KING MOMO DECLARES RIO’S CARNIVAL OPEN
World’s biggest and liveliest party begins with colourful, elaborate parades
RIO de Janeiro’s fabled Carnival — one of the world’s biggest and most lively parties — kicked off on Friday with the traditional symbolic passing of a key to the city to festival leader King Momo.
Once again this year, mayor and former evangelical Christian pastor Marcelo Crivella is sitting out the fun.
He sees all the debauchery — so much sweat, skin and sequins — as less than ideal, and has cut public funding for the samba troupes who will strut their stuff over the weekend in half.
So, Tourism Minister Marcelo Alves took his place for the opening festivities.
Wilson Neto — the big, jovial man who plays King Momo — accepted the key in the Sambadrome in a shower of confetti, and then declared Rio’s legendary Carnival open.
The 14 elite samba schools in the “special group” will parade tomorrow and the day after through the Sambadrome as they compete for the most prestigious Carnival title.
Some of them have adopted themes highlighting women, blacks and indigenous people in Brazil — an in-your-face response to Brazil's far-right President Jair Bolsonaro.
Starting Friday, the traditional blocos street parties were thumping here and in other cities, such as Salvador, Recife and Sao Paulo.
Authorities expect seven million people, including 1½ million Brazilian and foreign tourists, to participate in this gigantic outdoor party.
In a country that is just edging out of severe economic crisis and a tense electoral process, Carnival is a sacred ritual of collective catharsis.
Even Crivella could not be a total naysayer, saying in a video posted on Friday on social media: “May God protect us and make it a good carnival.”