HIRE A PROFESSIONAL
Whether or not you provide a separate play area, consider dividing dinner in two -- kids and then adults.Hire a ProfessionalWhy not entertain the tots with a professional performer? Consider hiring a bag piper, clown, comedian, caricature artist, face, body and/or fake tattoo painter, fortune teller, impersonator (think Batman, Cinderella, Elvis, Mickey Mouse, or Madonna), karaoke, magician, mime, mystery theatre, story teller, ventriloquist, hypnotist, or tarot card reader. It's an easy way to keep the kids happy and the adults off the hook. Check out local entertainment companies and party-planning companies to find the right entertainer for your young audience.
Teenagers, while not disruptive, may not get into the festivities as much as adults do. If you have lots of teens attending, you could create a cafe (coffee-free, but still) with tables and chairs, sodas, an espresso machine serving steamed milk, a variety of herbal teas and designer water, international newspapers and magazines, and a dozen vintage board games. Have music playing, too (cool music). Assign one member of your waitstaff to man the cafe. Your teenage guests won't want to leave.
SET UP A SPORTS ROOM
Set Up a Sports CenterFor an active gaggle of little ones, consider turning the play space into a sports palace. Rent or borrow Ping-Pong tables, air hockey, a Nerf ball, a basketball, Twister, hula hoops, jump ropes, and a putt-putt machine. If it's a hotel or country-club wedding, you may find all the equipment you need right on the grounds.
CREATE A CRAFT ROOM
For younger kids, turn one room into an arts-and-crafts center. Have a coloring contest, with prizes for most colorful drawings. Supply beads for necklaces they can take home. Se
t up a table for sand art, that colorful sand craft you've seen at fairs. You'll need pails of different-colored sand (kids can make their own with white salt and colored chalk), plastic spoons, and clear plastic jars or containers for the kids to fill.
If you're expecting very young children, chances are they'll be asleep before the evening is over. Accommodate their fatigue by setting up a quiet nap room where they can rest comfortably.With a little creative planning, you can make sure the kids -- and the adults -- enjoy your wedding almost as much as you do.


