😱

    • @SunflowerSpotlight
      @SunflowerSpotlight Před 4 lety +69

      How can the truth feel so blasphemous!? 😭

    • @TiggiTheWillful
      @TiggiTheWillful Před 4 lety +33

      Kathy is the famous one though

    • @kousetsuhana
      @kousetsuhana Před 4 lety +19

      Nay, there is but one, all others are mere shadows of The One True Avis!!!!!!

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Před 4 lety +23

      Dan
      That truly threw me for a second there...😂
      Especially, since we’ve been joking around about Mrs. Crocombe being a ‚Dr. Who‘ like character, with the icebox being her Tardis, over at the English Heritage channel 😂

    • @TiggiTheWillful
      @TiggiTheWillful Před 4 lety +10

      Rara Avis Mary Poppins is also a time lord. Can’t help thinking that Kathy would make an excellent Mary too - Spit Spot!

  • @Noel.Chmielowiec
    @Noel.Chmielowiec Před 4 lety +532

    This was so interesting, I never imagined Mrs Crocombe with another character than Kathy shows.
    I completely agree with looking at the sources for books that you are reading, but sometimes you end up in a rabbit hole of books and find yourself starting with book about sewing and end up reading how to clean carpets using tea leaves :D

    • @bernadettebanner
      @bernadettebanner  Před 4 lety +101

      This is why I wanted to point that out--there are so many ways her character can be interpreted as we have so little evidence remaining of what the real Avis Crocombe was like!

    • @Noel.Chmielowiec
      @Noel.Chmielowiec Před 4 lety +22

      @@bernadettebanner I feel like the only way to really know how she acted is to get time machine and travel in time to meet her, which could be quite interesting experience :D

    • @CrossingTheDelebear
      @CrossingTheDelebear Před 4 lety +5

      I worked for a certain US candy-based tourist trap's theatre department in high school (why an introvert thought this was a good first job, I still question) and it was a popular paid gig for local actors and interpreters - there were definitely different versions of the same person and it was fascinating to watch one after the other. One was also a Lincoln interpreter who I ran into out of work for me and in work for him, he tried really really hard to stay in character by asking about the "professor" (the other-job character). I still feel bad about that and it's been close to a decade.

    • @sanablue
      @sanablue Před 4 lety +10

      As someone who works in a very old library with historical books (as a librarian, not a historian though) I can confirm that those books can completely catch you off guard with their interesting topics and I still remember reading through this little book on childbirth from the early 16th century (I think) where the author (a male, obviously) told the reader that the process of giving birth will definitely be hard if the woman is very pale or dark in complexion or if she is generally unfriendly or acts cold towards others. Oh, and he also writes that giving birth sometimes is difficult if the mother is younger than 13 years old... man, that was such a weird book. Totally worth spending an hour of working time for.

  • @mmw55122
    @mmw55122 Před 4 lety +408

    I was born and raised on a state park that held the site of an 1870's historically-significant military fort in the US midwest. My first paying job (at 16--50 years ago) was as an historic-site interpreter wearing a full-length dress that, per current research, was surprisingly semi-accurate for the time period. I loved doing the job and wearing that dress. Now, after all this time, i can get back to this core passion of living history and making/wearing historical fashion! Thanks to all of you who share your extensive knowledge and passion which helps me expand my own.

    • @mschmitz8873
      @mschmitz8873 Před 4 lety +2

      Was it Fort Snelling?

    • @Sadimal
      @Sadimal Před 4 lety +3

      Hello fellow military interpreter. I'm a volunteer interpreter at Fort McHenry in the fife and drum corps and occasionally a bar maid in the tavern. Our costumes are 100% accurate but a pain in the ass to wear in summer since the uniforms are wool.

  • @amessiguess3773
    @amessiguess3773 Před 4 lety +304

    At about 6:40 we can see Bernadette, staring at the camera, whilst she realized she can take a course on this. She looks as if this just changed all of her world views and that's amazing

  • @ellawanless641
    @ellawanless641 Před 4 lety +119

    I once went to colonial Williamsburg, and when my mom asked a lady what we should do in town, she mentioned that our family liked the musical Hamilton. So naturally the lady recommended we see a play about Laffeyete and Jefferson, but she then proceeded to THIRST over Laffeyete, and tbh that brought history to life more than anything else I saw on that trip. People in historical dress acting like real people is one of my favorite things.

  • @sharonfernandez2739
    @sharonfernandez2739 Před 4 lety +116

    To “collect all Mrs Crocombes” is now top of the bucket list.

  • @Whitney_Sews
    @Whitney_Sews Před 4 lety +235

    "Not many people are related to King Henry the 8th"
    Me - Slowly raises hand as an actual relative.

  • @Chibihugs
    @Chibihugs Před 4 lety +416

    This is absolutely fascinating to learn more about what historical interpreters do, why and how various people come to into it. Kathy is so full of passion and knowledge on this and I am so happy she came to share her thoughts with you and us. It's also really cool to hear Hana's thoughts on it as someone new to it and how it differs from theatre acting.

    • @PatrickPoet
      @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +7

      I was quite curious about how Hana deals with accent

    • @DC-fo3bn
      @DC-fo3bn Před 4 lety +3

      @@PatrickPoet I guess they all have to deal with accents, British accents are so diverse it's probably just as hard for me to do an accent from another region in the UK as it is for an American to do a British regional accent,

    • @PatrickPoet
      @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +2

      @@DC-fo3bn or vice versa! So many Brit actors have done American roles and I didn't realize they weren't American until later!

  • @pauladavitt2744
    @pauladavitt2744 Před 4 lety +49

    I work with adults with learning disabilities, one of my young ladies hates museums and finds them boring. However in the September just past we went to the Beamish museum near Newcastle and they had actors in costumes and she loved it. She went back and was telling her flat mate,family and other staff about the history she had learned. She really did engage with the staff.

    • @icarusalchemist1398
      @icarusalchemist1398 Před 2 lety +4

      We went on a school trip to Beamish when I was about 9. The boys had to shovel coal in the mine and the girls had to bake. Then we had to go to school and I'm left-handed, I had to put my left hand behind my back and use my right hand to write, because left-handed people were seen as "bad" back then. Basically child abuse day out but it was fun 😂 at least we got Victorian sweets.

    • @louisecooper2580
      @louisecooper2580 Před rokem +2

      Beamish museum is an awesome and totally amazing place being there twice now

  • @tiredbread7
    @tiredbread7 Před 4 lety +213

    People think the avengers is the most ambitious crossover ever??

  • @hazeluzzell
    @hazeluzzell Před 4 lety +222

    I’ve been a historical interpreter/living historian whatever it is fashionable to call it for 28 years. As well as appearing at events, we go out to schools and give evening and afternoon talks and occasionally lecture at universities. We are often regarded as experimental archaeologists also. My area of interest is textile production and my period is 950-1066.

    • @VNicanndrais
      @VNicanndrais Před 4 lety +16

      @hazeluzzell Textile production in 950-1066 sounds fascinating! What was it like- lots of wool and linen? Did everyone produce their own, for the most part, or did people buy it? I bet you could talk about it for ages, but maybe you can give me a brief overview?

    • @karengerber8390
      @karengerber8390 Před 4 lety +8

      I would love to learn what you know!

    • @hazeluzzell
      @hazeluzzell Před 4 lety +53

      So kind of you both! I’m afraid it would take far more space than I feel comfortable taking up here...but briefly, yes, it was all wool or/and linen. Silk for royalty. All the dyes were plant based and the textile finds that have been tested for dye show overwhelmingly 3 main ones. Woad for blue, which was an expensive dye, as it took a while to process. Yellow, almost all from Weld and a brick red from either wild, or cultivated madder. Green was expensive, as it was produced from weld and woad, or weld treated with iron. Most poor people would have worn wool, the colour of the sheep, and unbleached linen. In the early period, cloth was woven in the home on a warp weighted loom, but later, weaving became an industry when it was taken over by the men. Pretty much 90% of the population were farmers and mostly unfree. I think I’ve taken up enough space, and that was a very brief overview.

    • @ellegilyard1348
      @ellegilyard1348 Před 4 lety +8

      @@hazeluzzell Wonderful overview! I read a little about textile production when I was in school (history major), but it was from quite a bit later and the source was from France, I believe.

    • @ardapelle
      @ardapelle Před 4 lety +3

      hazeluzzell amazing! Do you have any resources you’d recommend, if you can think of any?

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja Před 4 lety +91

    Yes, go to the library! Your librarian is trained at finding sources for you, and probably knows how to search for the right thing way better you do.

  • @rhythmictiger
    @rhythmictiger Před 4 lety +30

    Which one would you struggle with?
    "Interactions with all humans in general"
    Me too Bernadette, me too.

  • @alexachipman
    @alexachipman Před 4 lety +4

    I am a costumed volunteer interpreter on Angel Island in CA :) 1917 era. I am fairly shy and do not like talking with strangers, but I find when I put the costume (or original dress) on, that goes away, especially in a first person museum like the one being discussed.

  • @aerokas4817
    @aerokas4817 Před 4 lety +24

    6:43 The moment when Bernadette realised that the dream career does infact exist.
    (As did I! 😄)

    • @jamessamuel1255
      @jamessamuel1255 Před 4 lety +2

      Same here, it’d be my absolute favourite thing to do, playing as a butler, or a hunter, or a lord

  • @PatrickPoet
    @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +136

    That was very interesting. At one point, my ears were caught by hearing Kathy say that a character might know something the character wouldn't normally have a reason to know because she had a brother that got quite interested in it. I was delighted. That's such a British thing. In the UK, someone might be a butcher, but at the same time be considered quite an expert at archaeology because they'd developed an interest, volunteered at dig sites, educated themselves and eventually came to be considered real experts in the field. Seriously. That is a thing that still happens in the UK today. There are citizen scientists of all sorts and they are not considered a lower tier than someone who'd been to university. Expertise sets the understanding of others in the field about where you fit. I quite love that. It's quite democratic. Here in the US that is quite less common. Here in the US, if someone had gone to school for archaeology, but then ended up working in another field, some would be offended if they tried to play themselves off as an archaeologist, even though it's their degree! In some fields it still can happen in the US like historical costuming, or software, but less over time.

    • @healinggrounds19
      @healinggrounds19 Před 4 lety +6

      No, that's not true at all. Only university types get bent out of shape. LOL. But many, many people here in the states have interests in which they are so PASSIONATE, they can surpass so called "experts". I know a car mechanic who is THE best sound technician because music is his passion. He knows how to set up speaks and mics in ANY space and make it sound amazing. My guy who has an Masters from Yale cannot do this. I go give lots of examples: people who garden, watch stocks in their spare time, build motorcylces...

    • @PatrickPoet
      @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +16

      @@healinggrounds19 I completely agree with you, I think I missed communicating my point. The point was that the general public in the UK would accept the person as a professional in a field like linguistics or archaeology or physics even if they didn't have a degree whereas in the US they wouldn't want someone to call themselves an archaeologist even with a degree if they didn't work at it.

    • @KitInToronto
      @KitInToronto Před 4 lety +11

      Agreed! I am in Canada, and have two degrees in cultural anthropology, but work in law. Technically, I could call myself an anthropologist, but I don't!
      I have noted somewhat the converse when watching British television. All of the citizen experts!
      Although I did read an article awhile back about some fellow in the US who passionately studies a particularly rare kind of seahorse and who works, literally daily to both conserve its habitat and track and study it, who is considered to be THE worldwide expert about this seahorse, but has had no formal training in marine biology, or indeed any discipline at all. I believe he was a fishing boat captain or something before he became the world's foremost keeper of knowledge about that seahorse. Quite wonderful!

    • @AllThePeppermint
      @AllThePeppermint Před 4 lety +4

      Yes, I'm an American and have noticed this, too. An actress is a neuroscientist and sometimes voices opinions or perspectives on the work of other neuroscientists, or other fields of sciences, and people somehow don't think that she can voice an opinion, because she is an actress primarily by profession. It's bizarre.

    • @AlexaFaie
      @AlexaFaie Před 4 lety

      @@PatrickPoet Well I'm technically an archaeologist by degree, but only those who got firsts easily got jobs as archaeologists, if you had a 2:1 or lower, they expected you to have 5 years of excavation experience before you could get a job as an archaeologist. So that's really not very true. Tony Robinson presented Time Team, but I'd never consider him an archaeologist because he was only the presenter of the show, no matter how passionate he was. And within archaeology if you haven't immediately gone to work in it, and are also not a member of the IFA, then you don't really get to call yourself an archaeologist. Because you're out of practice. I'd love to still be a member of the IFA but I couldn't afford to pay the rates as a disabled person with no income so had to stop when my student membership ran out. Maybe in another part of the UK to the places I've lived its different, but you don't consider volunteer archaeologists to be actual archaeologists even if they are super passionate.

  • @OMGitsaClaire
    @OMGitsaClaire Před 4 lety +73

    So I do and have done living history professionally for a while now. I’m mostly in 3rd person which is the most common way it’s done today in the US. This means everyone is aware that I am in fact a modern human dressed in old-timey clothes talking about how life was and performing historic tasks. Mostly these days I’m a “costumed interpreter” which means I lead tours in period dress. Third person allows you to be more knowledgeable and explain changes over time and you get less people trying to play “stump the chump” with you. I have done first person interpretation and it is very very challenging. It’s like the most challenging form of improv. At one museum we would have big first-person events like mock weddings and Christmas parties. My challenge was that I look so much younger than I am that I usually played a teenager. So having to pretend to be a teenage girl in rural Middle Tennessee about 1855 and all the baggage that comes with that was interesting. And usually you’re doing multiple things at once. You’re trying to remain in character while making popcorn over the fire or waiting on your “cousin” at her wedding.
    As for whether or not the things people ask you make you want to do research: all the time! All of the main interpreters at the museum I’m at now, we’re constantly looking things up, constantly trying to better understand our site and the people associated with it. And what we find we document and share with each other so that we can better know the people we talk about.

    • @Anne--Marie
      @Anne--Marie Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you for the reality check as not everyone is lucky enough to play a lead character as fascinating as Mrs. Crocombe.

  • @jourdyn414
    @jourdyn414 Před 4 lety +10

    I absolutely love how full circle this has come. From making the video inspired by Mrs. Crocombe to meeting her at Audley End to sitting here at a pub having a lovely conversation about the method behind the beautiful historical madness!

  • @MrsBrit1
    @MrsBrit1 Před 4 lety +11

    So basically they are like historical Disney characters. In character at all times, know how to interact with the public, don't know or talk about things you shouldn't understand, etc. Sounds like great fun, to be honest!

    • @PatrickPoet
      @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +2

      Also in California, the Northern and Southern Renaissance Faires. Under previous management actors were required to wear period dress, and perform historically accurately. Under current management that's been relaxed quite a bit but it's still quite accurate.

    • @Anne--Marie
      @Anne--Marie Před 3 lety

      Please do not use Disney and history in a positive sentence as Disney has botched history so badly.

  • @teridahlin325
    @teridahlin325 Před 4 lety +93

    Very interesting. I’ve been asked to be a character ghost at a cemetery for an annual Cemetery Stroll. Now I have a better understanding of what I need to do. Thank all of you for this video.

    • @SunflowerSpotlight
      @SunflowerSpotlight Před 4 lety +16

      The one time I did something similar to this was when I played a Mitchum sister (her family being famous for making various products including Mitchum’s Deodorant). It was a Halloween festival showcasing somewhat local notable persons over time. Like, the veil was thin and they could walk among their descendants, keep their stories alive. I’m from TN, the southern accent wasn’t hard to accentuate, adding a little Geo’ja and Alabaymuh southern belle from my Aunts’ way of speaking. But I’d been in a play for a few weeks, performing a character with a somewhat posh British accent, so sometimes I’d slip out of it and realize what was happening, and feign a coughing spell. My "sisters" would show concern, explaining why my constitution was fragile, etc. At one point, one sister completely forgot the years the company made great strides in the industry and, being new at any improvisational work, did what came naturally when you feel appalled that your worst nightmare is coming true publicly and stood there, staring at us for help. Aside from those issues, it was a wonderful experience. I’d love to be able to more of it; history nerd’s dream come true!
      I really hope you can sink your teeth into the history and just... have fun slipping into another life for a while. I found that dry runs helped me a lot so I wasn’t stiff, and being drilled on facts did I can access them at a moment’s notice. Also, a tip from my director is that if you get anxious, take a moment, put some more weight on your heels, sinking them in the ground and anchoring you. Take a breath. One breath. Performers seem to think three seconds of silence have passed when only one has, according to some data, so it’s probably not as notable as you think. Pausing could also add to the character. She could be mysterious, or imperious or even a bit dim, and the pause will play into the persona you build. If you allow a breath when you feel overwhelmed, all the training and studying will have time to click into place most of the time, and off you go. Good luck. I hope you have a ton of fun!

    • @99zanne
      @99zanne Před 4 lety

      teri dahlin is that Biloxi?

    • @teridahlin325
      @teridahlin325 Před 4 lety

      99zanne no Huntsville Alabama

  • @chaeburger
    @chaeburger Před 4 lety +92

    Th e Townsend's channel has a ton of videos about historical interpretation, reenactment, experimental history, and recipe recreations (using original practice, of course). They also have interviews with people in this field, both in and out of character. It's all amazing.

    • @wxlurker
      @wxlurker Před 4 lety +3

      Chae Howard I recently started watching and I really liked the laundry series.

    • @Absintheskiss
      @Absintheskiss Před 4 lety +2

      I love the Townsends channel.

    • @kirstinmckeown3581
      @kirstinmckeown3581 Před 4 lety +25

      The Townsends and Victorian Way actually have a pair of crossover episodes, where Jon sends Mrs Crocombe some American food and a recipe for her to try, and Mrs Crocombe sends back some English food and a recipe!

    • @Aelfswythe
      @Aelfswythe Před 4 lety +3

      @@kirstinmckeown3581 Ooh! I need to check that out!

    • @lancer525
      @lancer525 Před 4 lety +4

      One thing you need to be exceptionally wary of, is the history snobs you're gong to run into at events and things. The ones who sidle up to you and look down their nose while they snidely say "Oh dear... Far be it from me to say anything, but your buttons are 3/64ths of an inch too small to be historically-accurate. It's really embarrassing, and you should leave right away before you cause any problems." You see Farbies everywhere.

  • @HearthandSickle
    @HearthandSickle Před 4 lety +31

    I’m a living historian/historical reenactor. And one of my favourite places to be is a beautiful 1860’s mansion in Nevada. I find that what Kathy said about children and adults is true. I love working with kids but the conversations I have with the adults are wonderful.
    The research is why I became a living historian. I enjoy reading the information and then sharing it in a tactical way for people. It’s also great fun to build ones backstory/and character(s). (It’s a good way for introverts to do it because it’s not you, it’s “them”)
    Ms. B

  • @aerolb
    @aerolb Před 4 lety +25

    Love seeing Hana again! It's great to see her working at Audley's End! And Kathy Hipperson a.k.a. Mrs. Crocombe! Love this video and it's great to hear about all the work that go into Audley End!

  • @TheMovingEye
    @TheMovingEye Před 4 lety +35

    The different Crocombe's remind me of Nordic style Larps, where the outline of the story and character sketches are provided at the beginning of the play but every player can define the character differently. There are interesting conversations to be had when players of the same characters go through their experiences and compare their reactions and resulting interpretations to the happenings.

  • @globoboboglob3270
    @globoboboglob3270 Před 4 lety +77

    Great timing for this lovely chat, I needed something to listen to while fighting a knotted lump of yarn. (got through it! I was productive and learned stuff at the same time, what a day) It's a lot of things I didn't think about, that historical interpretation gig. All the things that would be brought up in conversation would send me on a crazy knowledge chase, my oh my I'd be terrified of not knowing what to say. Or to say something I thought I knew, then later check and realise I fed lies to the visitors. Wow, just picturing this makes me panic a little. XD
    ... I might rewatch this a lot to try and reverse-engineer Kathy's top. Looks cozy as heck.

    • @bernadettebanner
      @bernadettebanner  Před 4 lety +33

      Oh, fighting the urge to google during this chat was *difficult*! Too bad Magical Pocket Encyclopaedias aren't allowed in the 19th century.

    • @SunflowerSpotlight
      @SunflowerSpotlight Před 4 lety +6

      Her top is so pretty! I’d love it in a garnet or royal blue. But the idea is so scary to me; I’ve only begun my knitting journey. The idea that one day I could make something like that!? Since I can’t sew intensively, or drape, etc, the idea of just making clothes... it’s really cool when others do it, but it’s a mountain to climb for sure! Good luck on your knitting journey, and may your rounds never be twisted. 😅

    • @rachael2177
      @rachael2177 Před 4 lety +2

      I'm still fairly new to the world of knitting, but it looks like an alternating knit-purl pattern?

    • @globoboboglob3270
      @globoboboglob3270 Před 4 lety +8

      @@SunflowerSpotlight You can do anything you set out your mind to! One thing that can make your first garment easier is going with a chunkier weight of yarn; the bigger the stitches, the fewer you need to make. If you're on Ravelry, you can look for beginner patterns, some of which are free! (btw I'm just 2 years in, I'm far from an "experienced" maker. I just try to learn a new technique with every new project. CZcams helps a LOT lol) Knit on, my friend!

    • @scarletpimpernelagain9124
      @scarletpimpernelagain9124 Před 4 lety

      Amara Jordan you can do it, I have faith! ✌🏻🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @etaylor495
    @etaylor495 Před 4 lety +37

    One of the things I’ve learned through being a part of living history myself (as a hobby, not a profession) is that it’s easier to tell people what it was like as the person you represent if you’ve experienced what they have yourself. It’s what makes mrs crocombes cooking such an asset, she doesn’t just dress like and talk about being a Victorian cook, she has actually experienced cooking with the implements available to a Victorian cook, and can tell people about the difficulties and how it’s different to today.

  • @SnappyDragon
    @SnappyDragon Před 4 lety +15

    "When you're doing interpretation, drink." Are you suggesting we stay hydrated, or drink something else?! :D
    I'm a hobby reenactor during the Christmas season, and the hydration struggle is real. My gigs are singing and dancing with visitors, and this is why I and so many of my fellow Dickens Fair folk have period-looking mugs that fit in our reticules.

  • @WaterNai
    @WaterNai Před 4 lety +56

    I would definitely fall down a research rabbit hole doing a job like that!

  • @sirephlyrrian6242
    @sirephlyrrian6242 Před 4 lety +100

    while this video has "only" 2k views, and i have at least small chance of being seen, i wanted to say, even though i don't sew myself (but still like the idea), i still enjoy your videos, simply because you are very interesting and genuine person, and your personality is wonderful

    • @narelleworks8448
      @narelleworks8448 Před 4 lety +11

      Sireph Lyrrian 24k views in 7 hours and counting. I'm not a hand sewer and certainly not an historical sewer but the atmosphere Bernadette creates is both cozy, informative, and dare I say compelling. I know we'll both keep watching and maybe one day make something historical. 🤞🏻

  • @jackom11
    @jackom11 Před 4 lety +7

    Hi Bernadette , when visiting audley end last year , when the parlour I asked one of the kitchen staff if our border collie was allowed in the kitchen, she answered we would have to ask Mrs Crocomb, Mrs Crocomb, we thought, would not appreciate even Ernie the most obedient Collie , in her kitchen and we decided to not risk asking in case we were rebuked! Thank you for the video, very interesting best wishes Mark

  • @tiredthesbian1731
    @tiredthesbian1731 Před 4 lety +10

    This just opened my eyes to a career path I never even considered as someone getting a theatre degree with a lifelong history of working in museums...

  • @andreawangdahl6176
    @andreawangdahl6176 Před 2 lety +2

    How lucky you are to have met both Kathy Hipperson AND her mrs Crocombe! Totally envious!

  • @jacquiharrison7027
    @jacquiharrison7027 Před 4 lety +41

    Keeping in character while working (especially a character of a real person) and needing to remember historical facts for people who ask questions sounds like it could be very draining, although that could just be for my introvert self. I have a lot of respect for living history actors. And I was way more excited about Kathy mentioning New Zealand in passing than I perhaps should have been. Always love it when people I admire mention my country.
    I wasn't hand sewing while watching this, but I was winding thread around some old fashioned wooden clothes pegs. I'm using them as a makeshift set of lace bobbins so I can try out lace making without committing lots of money into buying a set of proper bobbins before I even know if I'll enjoy the craft.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Před 4 lety +9

      Jacqui Harrison
      Making do with what you have at hand is a very historically accurate thing to do.

    • @PatrickPoet
      @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +8

      Jacqui, it's the same for me. I would be completely drained. I love the history but too many people is TOO many people;) Not the job for me:)

    • @TorchwoodPandP
      @TorchwoodPandP Před 4 lety +5

      What a brilliant tip! Will hasten to copy one of these days, because I'm very much wanting try out bobbin lace making as well. Cheers

    • @bryanaperry8760
      @bryanaperry8760 Před 4 lety +7

      Sometimes being a performer is great for introverts (I say this as an introverted actor who knows a lot of introverted actors). A switch kind of flips when you are playing another person, and some of your self-consciousness goes away somehow. It is hard to explain unless you've experienced it.

    • @PatrickPoet
      @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +3

      @@bryanaperry8760 I have experienced that, but never in a situation when I was dealing directly with the public rather than performing for them from a distance or on video. I wonder if it would still be ok for me.

  • @Poppy-
    @Poppy- Před 4 lety +36

    Bernadette, the face you made when Kathy said: "you can take course in that". I see that you are really into it and eager to know more about it. Your friend Hana working with Mrs Crocombe/Kathy this is wonderful! What an experience to be able to do this. Thanks for sharing it as I can't experience it

    • @TheJhtlag
      @TheJhtlag Před 4 lety +1

      It would fit in with her already being around theater, her knowledge of historical costumes and in her videos she acquires historical guides to sections of NYC where she learns about buildings that are no longer there, what things cost etc. She's already 3/4 ready ... just take the class now on how to put all that together.

    • @Poppy-
      @Poppy- Před 4 lety

      @@TheJhtlag I couldn't have said it better! 😁 But yes, she's already deep in it so much. Places, costumes, persons... And when I see her adding all this together, when I see her face brightening up, it cheers me and inspire me immensely. Hope to take a sewing class soon🧵, thanks to her and several more

  • @beckyannison9033
    @beckyannison9033 Před 4 lety +312

    Is it possible there Kathy Hipperson can point me to a knitting pattern for her top?
    Wonderful video by the way :)

    • @bernadettebanner
      @bernadettebanner  Před 4 lety +91

      You may want to talk to @globöb Oboglöb here in the comments, they seem to be on the case of reverse engineering it!

    • @globoboboglob3270
      @globoboboglob3270 Před 4 lety +116

      Hiii I'm Globöb. I wasn't planning on working on it this *right away* (I just started a sweater), but I'm making a note to let you know if I figure it out. :) And if you find a pattern before I do, I'd super appreciate if you'd let me know!

    • @WaterNai
      @WaterNai Před 4 lety +14

      That sweater is fabulous!

    • @olympic-gradelurker
      @olympic-gradelurker Před 4 lety +12

      I want to knit that sweater soooooo bad!

    • @beautifullyheeled9246
      @beautifullyheeled9246 Před 4 lety +12

      It looks as if it’s an ‘infinity’ as it’s currently termed with a bit more length as it’s almost past ‘cowl’ length (Easily moved to cover hair) with a bit of braiding weave thrown in perhaps?

  • @alaneisenberg4203
    @alaneisenberg4203 Před 3 lety +2

    So, a few months ago whilst searching for a new gingerbread receipt, I came across two ladies making Mrs Crocome's recipe. Then I met her. Because of that meeting I came to meet, John Townsend. From that I met Max Miller.
    I now cook so much differently.
    From my heart, thank you.

  • @janetsingperry5834
    @janetsingperry5834 Před 4 lety +3

    First of all, thank you so much for your videos. I recently retired and found myself looking at You Tube for the first time. I have been a seamstress all my life and for the last 10 years an American Civil War reenactor. I love making my dresses and make other periods in history, too. Your videos are wonderful, they came up when I searched sewing. They are informative and relaxing. The way a lot of your videos come on make you feel as if you are settling down for a wonderful show, full of great expectation and you never disappoint. I have learned a lot from you and I thank you. I loved this video, I found out a great deal. It is so rewarding to see so many people love history and want to keep it alive as I do. I'm glad you are doing more videos even though you are in England. Take care.

    • @DodiTov
      @DodiTov Před 4 lety +1

      First, welcome to our sewing circle, Janet! Numbering in the thousands, we are a cozy group nonetheless. Our gentle Bernadette is a charmer, but she is American, residing in New York. As she has many English friends, it would be simple to draw that conclusion. I do hope that you come to regard her as your Saturday treat (or Friday, if Patreon) as we do. Do expand your viewing pleasure with the many, many stitchers in this little part of CZcams. Morgan Donner, Costuming Drama, Cathy Hay, Prior Attire, and Historical Belle are just a few of the CosTubers (COStuming youTUBERS) producing excellent videos. They are all well worth your time.

    • @janetsingperry5834
      @janetsingperry5834 Před 4 lety +1

      @@DodiTov Yes, I do understand that she resides in New York, I have seen all of the videos. But, alas, I did not think I should write a book here since all of the other replies are so short. : ) I do thank you for your reply and I agree that all of the other stitchers are great too. But there is just something about Bernadette's videos that are special and I should be able to put my finger on it, but the word escapes me. My husband goes down to see his Mom, (she is 90) in the early morning and I use that time to sit down with my coffee and just see what is new. Being retired now gives me that pleasure. I am sewing for other people now, and wanted to see what other seamstresses were doing. Again, thank you for your reply. Take care!

    • @DodiTov
      @DodiTov Před 4 lety

      @@janetsingperry5834 Ah. It's early yet. The wordsmiths have not yet awakened.

  • @elizabethsacktor2818
    @elizabethsacktor2818 Před 4 lety +5

    I work as a living historian. The way we do it it’s not based on playing specific people rather than portraying types of women. So we do laundress demonstrations. We do laundry the way women would have done it in 1814 and it’s so much fun to actually do the laundry with the visitors. They get to help us and it’s so much fun to scrub clothes with little kids.

  • @debesmana
    @debesmana Před 4 lety +41

    Such an interesting conversation to be part of. As a visitor I know Im often one of the annoying (?) people with very specific historical interests and set of knowledge that flummoxes the staff. But then those often turn into very interesting conversations in themselves where the historic interpreters either go on to where they are comfortable or sponge up the information I have. There is a living history museum in Sweden that we have gone back to a few times that now cook their bread based very heavily on an old family recipe that has survived for hundreds of years in my family. Its rather fun.

    • @scarletpimpernelagain9124
      @scarletpimpernelagain9124 Před 4 lety +4

      Alma Ulmane what a lovely story! 🙂 any chance of the recipe, I would love to have a go at that - please?☺️☺️☺️✌🏻🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🌹

    • @TorchwoodPandP
      @TorchwoodPandP Před 4 lety +1

      Me too! Seriously, that is fantastic!

    • @ctaylorluce
      @ctaylorluce Před 4 lety

      Oh wow can you share the recipe? It would be fascinating!

  • @lindaschultz7253
    @lindaschultz7253 Před 4 lety

    My husband participated in historical reenactment of the WWII period here in St. Louis, Missouri. Two times a year they would camp at Jefferson Barracks Park and perform a weekend long event. My husband was part of the 38th Jaegers, obviously a German unit. Our kids and I would spend the day watching the battles and wandering through the displays. My husband and I loved learning from veterans who came. It was common for a vet to stop, stare at a piece of weaponry or gear and start talking about their memories of coming up against said equipment in battle. You could tell that the men had never shared these stories with their loved ones by the shocked, fascinated, enthralled looks on their faces. One of my biggest regrets was not asking permission and recording these bits of living history before they were lost forever. That's one of the biggest reasons I love the Audley house series. History preserved for us to learn and enjoy. Oh, and reenacting is a bit more complex than described in this video. There are public battles whe everyone is familiar with. And then at least in WWII reenactment there are closed battles which is how soldiers actually gain rank. If you are injured in these battles you actually get a wound badge. For the Germans, three wound badges and you are sent home. If you are wounded three times you have to create a whole new persona. 😂😂So don't get hurt because the reenactment setups are very expensive even if it is a reproduction that only passes the 10 foot rule. And no hand sewing but managed 2 more inches of crochet on my grandson's blanket.

  • @delanocarson7544
    @delanocarson7544 Před 4 lety +96

    Where I live we have a reconstructed Spanish/native american settlement (Mission San Luis, holla). It's interesting to see how much of the like guts of the operation stay the same in terms of having like traceable historical roles and ages, versus the people being slotted in to play them or whatnot. Here it's a lot of volunteer work since the funding is abysmal but its very much the same feeling just....a couple hundred years earlier and a lot more american lol

    • @Anne--Marie
      @Anne--Marie Před 3 lety

      Funding for this in the United States is not like it appears to be in the UK. After trying to cut Meals on Wheels, can you imagine our Congress actually funding something akin to English Heritage?

  • @fridasimpson9186
    @fridasimpson9186 Před 4 lety +8

    when you said "grab some hand sewing" I remembered that a button came of my coat so I'm no going to sew it back on.
    thanks for the reminder or I would never do it!

  • @janetmoore1124
    @janetmoore1124 Před 4 lety +5

    Many years ago a friend introduced me to the Renaissance Pleasure Faire that is held in Southern California. I had never encountered such a thing and immediately found myself enthralled. I've since discovered several other types of historical reenactments all over the country.
    There is something magical about stepping back into time and being able to encounter and engage with characters.
    For those who love history, reenacting provides opportunities to learn and share no matter if you are an actor or a participant/visitor.
    Very much enjoyed this visit! I'm a fan of Mrs. Crocombe and Kathy. The opportunity to hear her speak is much appreciated!

    • @darleneengebretsen1468
      @darleneengebretsen1468 Před rokem

      I've been to several " Ren Faires", and enjoyed them immensely. It's more fun if you wear a costume when you attend.

  • @Ladypuppy510
    @Ladypuppy510 Před 4 lety +3

    Mrs Crocombe and Bernadette Banner in one vid? Pure joy.

  • @mirandasls8339
    @mirandasls8339 Před 4 lety +8

    I've worked as a docent at a museum in Wisconsin for 5 years and we do occasional historical interpretation and all of this resonated so much with me. The random bits and pieces of knowledge I have gained both from my own research but also from visitors and other workers could fill a book. I cannot begin to explain why I know so much about the medical practices of the 1860's in America or painting techniques but it certainly makes for fun trivia questions.

    • @scarletpimpernelagain9124
      @scarletpimpernelagain9124 Před 4 lety

      Miranda SLS I’d love to read a book like that, ever thought about writing it all up? That kind is social history is precious to all us ‘hooman beans’ and it would be so useful for future researchers to have it all in one place ✌🏻🌹🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧🙂

  • @paustinheaton
    @paustinheaton Před 4 lety +15

    As a historical novelist who does tons of research, I am massively impressed with how much research these ladies put into their work. Thank you for posting this, Bernadette.

  • @clarakoenig7923
    @clarakoenig7923 Před 4 lety +9

    I'm a costumed interpreter at Stirling Castle in Scotland (you should come visit sometime!) and this makes me incredibly happy! I mostly do 16th century stuff and my work is a little tricky in terms of being in character (a large portion of the castle is restored / recreated and a lot of visitors want to talk about that) but all of the conversation rings very true to what my day to day experience is like.
    Thank you for the appreciation! ❤️

  • @dcinrb8538
    @dcinrb8538 Před 4 lety +26

    Having volunteered and worked in libraries in the past, I love how Bernadette explains sourcing titles from the bibliography of historical books. Not everyone is book knowledgeable to the same degree. Yet she never condescends "whilst" offering information. ♥️ Happy New Year 2020

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Před 4 lety +3

      dc in rb
      I also work at a library, and would like to add one more tip: if you don’t know where to begin looking, ask your librarian! They are professionals at helping people with that. Once you’ve found your entry point, they can help you get access to the sources referenced in the bibliography of the book(s) you’ve found helpful.

    • @dcinrb8538
      @dcinrb8538 Před 4 lety +3

      @@ragnkja yes, yes, a thousand times yes! Librarians are wonderful resources. 💕

    • @juliusroman8616
      @juliusroman8616 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ragnkja do you mean a university like library or just a normal library where you get books from?

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Před 3 lety +1

      @@juliusroman8616
      Regular public library.

  • @nadineashton2561
    @nadineashton2561 Před 4 lety +66

    I nearly finished one of my largest seams on my 2nd ever historical sewing project while watching this! This was an amazing video and it was so fun to watch while sewing. I really felt like I was apart of the conversation and it was just what I needed. Thank you for another amazing video Bernadette!
    PS: Me and the Cathy did end up talking on instagram after connecting on your last video. Thank you for helping me find such an amazing sewing friend.

    • @bernadettebanner
      @bernadettebanner  Před 4 lety +17

      Oh excellent, I was wondering about that! Merry sewing adventures to you both!

    • @peggydid
      @peggydid Před 4 lety +5

      I wasn't able to "do" anything! I just sat in rapt attention! I think I will play it again, and do my hand-sewing!
      (I am sewing fleece socks!)

    • @catwightman2943
      @catwightman2943 Před 4 lety +1

      I am indeed your personal Cathy, only separated by copious amounts of ocean and land!! So glad I found you though. And it's all thanks to Bernadette's video 😊😊 can't imagine not talking to you on the daily any more. P. S loving your sewing adventure :D p.p.s loving Bernadette's sewing adventure too!!

  • @moreteaplease2828
    @moreteaplease2828 Před 4 lety +6

    Hannah: “With the other characters, it’s always fun...”
    Bernadette: what is wrong with you
    Lovely conversation to sit in on! Thank you, all of you. ❤️

  • @philurbaniak1811
    @philurbaniak1811 Před 4 lety +4

    @17:15
    Gotta catch 'em all, Crocomon! ♥️👍
    Fascinating insight, thank you all and happy new year!

  • @louiselill1528
    @louiselill1528 Před 4 lety +10

    I am over joyed with excitement at seeing you all together . This was perfection I love you all and sadly I only get to see Kathy as Mrs Croscombe so to me Kathy is Mrs Crocombe any other will not do . I know it's impossible but If the real Mrs Crocombe stood right in front of me I would not believe her to be her . Thank you to all of you . Bernadette you are an angel .

    • @healinggrounds19
      @healinggrounds19 Před 4 lety

      If I visit Audley House in the fall and Kathy isn't Mrs. Crocombe on my visit, I shall weep!!

  • @gailhandschuh1138
    @gailhandschuh1138 Před 4 lety +23

    I was lucky to be raised very near Dearborn , Michigan in the USA where Henry Ford established both a museum and a village of historical accuracy. The folks working in the village are historical artists that display and explain crafts and procedures of the 1900’s the historians working there are wonderful and very patient answering questions they also display the lifestyle of the people and allow both children and adults hands-on experiences through-out the day. The Greenfield Village also has classes for children on Saturday during the summers that give kids even more experiences.

    • @angelmaden1559
      @angelmaden1559 Před 4 lety

      gail handschuh My grandparents and Mom brought me there as a kid. It was so interesting! Also Williamsburg VA and Rocky Mount TN.

    • @cocoateacosplay6851
      @cocoateacosplay6851 Před 4 lety +1

      I remember going on a field trip to Stanley School, it was either third or fifth grade i have a hard time remembering

    • @wickedartist1451
      @wickedartist1451 Před 4 lety

      @@cocoateacosplay6851 me too!

    • @wickedartist1451
      @wickedartist1451 Před 4 lety

      My elementary school class, in the 1970s, would take a field trip and we'd spend the day in the little schoolhouse there. It was a lot of fun dressing up!

    • @coppersandsprite
      @coppersandsprite Před 4 lety +1

      I love that place. Several trips as a child. Wish I were closer so I could share the experience with my kids and grandkids.

  • @shellithehippy
    @shellithehippy Před 4 lety +8

    I work in an interesting intersection of this and regular acting, immersive theater. Some immersive theater is fantastical or unrealistic but period shows can be extensively researched for accuracy. My favorite tidbit I’ve seen was a 1920’s show that featured a trick mirror that allowed audience to peak in on the “dressing room” of the chorus line girls. They had a scene of one girl helping another bind her chest, an actual thing done at the time period that I’d never seen before

  • @dariawitte4483
    @dariawitte4483 Před 4 lety +13

    "I've collected most of the Crocombes"
    Oh, I died!

  • @VNicanndrais
    @VNicanndrais Před 4 lety +1

    I do 1850s volunteer reenacting at my local museum, it's a lot of fun! Everyone has a specific area they know more about, and it is so interesting to learn from each other. My area is historical photography (and sewing, but that is a common one). I also struggle with the interaction part- with the public and other interpreters. A good thing to remember is that there have always been quite people and not everyone has to be super outgoing. I just try to stick to things that I can easily talk about, like photography and sewing. Most people don't want to talk for that long anyways.

  • @clarehagan4943
    @clarehagan4943 Před 4 lety +6

    There's something so magical about seeing historical characters brought to life in historical settings.
    In researching woman's suffrage and helping to craft a play about it, I've spent a lot of time trying to imagine what life was like. Even after months of looking at primary sources, it can be difficult. Then I recently saw a fantastic play in New Orleans called the Uninvited, staged in a historic home, with the play happening organically throughout the space. I hope to see much more of that intersection between theater and historical interpretation in the future. It demonstrates how these people lived in an incredibly physical way. It's extremely powerful.

  • @nicnaknoc
    @nicnaknoc Před 4 lety +3

    I don't do historic interpretation but I do oldstyle stone prints (lithographic prints) at a museum, in my very normal everyday clothes and as myself 😊 I like it very much and definitely feel that the visitors get so much more out of seeing the equipment in use than just walking through the exipit.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Před 4 lety +2

      Jezebel von Tex
      Maybe the next step could be to find out what someone who worked with such equipment in the relevant time period would wear when working?

    • @nicnaknoc
      @nicnaknoc Před 4 lety +2

      @@ragnkja nah I'm not wearing a blue coverall everyday 🤣

  • @malinm1615
    @malinm1615 Před 4 lety +14

    I am just starting my second semester for archeology, and due to some people making scarfs and mittens in class I have gotten into nålebinding. It is nice how many history nerds of different kinds there are, and how supportive everyone is. Everyone needs that kind of positivity ^^

    • @hydeandseek8428
      @hydeandseek8428 Před 2 lety

      May I ask what nålebinding is?

    • @phoebegreaves4709
      @phoebegreaves4709 Před 2 lety

      @@hydeandseek8428 it means 'needle binding' and it's basically another form of crochet to make socks and hats, just with a straight needle :)

  • @Richie8a8y
    @Richie8a8y Před 3 lety +1

    Bernadette Darling! What a fabulous video chat. Fascinating to get the perspectives from Kathy Hipperson and Hana DeHart; the maestro and the novitiate, both so generous with their experience in the gaining and dissemination of their knowledge in the field of historical interpretation.
    Though I empathize with your abject fear of this mode of teaching, I could see you sumptuously submersed the part of Lady’s Maid a la Frieda Arnold. Surely you would relish the role and imbue the character with your garnered grace and exacting standards, thus extolling an evocative edifying performance.
    I don’t know if you realize how much of a celebrity you are in your own right; I was sweetly amused by how star stuck you were in meeting Mrs Crocombe. You are so expressive and engaging Bernadette, effusive and demure at once, it is quite endearing. Many of the finest actors and performers will tell you they are introverted so you are already in good company. Entertain these thoughts. In the meantime I will outline a one woman show for you. No pressure 😂
    Till then a little poem for you Bernadette:
    May your needles be sharp and your fingers be nimble and their tips never want for the lack of a thimble -
    That was pretty good! Maybe I’ll put that on a needlepoint pillow or a sampler for you this winter.

  • @pattyatrumdycreations134
    @pattyatrumdycreations134 Před 4 lety +1

    I’m don’t sew in the typical way. I’m a mixed media artist. Yet I find your channel, you and your sweet Guinea pig most interesting. I love fabric! I use it in my art whenever I can. While going through my fabric this morning , for a project , I thought “ I need a basket for my cabbage!” Then I burst out laughing. I’m one of you now!!!! 😘

  • @mschmitz8873
    @mschmitz8873 Před 4 lety +22

    Minnesota Historical Society uses living history. Come see Fort Snelling and other fun sites.
    “People are scary!” I agree.

    • @elizabethanne9692
      @elizabethanne9692 Před 4 lety

      Oooh. Fort Snelling! They've been getting undeserved heat by including the Dakota name for the geographical location. I may have to come check it out though, living history is so much more engaging. I remember the MN Discovery Center (formerly Ironworld) had live actors/teachers who led activities when appropriate when I was growing up.

    • @kirstine8286
      @kirstine8286 Před 4 lety

      Ooooh, I haven't been to Fort Snelling since I was little! I should go back soon!

  • @Griiisetryne
    @Griiisetryne Před 4 lety +9

    This is so fun! Our local folk museum (Sverresborg folkemuseum) is one of Norways largest open air museums, and have some living history actors! They have over the years built a city, with old buildings that was taken apart and moved from the city centre up to the museum area. They have a colonial store, dentist office, apothekery and more, and even have a historical kindergarden(!) where you can put your little ones if you need a break.

  • @janehall2720
    @janehall2720 Před 4 lety +1

    I do a 1780s working woman from NJ. That said, I live in Idaho where 1780s is native Americans and not likely to be European. I make and sell handmade soaps so in order to promote my business I do it in custome. I also speak at schools or groups about life in 1780s as a woman. I too have developed a back story to accompany my persona. Thanks for another great video.

  • @roxiepoe9586
    @roxiepoe9586 Před 4 lety +6

    This was very informative. Thank you for your comments on how to find the informational resources. As a former teacher, it hurts my heart that this is not the most common of knowledge. However, perhaps some of the listeners heard it this time! :)

  • @robyn3349
    @robyn3349 Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you, Ms. Banner, for including your friends into your conversation! What a marvelous profession, the Historical Interpreter!

  • @patroxgan
    @patroxgan Před 4 lety +12

    It's amazing that Hana has found herself in Audley End now!!! It's amazing how things have come into fruition now :O

  • @katesmanik4007
    @katesmanik4007 Před 4 lety +1

    I grew up with Historical Interpretation because my mother loved Old Sturbridge Village! It brought history to life for me as a child and furthered my passion for history. I don’t know when OSV started, but I am 40 now and was there quite a bit as a very young child. So it’s at least 30 years old. If you haven’t been you should go! It’s not far from NYC!

  • @kaylasmith2435
    @kaylasmith2435 Před 4 lety +8

    One of the first jobs I had during college was taking photos for a small magazine advertising Old Salem. It’s sort of bizarre to get off of the interstate in North Carolina and take a step back in time. I still go every year or so, just to make candles and buy cookies.

    • @heathergleiser
      @heathergleiser Před 2 lety

      Old Salem is so fun and every time I eat Moravian cookies that’s the place I think of.

  • @shellysuttles91
    @shellysuttles91 Před 4 lety +9

    That's awesome Hannah is able to join them. And thanks to Kathy for breaking down all the different aspects of how the different roles you can go. Very interesting!

  • @taytayhat2
    @taytayhat2 Před 4 lety +3

    I just finished my study abroad in London and we focused on theatre and culture appreciation and I actually went to some of the places these ladies work/worked at and it's just surreal to hear about the acting from this background and perspective. Loved it. Love this.

  • @MoonOverHomelessness
    @MoonOverHomelessness Před 4 lety +1

    For such an Introvert, Bernadette.... you have quite an amazing sense of humor!!! And you really shine when you're in that element!! Most enjoyable! Thanks for all the enlightening education! I've always loved early history. Even as a small child in 3rd grade, my first experience was the Varner-Hogg Plantation in West Columbia, Texas. (Funny fact... the parents had that southern sense of humor that jumped cliffs... birthed a daughter... and had the gall to name her Ima. Always carried empathy in my heart for her. I was in my 20's, living down in Texas City, when Ima passed away. Amazing feeling to know you existed in such historical moments!)

  • @ellaalykat
    @ellaalykat Před 4 lety +2

    My grandmother worked at an old plantation house in Texas when I was growing up and I loved it when they had huge festivals and the kids got to be extra actors. I have a huge respect for historical actors

  • @mariansmith7694
    @mariansmith7694 Před 4 lety +10

    I enjoyed this episode so much. It is interesting to see Historical Interpretation becoming a more popular career. I have worked in this field most of my adult life, employed with the National Park Service in USA. I started as a young girl working in costume in the Civil War period. Later, as an interpreter of Natural history / Park Natiralist, quite different. I love it all and see this as a most effective way of teaching people of all ages to love history and our natural world. I LOVE IT SO MUCH.

  • @breakfastsewingclub1170
    @breakfastsewingclub1170 Před 4 lety +10

    My dream job is to work with our local living history Moravian village as their costume director. I keep checking their website for them to post it. My husband is so supportive he thinks it's perfect for me 😍

  • @jedblues
    @jedblues Před 4 lety +1

    Such a beautiful young lady Bernadette . It’s a pity there was not such interesting young ladies around when I was younger. Love your channel .

  • @Stephanie-in9we
    @Stephanie-in9we Před 4 lety

    I'm a historical reenactor and it's an absolute joy to do. It's a really wonderful way to dig deep into whichever period you're interested in. To live and breathe it to the best of your ability is truly a unique experience. I've made so many discoveries and gained a deeper understanding of the people who lived during various times that I could never get from reading a book.

  • @eduardvaniersel7535
    @eduardvaniersel7535 Před 4 lety +55

    This really is bringing history back to life.

  • @ARose767
    @ARose767 Před 4 lety +4

    I’m a museum professionals and this is a great dialogue about museum work!

    • @jenny9139
      @jenny9139 Před 4 lety

      How do you become a museum professional?

  • @rdd02
    @rdd02 Před 4 lety +2

    I live right near Audley End. Kathy is incredible!

  • @Carol-Bell
    @Carol-Bell Před 4 lety

    Huge thanks to Kathy and Hana for joining Bernadette for this amazing conversational visit, and to Bernadette for filming and editing the whole thing. It was so fascinating I just watched without trying to do anything else at all. I love all the Victorian Way videos, and Bernadette’s on Victorian fashion, and this one was wonderful, bringing several aspects of history and the re-enactment process together. Bernadette, you are a wonderful interviewer- you ask good questions and then allow the people to answer completely without interruption. I enjoyed this very much, and rather than being too long, it was so interesting It ended with me wishing for more. Thumbs up is putting it mildly!

  • @The214thRabidFangirl
    @The214thRabidFangirl Před 4 lety +5

    This feels very timely. I just cracked open my history textbook last night for the class I am taking this semester, and it did a lot of talking about primary and secondary sources. It was nice to see Hannah again, and it was nice to hear about historical interpretation from the other side. Also I really like the sweater Kathy was wearing.

  • @sparklinggrey3
    @sparklinggrey3 Před 4 lety +6

    This was joyous company for a quick knitting session! I work in a London museum and often see Mary Anning and Charles Darwin gliding through the corridors, so it was lovely to hear this side of the action I've not had the pleasure of meeting any of the interpreters before. Thank you

    • @SunflowerSpotlight
      @SunflowerSpotlight Před 4 lety +2

      Me too! I just started knitting two weeks ago and I love it! I hadn’t knitted much today (somehow messed up a long tail cast on 🤦🏻‍♀️) so a little sess is just what I need! 😁

  • @altertheworld
    @altertheworld Před 2 lety

    I love seeing other interpreters represented on CZcams. I interned as an interpreter at a living museum in Massachusetts called old Sturbridge village and loved it. The costumers were really detailed with the costumes. For instance, things for winter like scarves, mittens, etc were made on site starting with sheering the sheep in the summer to knitting them with that wool. It's a 1840s-1850s Massachusetts village and is a great visit! There is none of the acting aspect, more like modern people in costume doing everyday things off the time period based off the family who once lived in the house. All the buildings had been moved from other sites and were actual homes and businesses in that period with historical furniture. Anything used by the interpreters are reproductions made on site in those historical buildings.

  • @nekkidpossum4397
    @nekkidpossum4397 Před 4 lety +2

    I grew up down the road from a living history village (The Museum of Appalachia, museumofappalachia.org/) and am really grateful for it! John Rice Irwin has taken salvaged original buildings and created a museum that's very much part of our community.

  • @juliblacker7866
    @juliblacker7866 Před 4 lety +3

    What a lovely surprise! I work in museum education, and it is always nice to hear others talk about their experience in interpretation. The research thing is so real. You never stop finding new questions you don't know the answers to.

  • @SunflowerSpotlight
    @SunflowerSpotlight Před 4 lety +7

    Eek! I just started to learn to knit about two weeks ago, so it’s cool that I can actually take her up on the offer of knitting along while watching! Excuse me as I rise gracefully and then proceed to catapult to my yarn bag!

    • @scarletpimpernelagain9124
      @scarletpimpernelagain9124 Před 4 lety

      Amara Jordan You have such a way with words. Hope the knitting thing is working for you now! ✌🏻🌹🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

    • @SunflowerSpotlight
      @SunflowerSpotlight Před 4 lety

      Northern Light 😊 Thanks, I appreciate it! It’s a little one step forward, one step back, heh. 😅 But I’m getting practice in being a kinder teacher to myself. If I can just be as encouraging to myself as I am to other people, it’ll be an easier experience! It’s great for practicing that if nothing else. And I’m getting quite a wonky washcloth collection. 😂 I’ll get there! Eventually!
      Thanks for the encouragement. I’m finding the crafty community to be really welcoming and positive. 😊

  • @1789cassandra
    @1789cassandra Před 4 lety

    I love and miss doing historical interpretation. I did volunteer at Lincoln's New Salem while a teenager with my mother. We would be assigned a house in the village and talk about the family who lived there and how the house would be run in the 1830s, as well as talk about how the village was created in the 1930s to create jobs. I'm so glad this was talked about! It brought back so many wonderful memories.

  • @magnoliaweathershield443
    @magnoliaweathershield443 Před 4 lety +1

    For anyone travelling to Northern Ireland, let me recommend the Ulster American Folk Park near Omagh. They have had historic interpreters since the 1970s, although I doubt that they were trained as actors. There were courses teaching traditional skills in dying and spinning and weaving. One of the highlights for me is the recreation of a street in Derry in the 1800s, with shops and bars and a working printing shop. The street runs down to a quayside, where you get onto a full size replica of a 1815 boat that took emigrees from Ireland to Baltimore. On the coming off the other side of the boat, you emerge into ‘America’, and follow the emigrant experience there.
    The Ulster American Folkpark also hosts a mean bluegrass music festival on the last weekend of August.

  • @e.urbach7780
    @e.urbach7780 Před 4 lety +5

    Such a great interview! I spent most of my career as a historical interpreter in California, and in my experience in the U.S., historical interpretation is a part-time job for almost everyone, except for a few who work at the largest historic sites (Colonial Williamsburg, Plimoth Plantation, etc.). I couldn't find any museum interpretation job in the state of California that offered more than 20 hours a week of paid work; most museum sites expected all their interpretation staff to be volunteers, actually. I felt lucky to have a job where I got paid at all to do the work! I am no longer working in a museum, however, because I couldn't live on the wages, and my hours at the museum filled the best working hours of the day so I couldn't get a job anywhere else that would pay at a higher rate!
    That said, I absolutely loved the work, and was inspired to do more and more research because of the questions that the visitors asked. In my work, we had a set of facts (about the historic site, about the time period, about the people who lived and worked there) and it was up to us how we worked those facts into our presentation, and which other facts we included. That worked very well, and I don't know that I could have done the work if I had been required to memorize and recite a script exactly the same way each time!

    • @michelecraig9658
      @michelecraig9658 Před 4 lety +1

      I was in the same boat as you were. I just retired from CA State Parks, but never did get a permanent position. I love historical reenactment as well, however there are additional challenges in the US when race played such an important part of the history -- ie the Californios of Spanish descent, native Americans who worked as the labourers, often against their will.

  • @projectgreenstar
    @projectgreenstar Před 4 lety +3

    I loved the historical interpretation they do in Philadelphia. I went on a class trip and they had people in costume that you could talk to and they had people who were doing plays that were historically accurate on how we got our money together in America. The attention to detail is the most impressive part and the people who do it are brave. It’s a different experience with history than anything else you can get.

  • @Aelfswythe
    @Aelfswythe Před 4 lety +1

    Reenactor and historical interpreter here! Loved listening to this conversation. There are many wonderful things and also challenges that come from historical interpretation, so it makes me happy to see conversations like this. Thanks so much for posting such an interesting interview to your channel!

  • @sky33liner
    @sky33liner Před rokem

    I spent several years as an English Civil Wars re-enactor but as a civilian. I was usually the local schoolmaster and talked to visitors about education in seventeenth century England. The English Civil War Society has had a living history camp at their events for a long time. On other occasions, we would populate an historic building. Sometimes there would be a story running through each day with the re-enactors following the story line but improvising on it as they went. It's huge fun and enormously satisfying.

  • @maurinet2291
    @maurinet2291 Před 4 lety +11

    I live in Texas outside of Houston and we have several of these living history enclaves within a few hours drive from me, or closer that operate on special days. But none of the actors, to my knowledge, are paid. It's all volunteer. Some young people get involved because they're interested in learning weaving or blacksmithing--and it's a great place to do that; who has forges or looms in their house anymore? But the bulk of the docents are retirees. And they love it, and are quite passionate about it, but we as a society don't see it as a valuable enough contribution to pay them. I've always thought that's really sad.

    • @skulleigh5867
      @skulleigh5867 Před 4 lety

      Maurine T I’m up in DFW - what places are these? I’d love to check them out.

    • @maurinet2291
      @maurinet2291 Před 4 lety +2

      @@skulleigh5867 A little far from you, but the best is George Historical Ranch www.georgeranch.org/ which features 4 houses plus outbuildings from different time periods spread across acreage, each with its own staff and tours. Washington on the Brazos State Historic site is another great day out in a working plantation wheretexasbecametexas.org/ . Near where I live, Jesse Jones Park is located on a historic homestead and they actually have reenactors in on Wednesdays and Saturdays. houstonfamilymagazine.com/events/second-saturday-settlers-homestead-fun/ They also have a couple days a year where it's more involved, a Pioneer Day in the fall, and in the spring they'll reenact civil war skirmishes while families learn to make hands on crafts, both those performed by the pioneers and the native Americans in the area. It's a complete blast.

    • @charlesmiller7350
      @charlesmiller7350 Před 4 lety +3

      George Ranch. It was one of my favorite places as a kid. I went there on field trips 5 or 6 times.

    • @skulleigh5867
      @skulleigh5867 Před 4 lety

      @@charlesmiller7350 Thank you!

    • @gretchensmith2852
      @gretchensmith2852 Před 4 lety +1

      In the Austin area, there's also Pioneer Farms. I don't know much about it, though, since I was too young to care when my family visited there.

  • @SuziSmartPhoto
    @SuziSmartPhoto Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you so much for taking us back to the characters and life at Audley End. Congratulations Hannah, I hope you're having as much fun as you appear to.
    You have all sent me back down the rabbit hole of personal history. Since my mom's passing, I've been charged with finishing our family tree but have neglectful in doing so. This has reignited that interest in our history where I'll inevitably get sidetracked into the many odd aspects of life as I time travel.
    Cheers, I hope you all have a fabulous weekend.

  • @user-uc3zz5my4o
    @user-uc3zz5my4o Před 4 lety +1

    Another fantastic video! Also, I don't know about anyone else but I for one am very happy you history dive then youtube as it allows me to learn and be interested in a commonly rather niche subject without having to travel (not that that's a bad thing) and in the comfort of my home with lots of food.

  • @Anne--Marie
    @Anne--Marie Před 3 lety +1

    Kathy mentioned the one thing that I found offputting about reenactments and that is the fact that they were focused on battles. I have always been more interested in the everyday lives of ordinary people. They didn't need to battle.