logo
George Coulam, ‘Ren Faire' Docuseries Subject and Founder of Texas Renaissance Festival, Dies at 87

George Coulam, ‘Ren Faire' Docuseries Subject and Founder of Texas Renaissance Festival, Dies at 87

Yahoo21-05-2025
George Coulam, the founder and longstanding owner of the Texas Renaissance Festival whose eclectic lifestyle and hunt for a successor were documented in the 2024 HBO docuseries 'Ren Faire,' was found dead in his home in Todd Mission, Texas on Wednesday morning. He was 87. An investigation remains ongoing and a cause of death is not known at this time.
The Todd Mission Police Department was dispatched to Coulam's residence, adjacent to the Renaissance Festival's premises, on Wednesday morning. The Grimes County Sheriff's Office and Texas Rangers were present for assistance. Coulam was pronounced dead by authorities upon arrival.
More from Variety
'Ren Faire' Finale: Director Talks Who Won, What Will Happen to the Renaissance Festival and How the Subjects Reacted to the Docuseries
Welcome to 'Ren Faire': Lance Oppenheim's HBO Docuseries Follows a Festival Trapped in a Real-Life Game of Thrones
'Spermworld' Documentary Introduces the 'Sperm Kings' Who Use Facebook to Donate to Dozens - or Hundreds - of Women
'To our Texas Renaissance family and friends, we are deeply saddened by the loss of George Coulam, founder of the Texas Renaissance Festival,' the Texas Renaissance Festival wrote in a statement on social media. 'For more than 50 years, he built a community that has become a cherished tradition for generations of performers, staff and guests. At this time, we ask for respect and privacy for Mr. Coulam's family and the extended Texas Renaissance Festival family as they grieve.'
Coulam's death comes less than two weeks after a Grimes County District court ordered the Texas Renaissance Festival must be sold, ending a nearly two-year civil case. In the decision, Judge Gary W. Chaney of the 506th state District Court, also ordered that Coulam must pay over $23 million in damages to cover attorney's fees and money lost by the fest's buyer.
The suit alleged that a group of RW Lands Inc., says Texas Stargate, Inc., Royal Campground, Inc., and Texas RF, Inc. agreed to purchase the Festival, property and assets from Coulam for $60 million. The plaintiff claimed that Coulam and his associates did not provide required documents for the sale and that the original owners failed to close the transaction by its agreed-upon date. Coulam denied the allegations.
Coulam founded the Texas Renaissance Festival in 1974 and has overseen its growth into the largest such gathering in the United States. Along with the court order to sell, Coulam also lost office as the mayor of the fest's premises, Todd Mission, in early May. He had been the only mayor of the town since its 1982 incorporation until losing re-election this year, with city council member Stephen Mensing sworn in.
The operations of the Texas Renaissance Festival, infamous among locals, were documented in the 2024 HBO docuseries 'Ren Faire,' which followed Coulam's less-than-motivated search for a successor to lead the festival, and the surrounding business affiliates vying to take over operations. The three-episode run also included details of Coulam's dedicated online dating pursuits and his unforgiving temperament around his staff. The series' events concluded prior to the emergence of the recent civil lawsuit against Coulam that reached an end in early May.
'Functionally, he actually is a king. He's created a real-life fiefdom,' series director and executive producer Lance Oppenheim told Variety in an interview before the series premiered. 'The first thing he said to me was 'I used to play the king, but now I'm a horny old man. I want to find someone that can take care of the festival.' These were the things just flowing out of him. He was maybe looking for an outlet — somebody that he has no control over. He doesn't have any friends that he doesn't employ.'
Coulam faced other legal troubles in recent years, including allegations of sexual harassment and wrongful termination. The festival settled a 2021 lawsuit filed by a former employee, who claimed that Coulam made her sift through 'sugar daddy' websites to facilitate his romantic life.
Per Coulam's official website, he earned his master's degree in art from the University of California at North Ridge.
Best of Variety
New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week
Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz
Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Was a 2020s Carrie Bradshaw Ever Really Going to Satisfy Us?
Was a 2020s Carrie Bradshaw Ever Really Going to Satisfy Us?

Vogue

time16 minutes ago

  • Vogue

Was a 2020s Carrie Bradshaw Ever Really Going to Satisfy Us?

It's a common thing among New Yorkers to feel like you've just missed the city's greatest era, but I genuinely mourn the fact that I wasn't a Brooklynite during the original run of Sex and the City on HBO. No less an authority on rom-coms than Mindy Kaling underscored the impact of the show in her first book, Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me?, writing: 'Let me take a moment here to stress again just how pervasive the Sex and the City culture was in New York in 2002. You could be an NYU freshman, a Metropolitan Transit Authority worker, or an Orthodox Jewish woman living in a yeshiva: you watched Sex and the City.' And what, exactly, has my generation of Netflix-addled millennials been handed instead of the SATC culture that Kaling raved about? And Just Like That…, of course, a series that was to the original series what the five million Bring It On sequels were to the first 2000 film. Now that the less-than-perfect reboot is officially ending after three seasons, I'm left wondering just what it was that went so awry. This season in particular has been something of a slog to get through, and I'm a person who used a picture of Carrie Bradshaw as the background of the first computer I ever owned. If I'm only watching out of professional obligation, you know something is wrong. Carrie may have inspired generations of young women to worship graven images of her clothes, but what I loved about her on the show's original run was that she wasn't aspirational, not all the time. Yes, she had the great job and the perfect wardrobe and the cute apartment and the girl squad and the line of men waiting in the wings to date her, but she also got pigeonholed as a sex columnist and couldn't afford her outfits or apartment and fought with her friends and got dumped and did a million other things that made her feel like an actual person, not just Pinterest fodder. I don't doubt that the 50-plus-and-fabulous life of a rich New York widow was an exciting proposition for some (especially mankeeping wives who hate their husbands but will only admit it after two white wines), but modern-day Carrie's story was also freighted with loss (see: Mr. Big), decades-old baggage (see: eternal loser Aidan), and storylines like disliking the mega-luxe New York City apartments her hot realtor friend showed her. (No offense, but…snore!) Of course Carrie's life in her 50s was going to look different than it did in her 30s, but it's been hard to shake my image of our heroine as the ultimate single, unencumbered, footloose-and-fancy-free-in-expensive-Manolos New Yorker who arguably prefigured the West Village girlie. Sure, she flirted a bit with her weird British neighbor, but why didn't we get to see Carrie really hit the dating market again? I would pay good money to see this woman's Hinge profile! (Okay, fine, she'd clearly be on Raya, but still.)

Ben Barnes Talks Harry Potter Fancast Amid Audiobook Casting
Ben Barnes Talks Harry Potter Fancast Amid Audiobook Casting

Buzz Feed

timean hour ago

  • Buzz Feed

Ben Barnes Talks Harry Potter Fancast Amid Audiobook Casting

Once again, actors' responses to the ever-expanding world of new(ish) Harry Potter properties are a sign of the times. Unless you've been in a coma, you're likely aware that J.K. Rowling has faced immense backlash for her anti-trans rhetoric. Which isn't to say that her beliefs are merely theoretical; she's provided funding for a group that successfully got the UK Supreme Court to essentially no longer view trans women as women and has created a private "legal fighting fund for women protecting their sex-based rights." Currently, she's calling for a boycott of a chain of stores because a woman claimed that a trans employee* "politely" asked her teenage daughter if they needed help. *The woman and her daughter were there to ask for a bra fitting and the "trans" employee (it's not confirmed whether she is trans, she's just noted as being very tall) was apparently in the lingerie section of the store. She didn't ask to perform the bra fitting and would have had no reason to know that that's why the family were there. Given that the writer continues to use her economic and cultural power to fight against trans people, many have called for a boycott of any new and official Harry Potter IP that will benefit Rowling. That hasn't stopped many actors from cashing in themselves, such as the cast of the upcoming HBO series, which features Nick Frost, John Lithgow, and Paapa Essiedu. Given that the bar is in hell, someone with a passable take on the whole thing is Ben Barnes. You might recognize the actor and singer from The Chronicles of Narnia and The Punisher, but he's also been fancast as Sirius Black for many years now. As per Collider, Ben was recently asked about fan hype at a convention in Florida. 'I found it very weird for a lot of years, because I didn't really understand what was happening,' he replied. "Then I went through a phase of being like, 'Wait, people have imagined me in this sort of old universe thing for like, 15 plus, 20 years now.' And it's that kind of, like, it's the commitment to it, which I really kind of value. And I think is really, really lovely.' 'Most people in the world found those stories and those movies, when they came out, really joyful,' he continued. 'And obviously, in the last few years, I found it much more — a more difficult thing to talk about, because there's obviously, like, a clash between some of the author's views on things and the way I see the world.' "I think that has made it, sadly, sort of tainted, this beautiful mythology of how I saw those stories. But it doesn't change the fact that it's a really — such a cool character, and, you know, to be associated with a character like that from other people who do love it, it's like — it's like a really beautiful thing, and it makes me happy," he added. Ben's words came a few days before the cast of the new Audible Harry Potter audiobooks was announced. The cast includes Hugh Laurie as Albus Dumdledore, Matthew Macfadyen as Lord Voldemort, Riz Amed as Professor Snape, and Michelle Gomez as Professor McGonagall. Hugh said of his casting, "I'm honoured to have been trusted with the keys to Albus Dumbledore, and thrilled to be able to take him around the track of this beautiful incarnation by Pottermore and Audible. I'm also deeply conscious of previous drivers Richard Harris, Michael Gambon, Jude Law and the iconic narrations by Jim Dale and m'colleague Sir Stephen Fry. Just below the horizon, but headed our way, is the rough beast John Lithgow, his hour come round at last. This is great company, and it's a privilege to be among their number." Resist the siren song, Ben...

'South Park' Season 27, Episode 2: How to Watch Without Cable
'South Park' Season 27, Episode 2: How to Watch Without Cable

CNET

time2 hours ago

  • CNET

'South Park' Season 27, Episode 2: How to Watch Without Cable

Comedy Central South Park season 27 didn't air a new episode last week, but fans won't have to wait too much longer for the second installment of the satirical show. Episode 2 of the hit animated series debuts later today, and you can watch a trailer if you haven't already. After a hectic rollout that included a premiere-date push, South Park's new season is underway and its streaming home is now clear. Per a report from Deadline, five upcoming seasons and the show's back catalog will be on Comedy Central and Paramount Plus with the signing of a new deal. Forthcoming episodes of South Park season 27 will stream on Paramount Plus in the US the day after airing on Comedy Central. South Park will return to Paramount Plus internationally and won't continue to stream on HBO Max past early August. As for what the new season will entail, we have the above video for reference -- which starts sort of like a horror movie trailer before fires are unleashed, the Statue of Liberty is dismantled and disastrous plane collisions occur. The first episode lampooned President Donald Trump, and there's more of that in the latest teaser. If you want to watch the 27th season of the show co-created by Trey Parker and Matt Stone, here's what to know. South Park season 27, episode 2 release date and streaming details South Park season 27, episode 2 will premiere on Comedy Central on Wednesday, Aug. 6, at 10 p.m. ET/10 p.m. PT/9 p.m. CT and stream on Paramount Plus the next day (the first episode is already on the streaming service). Episode 2 is titled "Got A Nut." Here's the synopsis, according to the South Park website, "When Mr. Mackey loses his job, he desperately tries to find a new way to make a living." Season 27 episodes will hit Paramount Plus in the US the day after they air on Comedy Central, according to Deadline. If you don't want to wait that long to watch without cable, you might want to consider a live TV streaming service like Philo, Sling or YouTube TV. More on that below. James Martin/CNET Paramount Plus Paramount Plus has two plans: Paramount Plus Essential and Paramount Plus Premium, which used to be called Paramount Plus with Showtime. Essential costs $8 per month and includes ads and a sampling of Showtime programming. Premium removes ads and unlocks more Showtime titles, among other perks. See at Paramount Plus Philo Philo Carries Comedy Central Philo is a live TV streaming service that provides more than 70 channels, including Comedy Central. A subscription costs $28 per month and also includes access to AMC Plus content. Rivals like YouTube TV come with more channels but Philo could be a good fit for you if you like its smaller selection for a lower price. See at Philo

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store