Do you know what a Mummer is?

Do You know what a "Mummer" is?

  • Yes

  • No

  • I am one / want to be one

  • I know one

  • Unfortunately I do know what a Mummer is. Thanks God, January 1st only comes once a year.


Results are only viewable after voting.

Papa Deuce

<font color="red">BBQ loving, fantasy football pla
Joined
Sep 29, 2003
Messages
17,794
EVERYBODY in the Philly area knows what a Mummer is, but what about you folks who live far away?

EDIT: Don't page down until you answer the poll if you don't want to know what a Mummer is before voting.
 
well until my aunt passed away we used to go to her place at 2nd and Tasker to watch the 2 streeters. Sometimes when we were young the older folks would make us cover their eyes. Mummers used to have bottle holders built into their costumes and they would drink all the way along the route. By the time they hit 2street and their clubs they were feeling no pain. The young women along the route would often have mummers face paint on their faces from receiving smooches from the marchers. Once my grandfather went up to a mounted officer and stole his club.
Most of my older male relatives marched at one time or another. My one son has my uncle's banjolin that he used to play, we just had it reconditioned. I remember when they started allowing women. What an uproar in our family homes. My uncles all said never would they march with a woman. But since they were all in their 50's I guess that wasn't much of a threat.
 

Unfortunately I don't know how to post pics or I would post some here......probably somebody here could do it?
 
I wasn't exactly sure how to answer this question. I've lived in PA for about 15 years, I've seen a Mummer, but have NO idea what they are or what their purpose is. I feel inclined to vote the last option. :earboy2:
 
We watched the Mummer's on television this afternoon! Those costumes are pretty wild!

Kinda looked like a Yankee version of Mardi Gras...
 
one pic
Feb24_34_small.JPG

another
FEB04_23.jpg

more formal
2001mummers71.jpg
 
Yes I know what a mummer is, I See them every year at the Bunker Hill Day parade in June. That's a holiday only celebrated by Boston, Somerville and Cambridge Massachusetts. Basically we get a day off to celebrate and party, but the excuse is that we are celebrating the anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill.
 
Papa Deuce said:
Unfortunately I don't know how to post pics or I would post some here......probably somebody here could do it?

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Tiggeroo said:
well until my aunt passed away we used to go to her place at 2nd and Tasker to watch the 2 streeters. .

My wife has friends who are 2 Streeters.

I've lived in the Philly area basically all my life and I just don't get it.
 
Sounds like something dirty.

No, really didn't some of the literary characters dress as mummers or go mumming in War and Peace or Anna Kerinina? Maybe it's a Russian tradition.
 
I was just asking a PA DIS'er about the Mummers this past month. I was saying they were such a part of New Year's Day years ago on TV but have not seeen them in ages. I really enjoyed them back then. They are still on??

http://www.mummers.com/

A History of Mummery
The Philadelphia New Years Day Mummers Parade is a tradition of the city that dates back to pre-Colonial times, making it the oldest folk parade in the United States. The parade originates from a blend of Irish, Swedish, Finnish, English, German, and other European heritages. This great celebration of the new year takes place on the 1st of January, every year in Center City.

H. Bart McHugh, a Philadelphia theatrical producer and publishing agent, is credited with the idea of having the city organize and sponsor the parade. Before his influence, the "Mummers" were clubs of costumed musicians and non-musicians who would parade in South Philadelphia to celebrate the new year. Now, the city-sponsored New Year's Day spectacular starts at 5th and Market Streets and travels east to City Hall. This seems to be the new controversial, yet possibly permanent home for the parade after one hundred years on Broad Street.

The parade is divided into four categories: Comic, Fancy, String Band and Fancy Brigade. Each category consists of separate organizations that compete for prize money, but mostly for bragging rights, until the next year's parade. The parade starts in the early morning and usually lasts well into the night. At the end of the parade route, all of organizations perform at City Hall in front of the judges (except the Fancy Brigades, who do their presentations in the Convention Center), as well as hundreds of people in the stands and millions of people watching on television.

The String Band Division is often considered the most unique part of the parade. The combination of bright, colorful costumes, live music (featuring banjos, saxophones, accordions, glockenspiels, bass fiddles and drums), as well as strutting and dancing, provides for a one-of-a-kind experience.
 
We are only an hour out of Philly and enjoy watching the Mummer's Parade on TV. Unfortunately, our cable doesn't carry the station it was on this year. DH almost had us going up there to watch.
 
Stepharoonie! said:
What in the WORLD are they wearing?! :earseek:

Heh. It seems normal for those of us who grew up in this area to see grown men in dresses, wigs, feathers and full make-up. Some of those costumes, especially for the fancies, can be more than $10,000.00!

BTW Dan your info is a bit out of date. The Market Street experiment did not work and the Mummers are back marching on their original home, Broad Street!

String bands are string, reed and percussion instruments only- no brass. It's a unique sound. The comics brigades are closest to the 'true' mummers, with men dressed in drag strutting down the street.
 
My Mom used to love to go down and watch the parade when I was a kid growing up in NE Philly so I know what a Mummer is and GLAD it only comes once a year!!

A coworker is a Mummer. Has been since he was a kid. And you're right, the suits can get expensive and take a long time to make.
 
originally there were no women in the parade. Men dressed as both men and women. And they only went to so much trouble so they didn't shave face or legs. But they would pad their female parts amply.
And given the immigrant base it wouldn't surprise me if it had some roots in russia. I was told that there was a heavy Irish influence.
 













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