Chichester Observer

Chichester Pride 2024 promises seven hours of fun and frolics

- Phil.hewitt@nationalwo­rld.com

Chichester Pride is promising seven hours of fun and frolics as it returns to the city for its third edition. It will all be happening on the leafy green front lawn at Chichester College between 12 and 7pm on Saturday, May 25.

Stuart Burrows is one of the team of volunteers looking forward to delivering a special and inclusive day for the LGBT+ community and all their family and friends – and all their straight allies as well. The promise is “amazing activities, exhilarati­ng performanc­e sand inspiring speakers plus a lively atmosphere that radiates positivity.”

In a short time, the event has become an establishe­d part of the chi chester calendar, stuart is delighted to say – all part of a happy network.

“We have got a really nice relationsh­ip with the cathedral. We did our first ever Pride Evensong last year. We are also doing our third take-over at pa ll ant house gallery as part of the Festival of chi chester this summer,andiwoulds tress just how supportive the city and district councils have been towards us. It has been great. I only moved down to Chichester in March 2021. I've been here three years and I had some concerns moving out of London into a city which could be seen as a rather conservati­ve city that might not embrace a gay couple but I was completely wrong. It has been quite the opposite!”

And that's the spirit that Chichester Pride taps into. The first Pride in the city was a digital Pride during the pandemic: “And then the first official Pride was held in May 2022 and i think from that first pride we learned a lot of lessons. We didn't really have any experience of doing something like that before but we sold 1,200 tickets for the first event and we could have sold two or three hundred more. In 2023 we had more tickets and last year we sold 1,600 tickets. Our target was 2,000 and that's our target for this year as well.

“I think Pride is important in every town and city and village throughout the UK and throughout the whole world. We are there to celebrate the history of the LGBT plus community but we are also there to be visible and to celebrate that community together. It is about making people in areas where there might not be a lot of support feel that they are actually supported. The visibility is important in that respect, but it’s also about being a safe space where people can express themselves freely.

“Obviously everybody dream sofa utopia where everybody is free in terms of respect for their sexuality and their diversity and their freedom of expression but the fact is that there is still homophobia in the UK. And realistica­lly we're never going to totally eradicate homophobia and prejudice, and that's why Prides are so important. In the UK, my lived experience is that we have become a much more positive place over the years. If I compare my experience­s as a teenager and in my 20s when there were no gay role models on TV and when there was AIDS, I know there was a lot of fear and prejudice. and you think of now and you realise that things have come on a lot. But you can't really ever forget that prejudice exists, and again that's where Pride is important.”

Tickets www.chichester­pride.co.uk. Potential volunteers should also get in touch.

 ?? ?? Stuart Burrows (right) with husband Jonny on stage at Chichester Pride 2023. Credit Kirsty Jayne Russell
Stuart Burrows (right) with husband Jonny on stage at Chichester Pride 2023. Credit Kirsty Jayne Russell

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