Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Rio Carnival’s overlooked, all-important rite: The count

- By David Biller

Rio de Janeiro couldn’t resume regular life after the Carnival festivitie­s came to a close until “the count” of scores from the parade competitio­n was complete and a victor proclaimed.

The Carnival parade is billed as the world’s biggest party, yet scarcely anyone outside Brazil realizes the flashy floats and extravagan­t dancers are more than spectacle. It has complex, constantly changing regulation­s and dozens of judges. In recent years, the samba school league has adopted changes to limit subjectivi­ty, but skepticism about scoring remains — not least because of its checkered past.

And the hopes of entire working-class communitie­s ride on the outcome. On Wednesday, they flocked to their respective schools to watch the televised results. A win affirms their diligent work was executed to perfection, bestowing honor and prestige.

“It’s the pleasure of doing the parade correctly and the satisfacti­on of taking the title home,” Maria da Conceição da Silva, 59, said Monday night before parading. She swears she’ll keep coming back “until God takes me, to parade up there.”

The esoteric regulation­s dictate schools be scored on nine categories — among them costumes, drumming, song, harmony, plot and evolution — that together quantify the months of design, stitching, sculpting, welding and rehearsal that go into production. Judges with proven knowledge in each category undergo training, then are distribute­d along the 700-meter (2,300-foot) parade route to watch as each school’s several thousand paraders pass.

Rio’s samba schools began competing in the 1930s, and were corralled into the Sambadrome parade grounds in the mid1980s. Their 70-minute displays can cost 10 million reais (almost $2 million), and the school that scores lowest is relegated to the lower league. Returning to the elite echelon can take years.

The top six finishers get percentage­s of box office revenue. But only the champion school goes down in history, and no one remembers the runner-up, said Jorge Perlingeir­o, the president of

the top league.

For over three decades, Perlingeir­o has been the voice of Carnival, announcing judges’ scores one by one. Each bellow of “10!” — the top score — with his heavy Rio accent launched the schools’ fanatics into ecstasy Wednesday. Some lower scores elicited frustrated groans. More than half of Rio’s television­s were tuned in, according to Ibope, a company that monitors ratings.

The ceremony lasted about 90 minutes, with no less than 432 scores read aloud for 12 schools. The winning school, Imperatriz Leopoldine­nse, achieved 269.8 — twotenths of a point shy of perfect. The title ends the school’s 22-year drought and cements its Carnival director’s star reputation. At the Sambadrome, the school’s drum leader crumpled and cried when the win was announced while a packed crowd at the school jumped for joy.

The large number of judges — 36 — is necessary to assess performanc­e throughout the parade grounds and prevents a single bad score from torpedoing a school, according to Fábio Fabato, who writes and researches Carnival and Brazilian popular culture. It also helps curb corruption, he said, because it’s harder to buy off many judges.

In 1974, samba school Mocidade lost the title because one costume judge handed down an inexplicab­ly low score of 4, Fabato said. In 1986, Brazilian soccer legend Socrátes was selected to judge drums, but had zero expertise, so he rated schools based solely on crowd reaction. Samba

schools were furious. One school’s president said Socrátes was too drunk to judge and demanded that his scores be annulled.

“He (Socrátes) skipped down the stairs to the parade ground, stripped off his top and started dancing along in a pair of tight white shorts. Officials objected and he was reluctantl­y coaxed back to the judging station,” according to his biography, “Doctor Socrates.”

The count two years later sparked a vicious fight between rival schools and a 16-year-old girl was shot in the stomach, according to an O Globo newspaper report at the time.

David Butter, a Brazilian journalist who wrote a book on Carnival, remembers as a child watching the count with his father, who enjoyed it even more than the parade.

“We would get the newspaper with the empty scorecard to fill as the count went forward. We were all excited about the scores, the disagreeme­nts,” Butter said. “The count became a spectacle in itself, just like an opera. It is an exclusivel­y Brazilian entertainm­ent product.”

Other competitio­ns have struggled with subjective scoring. Olympic figure skating had been rated from 1 to 6 until a judging scandal at the games in Salt Lake City — known as “Skate Gate” — prompted adoption of an elaborate system involving a technical panel. More recently, an investigat­ion found multiple boxing matches were fixed at the 2016 Olympic games in Rio.

That same year, Rio police probed alleged fraud in Carnival judging. Greater

technical rigor and profession­alism were meant to head off disputes and provide transparen­cy. Judges must justify any less-thanperfec­t score with a handwritte­n explanatio­n.

One judge evaluating costumes last year docked one-tenth of a point from a school because “a considerab­le quantity of paraders’ hats were slipping or fallen,” and she noted another school had promised to deliver “a diversity of green tones,” though only lime green prevailed. A harmony judge noted “occasional loss of internal homogeneit­y” and that “the neglect or weakening of some voices emptied the song of its sonic mass.”

On a scorecard last year, one judge noted how hard it has become to find errors when so few are committed, so just one-tenth of a point can clinch a victory. This year’s runner-up finished one-tenth behind.

If a gap appears between sections, the school can lose points. In this year’s parade, the lighthouse atop Unidos da Tijuca’s float was knocked severely askew, which cost them.

Starting last year, judges’ justificat­ions are posted online within 48 hours. And cameras inside judges’ booths record what they can see, so schools can review footage and compare to the judges’ notes for inconsiste­ncies. If any are found, schools can petition for a judge’s removal.

In interviews with two dozen paraders on Monday night, about half said they think judges’ determinat­ions still reflect some undue influence. But most acknowledg­ed scoring has improved with each passing year.

 ?? BRUNA PRADO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Members of Imperatriz Leopoldine­nse samba school celebrate after receiving the top trophy for the best samba school parade during Carnival celebratio­ns at the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2023.
BRUNA PRADO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of Imperatriz Leopoldine­nse samba school celebrate after receiving the top trophy for the best samba school parade during Carnival celebratio­ns at the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2023.

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