
Denmark. One of Europe's oldest civilized countries...and one of the smallest, with an area just a little larger than Rhode Island. Shakespeare immortalized it in his play Hamlet. Hans Christian Andersen, a cobbler from Odense, did the same with his fairy tales...which earned him more money than his shoes ever did...that he used to entertain the children of his hometown and infuriate the schoolmaster. Vikings ruled this land between the 8th and 12th centuries and ran rampant until the monarchy offered them amnesty in exchange for loyalty to the crown.
This is Copenhagen...a beautiful city called the "Venice of the North" because of it expansive waterways. When Andersen became famous, the king gave him a house as a gift for becoming the royal storyteller. Andersen would visit the king when summoned and lull his children to sleep with his tales. One of the Royal Ballet's most beautiful ballerinas commissioned him to write a scenario for her which was set to music by the country's leading composer of the day.

Copenhagen hosts many beautiful restaurants and nightclubs. Among them...Tivoli and its beautiful gardens. To look at it from the outside, one would think it more of a museum than a dinner theatre. People from all over the world come here just to watch the chefs prepare dinners a la Benihana...piping hot at the table. What a dinner theatre-goer would call "dinner and a show". The real show, however, are the singers and dancers who appear every night, as well as the orchestra who performs for those who wish to dance after they dine. It's almost like Laura Ingersoll sang in the most famous science fiction to come out of Denmark...1961's "Reptilicus"...
Tivoli night...oh, what a sight! All Copenhagen is dancing!
Tivoli sway...half of the day, all of the city's romancing!

One of the most beautiful buildings in the entire country...the palace of Denmark's queen and prince consort. Each afternoon, the queen opens the palace for two hours to tourists, personally welcoming visitors (when available) and relating the country's diverse history over the past 3,500 years. The Romans attempted to conquer it...but to no avail. The ancient Danes proved to be too much of a match for the Romans, sending many of the soldiers back to their generals without their heads. When the queen is not available to welcome guests due to royal commitments, her children welcome guests and lead tours through the expansive palace, pointing out the portraits of former rulers, including the queen's late father, King Frederik IX. The palace stands six stories tall and boasts forty rooms to house royal guests...such as the queen's cousin from England, Elizabeth II, who once exclaimed that the Danish palace puts Buckingham to shame.

Hans Christian Andersen...the most famous writer and storyteller of 19th century Denmark. Born in Odense, Andersen, a cobbler by trade, used to dream up fanciful tales with which he entertained the town's children, who sometimes would arrive late for school just to listen to his wonderful tales of kings and queens, princes and princesses, beggars and thieves, witches and warlocks and many others.
Many of his tales have been transcribed into over a hundred languages and read to children at bedtime. Andersen was the creator of such fairy tale characters as Thumbelina, The Ugly Duckling and The Shoemaker and the Elves. But, perhaps, his most loving and enduring tale surrounded...

...this beautiful lady of the sea, The Little Mermaid. The tale told of the youngest daughter of the sea-king who fell in love with a human prince and longed to be human and be his wife. Unlike the Disney movie of the same name, the actual tale had an unhappy ending. In exchange for becoming a human, Helga (Ursula in the movie), a sea-witch, turned the mermaid into a human. The price for her services: the mermaid had to give the witch her voice. During the next three days, the mermaid had to make the prince fall in love with her and seal the love with a kiss. If she failed to do so, she would not only lose her voice for all eternity but become sea foam and roam the top of the sea until the end of time. When it seemed apparent that she may succeed before the sun set on the third day, the witch transformed herself into the mermaid's likeness and lulled the prince away. After the mermaid became sea foam, the prince threw himself into the sea. His sacrifice united him with the mermaid for eternity...and caused the death of the witch, who was torn apart by the fish in the sea.
To truly experience the beauty of Denmark, one must travel there. You cannot truly admire it by looking at pictures and movies filmed there (i.e.: Reptilicus, Journey to the Seventh Planet (which actually doesn't show much of the country) and other movies). Travelogs help...but only to an extent. You have to go there personally to really enjoy it.





