The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mardi Gras meltdown Official parades cancelled

- Bre Anderson

COVID: EVENTS THAT MAKE UP ‘LARGEST FREE PARTY ON EARTH’ VIOLATE RULES

In January 2020, Polly Watts estimated how much alcohol she would need to make it through Mardi Gras at her bar, Avenue Pub – and then ordered considerab­ly more than that. It is a practice she and other bar owners here use to lock in savings that many liquor companies offer in the early months of the year.

“We had an Armageddon-level liquor stock,” Watts said. “It usually lasts us a few months.”

New Orleans has again entered Mardi Gras season – the big finale, Fat Tuesday, is on 16 February – and Watts, like many bar owners, has yet to sell much of the alcohol she purchased a year ago, just before the pandemic halted the city’s famous nightlife as the high season for festivals and tourism was set to begin.

She doesn’t expect to go through her overstock of vodka, whiskey and beer anytime soon, even though Avenue Pub is on St Charles Avenue, a main route for most of the large Mardi Gras parades.

That is because this year’s official parades have been cancelled. The balls, parties and other events that make up “the largest free party on earth” violate Covid-19 rules, which early this month were raised in New Orleans to levels not seen since the start of the pandemic, when the city struggled with one of the highest coronaviru­s caseloads anywhere.

Mardi Gras 2020 is remembered locally as the last gasp of pre-Covid normalcy, as well as an accelerant of the virus’ spread. So few people here expect this year’s edition to be anything like normal. It can’t be.

Infection rates in the city are at near-record levels. Restrictio­ns will be reexamined at the end of the month, said Sarah Babcock, director of public policy and emergency preparedne­ss for the New Orleans Health Department.

“What activities are going to be allowed on Mardi Gras is really dependent on what New Orleanians do today,” Babcock said. “But the Mardi Gras that the nation thinks of, the picture they have, is not going to happen.”

Still, Mardi Gras, a holiday with Christian (and pagan) underpinni­ngs, can’t be cancelled.

“People are going to find a way to celebrate,” Babcock said. And in the absence of traditiona­l programmin­g, the focal point is likely to be the bars that showcase the music and drinking cultures so central to the city’s economy, identity and allure.

These businesses, which have been as damaged by the pandemic as any sector of the city’s life, face a holiday that embodies New Orleans’ spirit – the capacity for joy, the sense of community, the embrace of art and excess – in a year when no one knows what form the celebratio­n will take, at a time when summoning that spirit could cause harm.

The bar scene here, which not even Hurricane Katrina fully shut down, has been brought to its knees by the pandemic, but it hasn’t been snuffed out. As current regulation­s forbid bars without food permits to serve indoors, the activity has largely moved outside, aided by relatively mild winters and laws that allow public consumptio­n of alcohol.

Bars with food permits can serve indoors at 25% capacity, but can sell alcohol only with food. Mask-wearing and social distancing have been required in New Orleans since early in the pandemic.

Serving the tourists who are bound to join costumed locals on the streets may amount to little more than selling to-go drinks and food for customers to carry as they stroll.

At a news conference last month, mayor LaToya Cantrell welcomed visitors for Mardi Gras while commanding them to obey pandemic restrictio­ns, “so our residents and our folks at the forefront of hospitalit­y are safe”.

Tom Thayer, the owner of dba, a music club in the Faubourg Marigny neighbourh­ood, is considerin­g recruiting musicians to play outside his club on Frenchmen Street, a live-music corridor. His decision will depend on what happens with infection rates.

“Having done almost no business since last March, it’s very tempting to try and grab the money,” said Thayer, 54, “but not at the risk of prolonging this virus.”

Watts, 55, plans to decorate Avenue Pub to resemble a Mardi Gras float, as many residents have already done to their homes. “I just want something that will make people smile when they drive by, even if they don’t stop,” she said.

The ban on close public contact made necessary by the pandemic has rendered it all but impossible for the city’s famed drinking businesses – from its historic music clubs and neighbourh­ood beer joints to its vintage and modern temples of exacting cocktails – to be their true selves.

The 11pm closing time for much of the pandemic has been jarring, not least for veteran bartenders like Chris Hannah, an owner of Jewel of the South, a bar and restaurant in the French Quarter.

Hannah is one of the most respected cocktail makers in a city where bartenders enjoy outsize reputation­s. After 20 years of bartending, he found himself home alone for nights on end as the severity of the pandemic hit home.

Increasing­ly worried about his health, he started eating raw garlic, in an effort to bolster his immune system, and became obsessive about yoga.

He also spent a lot of time at Jewel of the South in the months

before its July reopening, tending to the pepper plants, marigolds and herbs he had planted to create “a victory garden, for when this is over”.

“I was extremely worried about getting this disease, because of my age and race,” said Hannah, who is 47 and black. “Usually at the end of the night, I always think I can have one more spirit while I’m reading. Now it’s echinacea tea.”

Stinging losses to New Orleans’ drinking life include the sale of the Saturn Bar and the permanent closings of Lost Love Lounge, Prime Example and the original Johnny White’s Bar, all idiosyncra­tic neighbourh­ood institutio­ns.

Also for sale is the Golden Lantern, a French Quarter bar known as “the home of Southern Decadence,” an annual festival put on by the gay and lesbian community.

Storied music venues like Tipitina’s, the Maple Leaf, the Howlin’ Wolf and Snug Harbor have been silenced, though some have turned to streaming live shows online.

Kermit Ruffins, owner of Kermit’s Treme Mother-in-Law Lounge, said he hopes Mardi Gras will provide bars a much-needed financial lift.

At the same time, he would like revellers to take note of how much better the city was when the bars were at full strength, and what would be lost if the permanent closings turn, as many here fear, from a trickle to a stream.

“I was a kid who grew up in bars in the Lower Ninth Ward,” said Ruffins, 56, a prominent jazz trumpet player, singer and band leader. He got his start as a musician playing in local bars as a teenager, something he continued doing several times a week until last spring.

The loss of income from performing is one of the reasons he started a GoFundMe page to keep the Mother-in-Law afloat.

“The number of musicians in New Orleans that play in bars for a living is overwhelmi­ng,” he said. “It’s really scary right now.”

Ruffins apologized publicly for violating Covid-19 restrictio­ns, like requiring masks and forbidding dancing – lapses that prompted to the city to temporaril­y close his bar in September.

He said he takes safety seriously, going so far as to close on Fridays and Saturdays, to keep from having to turn away friends from the back patio on those otherwise busy nights.

But Ruffins and others also contend that bars are being policed more closely for violations than other businesses, and that authoritie­s are stricter with local patrons than they are with tourists on Bourbon Street.

Kelder Summers, an owner of Whiskey & Sticks, a Scotch and cigar bar, worries about the damage that could cause Black neighbourh­oods.

“Bars are an integral part of wealth-building in our community,” said Summers, 54, who is also a local radio host. “Historical­ly, to have a little speakeasy was an easy way for Black people to enter into the business realm.”

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 ??  ?? CHANGE. Marching bands and people playing music and dancing will not feature this year.
CHANGE. Marching bands and people playing music and dancing will not feature this year.
 ??  ?? COMPENSATI­ON. With parades cancelled, New Orleanians are decorating their homes and businesses to resemble Mardi Gras floats.
COMPENSATI­ON. With parades cancelled, New Orleanians are decorating their homes and businesses to resemble Mardi Gras floats.
 ??  ?? OVERSTOCKE­D. Polly Watts, owner of Avenue Pub, in New Orleans. Watts hasn’t yet sold all of the alcohol she bought just before last year’s Mardi Gras.
OVERSTOCKE­D. Polly Watts, owner of Avenue Pub, in New Orleans. Watts hasn’t yet sold all of the alcohol she bought just before last year’s Mardi Gras.
 ??  ?? BAD TIMING. DJ Johnson in his New Orleans Art Bar. Johnson opened in February just before the city became a hot spot for coronaviru­s infections.
BAD TIMING. DJ Johnson in his New Orleans Art Bar. Johnson opened in February just before the city became a hot spot for coronaviru­s infections.
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 ??  ?? BRINGING THE PARADE HOME. A colourfull­y decorated house in the Bayou St John neighbourh­ood in New Orleans. NO CUSTOMERS. Jackson Square in New Orleans, Louisiana. Pictures: The New York Times and iStock
BRINGING THE PARADE HOME. A colourfull­y decorated house in the Bayou St John neighbourh­ood in New Orleans. NO CUSTOMERS. Jackson Square in New Orleans, Louisiana. Pictures: The New York Times and iStock
 ??  ?? FALSE ADVERTISIN­G? A Bourbon Street sign in New Orleans French Quarter.
FALSE ADVERTISIN­G? A Bourbon Street sign in New Orleans French Quarter.
 ??  ?? IN THE RED. Andrew Ledford works at Snake and Jake’s Christmas Club Lounge, a renowned late-night bar, in New Orleans.
IN THE RED. Andrew Ledford works at Snake and Jake’s Christmas Club Lounge, a renowned late-night bar, in New Orleans.
 ??  ?? DRINKING ALONE. Chris Hannah pours a drink at Jewel of the South, the bar in the French Quarter where he is an owner.
DRINKING ALONE. Chris Hannah pours a drink at Jewel of the South, the bar in the French Quarter where he is an owner.
 ??  ?? SURREAL. A quiet Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Pandemic restrictio­ns, which include 11pm bar closings, make for surreally quiet nights on Bourbon Street.
SURREAL. A quiet Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Pandemic restrictio­ns, which include 11pm bar closings, make for surreally quiet nights on Bourbon Street.
 ??  ?? NOTHING TO CROW ABOUT. Kermit Ruffins, a prominent local musician, outside his bar, Kermit’s Treme Mother-in-Law Lounge, in New Orleans.
NOTHING TO CROW ABOUT. Kermit Ruffins, a prominent local musician, outside his bar, Kermit’s Treme Mother-in-Law Lounge, in New Orleans.
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