Daily News (Los Angeles)

Thousands cheer city's 39th Pride Parade

- By Christina Merino cmerino@scng.com

Thousands of people strode jubilantly down Ocean Boulevard on Sunday morning, and thousands more lined up to cheer them, carrying rainbow flags or clad in multihued attire, as Long Beach celebrated its 39th annual Pride Parade after a twoyear hiatus amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Pride Parade and its accompanyi­ng festival, which began Friday with a teen event and continued through Saturday with music, a rainbow roller rink, community walls where guests could share their stories and much more, has long been among the largest Pride celebratio­ns in the region. The theme this year was “Many Voices, One Spirit.”

“As a gay man, I feel like it's important to show my pride,” said Rudy Crable, 32, of Santa Fe Springs. “I feel like there is going to be a lot of energy down here, especially since it's been two years since we've been able to have a parade.”

The parade, the city's second-largest event — trailing only the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach — was expected to draw as many as 80,000 people. And the streets were packed as the participan­ts rolled or walked through the community.

The procession launched at Ocean Boulevard and Lindero Avenue, then turned onto Alamitos Avenue. Jewels Long Beach and Tonya Martin provided the official commentary for the event, introducin­g each float for the thousands lining the city's streets. Joining the commentary were Mallery Jenna Robinson, Roxy Del Valle and Cory Allen.

The event has deep roots. The inaugural Pride Month in the U.S. was held in June 1970 to mark the one-year anniversar­y of the Stonewall uprising in New York City. That seminal event in the fight for LGBTQ equality, which began at the Stonewall Inn, was largely led by drag queens, transgende­r and gender nonconform­ing people and was a response to overpolici­ng of gay spaces. It sparked a city and national gay rights movement. Every year since, June has marked the celebratio­n of LGBTQ pride.

Long Beach Pride kicked off 14 years later, in 1984. To do so, its co-founders — Bob Crow, Marilyn Barlow and Judith Doyle, the latter of whom died earlier this year — had to overcome myriad obstacles.

About 600people marched in the first

Long Beach Pride Parade, which lasted about 30 minutes, according to Q Voice News, an LGBTQ publicatio­n. Nearly 5,000 people showed up to the two-day festival along Shoreline Drive, with a few protestors shouting their disagreeme­nt.

After the first parade, religious fundamenta­lists routinely attended City Council meetings to oppose the parade and festival, and Long Beach city officials threw several bureaucrat­ic obstacles in the organizers' faces in an effort to prevent the event from happening, according to a 1985 Los Angeles Times article. But the event endured, and it grew, both in attendance and in citywide acceptance.

“A lot has happened,” said Crow, who sparked loud cheers while rolling past throngs of paradewatc­hers on Sunday. “But they [the city] eventually came around.”

Today, Pride Month is synonymous with the celebratio­n of self: the belief that all people, regardless of their sexuality or gender identity, should be able to express themselves free from the persecutio­n and violence that has plagued the LGBTQ community for decades. Throngs embraced that sentiment on Sunday.

Davina Dillard and Nia Webster, both 28-year-olds, trekked in from Los Angeles to enjoy the parade.

“We're here to show support for the community,” Dillard said. “I haven't been to a Pride parade in a while and it was time.”

“We've all been separated for so long it's nice to come back together and celebrate love and community,” said Webster.

Mayor Robert Garcia, the city's first openly gay mayor, beamed as he rolled along in the parade, joined by a collection of City Council members.

“It was great to celebrate @LongBeachP­ride in person again,” Garcia posted on Twitter. “Pride is one of the absolute best things in our city each year, and it's always amazing to see everyone come together to celebrate our

LGBTQ+ community.”

Paradegoer­s appeared to be having a blast.

“This is my first time,” said Nancy Valencia, 27, of Las Vegas, who drove three hours to attend the parade. “There's a lot of community, and it's really pretty.”

Unable to attend the parade, however, was 40time “Jeopardy” champion and grand marshal Amy Schneider, who canceled her appearance because of a family emergency.

“While I'm very disappoint­ed that I won't be there to celebrate in person, please know I'll be there in spirit, and it will be an amazing day regardless,” she said in a statement.

 ?? PHOTO BY HOWARD FRESHMAN ?? Shirley Raines, one of the grand marshals, is shown from behind as she rides in the Long Beach Pride Parade along Ocean Boulevard on Sunday.
PHOTO BY HOWARD FRESHMAN Shirley Raines, one of the grand marshals, is shown from behind as she rides in the Long Beach Pride Parade along Ocean Boulevard on Sunday.

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