Elite Street Productions offers several "ice breaker" games for your event.
We entertain your guests and make fun happen!
* Limbo
* Twist Contest
* Musical Chairs
* Twister
* Freeze
Props
Props can be supplied by us at an additional charge (You tell us how many of what you want and your guests can keep them) or you can supply the yourselves.
* Inflatable Guitars and Musical Instruments
* Glow Jewelry
* Hawiian Leis
* Etc.
GAMES
Please note, running a game requires focus on things besides the participants. Therefore, we need adults at the event to act as judges during the games. Remember Elite Street Productions does not provide prizes for games and contests, but you can purchase them from our Party Store. Just click the link on this page.
Some of the games you may already know include:
Limbo, Musical Chairs, Freeze and Twister.
Here are some others you may like:
Elimination Dance: We start by having the guests dance to a song. Periodically, we stop the music and call out a description. If the guest fits the description, they must leave the dance floor. The song continues until you have 1 or 2 winners. Examples:
Anyone wearing red Anyone wearing a watch Anyone with a hat one
Twisted Musical Chairs: This starts out like traditional musical chairs. You have one less chair than people playing. The music plays and contestants walk around the chairs. When the music stops, the DJ also calls out something that the contestants must find and bring back before they can sit down. For example, the DJ might call out, "a set of keys.". Everyone must find a set of keys and bring it back to a chair. A player is eliminated and then a chair is removed. This time when the music stops and the DJ calls out an item to find, the players must return the first item before locating the new item. Play continues until there is just one or two winners.
Reverse Musical Chairs: Everyone spreads out in a huge circle about arm's length apart. A basketball or other small object is passed around the circle while the music is playing. When the music stops, whoever has the ball is out. Then we start the music again. This time when we stop it, we make announcements like these:
The person to the left (or right, or both) of the basketball is out
The person holding the ball picks someone to be out (or picks between the two neighbors)
The last two people to touch the tennis ball are out
Play continues until there are just one or two winners.
Baby Guessing Contest*: Get pictures of your classmates when they were very young. Secure them on a large mat and number them. Provide an entry blank that is numbered also. You may want to include an alphabetical list of the people pictured to help out the contestants. Be sure to include several names that are pictured.
Superlative Alumnus*: Find out who has come the furthest, who has the most children, who was the first to respond to the reunion invitation, who has the youngest child, etc.
"I've Become My Parents": (best done at 5, 10, or 15 years) I introduce this by saying that in the month before my tenth year reunion, I did something I had thought of in high school as something only my parents would do - I had a yard sale... twice. We all think that when we are in high school that we are the coolest thing to come along. So now, tell us what you have done recently that truly makes you as square those adults you ridiculed. The best one wins a prize. Some entries I have heard are: bought a house, told a child, "Because I'm your mother, that's why", took up knitting, sold his Metallica CD's, etc.
Name That TV Show: We have theme songs from TV shows going back to the 1960's. We select 4 contestants at a time. We play the song and the first one to guess the show it is from wins. As an alternative, the winner could go on to a final round with 3 or 4 other winners from the first round.
Specific Trivia: We have thousands of trivia questions in all types of categories - the 1940's through the 1990's, music, general, fads, etc. We can help prod your memory with memory jogging clues. We do not bring trivia questions unless requested.
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