OK, on to the big story in Manhattan today which is the annual Gay Pride Parade.
When I went over to Fifth Avenue near the Empire State Building, of course I saw a lot of people taking pictures--and then I realized that most of the people walking in the Parade or on floats were taking pix themselves. Such is the age of iphone instant visual documentation, etc.
I wandered up Park Avenue to where people were waiting stoically at a staging area...almost all with balloons it seemed...
But the question I am still left with is who are these "Imperial Court" people? Sort of like Homecoming Queens? ( bad choice of words, it occurs to me , nobody get too upset about that, please!)
Well, just something about why the festivities are so special this year ( from the local Metro paper)
Giving LGBT New Yorkers even more cause
for celebration at the annual Gay Pride Weekend, the Supreme Court this
week struck down the Defense of Marriage Act, a federal law that barred
married same-sex couples from receiving federal benefits in states like
New York that have legalized gay marriage. “This is going to be a
historic weekend. I think your going to see this celebration reach new
heights based on what was decided,” said Chris Frederick, managing
director of Heritage of Pride, which the weekend’s official events.
Frederick added that in light of the ruling, this year’s theme, Rain
to Rainbows, seems especially appropriate. “It’s such a true statement
of where we’ve come from as a nation,” he said.
Edith Windsor, a New Yorker and the plaintiff in the DOMA case, is
one of the grand marshals of the march, along with Earl Fowlkes,
President and CEO of the Center for Black Equity, and singer and gay
activist Harry Belafonte. “Without Edie Windsor none of this would have
been possible,” Frederick said. Windsor said she was “honored” to be
among the marshals. “If someone had told me 50 years ago that I would be
the marshal of New York City Gay Pride Parade in 2013 at the age of 84,
I never would have believed it,” she said in an email.
Windsor said she would watch the parade with her longtime partner
Thea in her wheelchair before she died in 2009. “So given both my own
personal story and this important moment for our community and our
nation, I am absolutely thrilled,” Windsor said. Frederick also said
this year’s Pride events mark an important moment in the gay rights
movement. “I think the March is the strongest example for that,” he
said. “The energy of that event is largely emblematic of the history of
where we’ve come from.” The March goes along Fifth Avenue from Midtown
to Christopher and Greenwich Streets, where 34 years ago police raided
gay club the Stonewall Inn, causing riots and igniting the modern gay
rights movement.
Frederick thinks the Supreme Court decision will bring another 10 to
15 percent more attendees than last year’s March, or 1.7 million total
parade-goers. Catering to increased interest, organizers expanded this
year’s festivities, loading the week of the March with 10 official
events around the city. Frederick said they also added a couple more
exclusive events in order to compete with club promoters and other
for-profit venues looking to cash-in on Pride.
“We’re finally getting back that control, so to speak,” he said,
adding that official Pride events benefit the nonprofit group and make
the March possible. Frederick said he thinks the week, even with its
most events to date, could grow in the coming years with public and
personal acceptance. “I think we’ll get bigger as people become more
comfortable with themselves and are able to accept their own sexuality,”
he said. But for Frederick and many Pride participants, this week is
about celebrating.
Windsor said she’s marched in the parade for the past several years
“carrying a huge rainbow flag.” “Last year, I was so elated that I
danced my way down the street for the entire route of the Parade,” she
said.
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