![]() During our recent trip to Dallas a quick family weekend getaway from Houston. Below is the details on the food options. The Spring Break Family Horses, Knights, and Queens oh my This is a Medieval Times Dallas review. In addition enjoying a fun afternoon of food and fun. Jude’s and be good corporate citizens in our communities. A: The vegan meal includes a generous serving of hummus with carrot and celery sticks, a main course featuring three-bean stew with fire-roasted tomato and brown rice, and a choice of fresh fruit or Italian ice for dessert. At Medieval Times it is our honor to be able to partner up with St. Jude for treatment, travel, housing or food because all a family should worry about is helping their child live. Trista W Do they serve Alcohol over a year ago Answer 7 answers Attraction representative MedievalTimesTX Dallas, Texas 4 Votes Thank you for the question We have 2 full service bars containing an array of medieval themed mixed drinks as well as a variety of beer, and wine. Jude ensures that families never receive a bill from St. Jude have helped push the overall childhood cancer survival rate from 20% to more than 80% since it opened more than 50 years ago in 1962. Saving children.® Add-on donations may be added on top of that cost and are tax deductible to the extent allowed by law. ![]() Jude to support its lifesaving mission: Finding cures. For every ticket purchased Medieval Times will donate 100% of the purchase price directly to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital® with an exclusive show on Sunday, Decemat 2:00 pm. For more, visit Here is all the details you need to support!ĭallas, TX - Medieval Times in Dallas is supporting St. It has been performed for 65 million guests in its 34 years. It launched in North America in 1983 and has since opened nine castles across the United States and in Toronto, Canada. Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament was founded in 1977 in Spain. All proceeds from the show will go to St. Medieval Times is hosting an exclusive show to support St. After that, we highly recommend you watch Medieval Times’ YouTube series, The Making of a Knight, which we are still patiently waiting to be turned into a full-length television series.Medieval Times is a dinner and show tournament. If you are unwilling to take the risk of entering a Medieval Times castle during a pandemic that is very much still happening, you can at least check out how weird the reopenings are thanks to some of the recent YouTube uploads. (Fun fact: Along with NASCAR and a handful of other events, the Myrtle Beach Medieval Times location was given an exemption in South Carolina’s ban on gatherings of over 250 people earlier this month.) The locations in Buena Park, Lyndhurst, Chicago, Baltimore, and Toronto currently remain closed. But it’s apparently a risk the Orlando, Scottsdale, Atlanta, Dallas, and Myrtle Beach locations are willing to take. Whether the new setup prevents any outbreaks remains to be seen, but considering that Medieval Times takes place in an indoor venue where guests are typically encouraged to scream and cheer on their assigned knight on his way to victory, it seems a bit risky. Of course, Medieval Times is a dinner theater, so regardless of how much the open locations enforce the rules and attempt to space guests apart with minimal contact, a glance at recent Instagram posts by guests at the Scottsdale location reveals that attendees are, obviously, taking off their masks while inside the show. The entire setup both before, during, and after the show has been reworked for “minimal contact” between the guests and staff - which includes no more autographs by cast members. Guests are required to wear a mask and get a temperature check prior to entering the castle, employees have been trained “on new health and safety guidelines,” shows are now booked at limited capacity so that parties are seated spaced apart (at Scottsdale, it’s at 50 percent capacity, according to a local ABC15 report). (All of the locations had previously been closed since March due to the coronavirus.)Īccording to the Medieval Times website, the company has put into place several changes in an attempt to make the experience of attending the show as safe as possible. ![]() ![]() Over the past few weeks, Medieval Times has been uploading videos to its YouTube channel detailing the recent reopening of several locations, and from the looks of it so far, Medieval Times 2020 is one very bizarre place to be. Plagues and medieval times go hand in hand, so it absolutely tracks that the dinner-theater chain and The Cable Guy scene-stealer, Medieval Times, has decided that the (indoor!) show must go on despite a pandemic with no end in sight. Photo: Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament/YouTube
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