Featuring the Stalking Crow Dancers
Drury Row Theater Midnight Sing Along Performance
Every Year between October 15 and November 15, the Drury Theater celebrates the annual gathering of the crows. Costumes are worn for the Midnight Ball on November 1st. Drury customers, a community with less historical interest than their counterparts, whoop it up anywhere there is a free food party going on. The Drury family argues that the flare is the thinnest at this time of year. It allows their corrupted ancestors through with the help of a singalong. The Gazette newspaper covers phenomena that are otherwise overlooked. No cost advertising. The season is the theater’s most profitable time of the year. Hallows Eve celebrations typically involve bonfires, feasting, and divination. People dress up in costumes to ward off evil spirits, and leave food and drink out for the dead. Samhain was also a time to honor ancestors and to celebrate the harvest. Many of the 1907 customs of Halloween, such as bonfires, costumes, and trick-or-treating, have their origins in Samhain. Samhain is still celebrated by many people today. Drury Theater lights a bonfire at midnight once a week. The indoor snobbish theater patron move outdoors where the mingling continues. The outdoor festivities and music are free. Hundreds of Red Lamp residents and visitors share in the pumpkin carving contests. Prizes include tickets for upcoming Christmas season theater events and left over Midnight Ball foods, including candy and apples. It is the one night that urchins eat their full of sweets and luncheon meats. Brave costumed party goers climb into carts and wagons and drive to the cemetery to honor their deceased ancestors. Ghost stories are read until dawn. The most horrific tales are saved to the last hour before daylight.
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