1st edition, 2011
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Author | Kathy Gfeller and Linda Clayton |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Twig the Fairy |
Genre | Children's fiction, Fantasy |
Publisher | Twig the Fairy, LLC |
Publication date
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2010 |
Media type | Print (hardback) |
Pages | 40 |
ISBN | |
Preceded by | Twig the Fairy and the Curious Land of Real (2010) |
Twig Oaklyn Flewinia Thistlebottom, better known as Twig the Fairy, is a fairy character frequently seen at Renaissance fairs around the United States. A "charmer of children", Twig entertains passers-by with jigs and airs played on a double-piped aulos. She occasionally offers a glass stone glittering with "faerie dust" as a token of friendship to children who approach her. The actress who plays Twig describes Twig's character as a "shy and gregarious—kind of a woman-child: innocent, mischievous, playful." Twig is a silent character because, according to the actress who plays her, "talking takes away a bit of the mystery" of fairies.
The character of Twig debuted at the Minnesota Renaissance Festival in 2003. Since then, Twig has appeared at Renaissance festivals across America. She makes regular appearances at the Carolina Renaissance Festival, the Arizona Renaissance Festival, the Scarborough Renaissance Festival, the Colorado Renaissance Festival, the Siouxland Renaissance Festival (in Sioux Falls, South Dakota) and the Minnesota Renaissance Festival, among others. Twig has appeared twice on the cover of the nationally-published Faerie Magazine and has more than 240,000 followers on Facebook.
Twig is portrayed by Kathy Gfeller, an actress from the small North Woods town of Ely, Minnesota. She studied theater, fiber arts, and history at Minnesota State University at Mankato. Kathy joined the renaissance festival circuit as a performer after graduating with a degree in fiber arts and sculpture, finding that she could express herself best as a silent fairy. According to Kathy, "Twig was born out of my desire to portray what I thought a real fairy might be, and of what I've always wanted to meet as a child. She is a contradiction: innocent yet mischievous, bashful yet gregarious, full of music yet silent."