Houston Chronicle

Pandemic makes for muted Mardi Gras

- By Kevin Mcgill

NEW ORLEANS — Music blared from the courtyard of a French Quarter restaurant on Mardi Gras morning but nobody was there to hear it until Tom Gibson and Sheila Wheeler of Philadelph­ia walked out of their hotel’s nearly empty lobby.

“We were expecting a little bit lower key than the normal Mardi Gras,” Wheeler said. But empty Bourbon Street was a shock.

Coronaviru­s-related restrictio­ns in New Orleans included canceled parades, closed bars and a near shutdown of rowdy Bourbon Street. That, and unusually frigid weather, prevented what New Orleans usually craves at the end of Mardi Gras season: streets and businesses jam-packed with revelers.

To be sure, some hardy lovers of the season braved the cold. Knots of people, some in costume and some carrying cups of hot coffee (sales of alcohol to go were prohibited) wandered the French Quarter.

On St. Charles Avenue, houses decked out as stationary “house floats” with giant mythical figures, circus animals or dinosaurs, drew handfuls of people snapping photograph­s.

WDSU-TV captured a group of Mardi Gras Indians — African American organizati­ons that for generation­s marched in brilliantl­y hued hand-beaded and feathered costumes — on a brief march through one neighborho­od.

And satire survived. A group of masked revelers in one neighborho­od, poking fun at the tight restrictio­ns, pulled around a giant voodoo doll with Mayor LaToya Cantrell’s face and dubbed her “Queen Destroya,” in images captured by The Times-Picayune’ The New Orleans Advocate.

But, by any measure, it was a vastly diminished Mardi Gras.

Bourbon Street was eerily quiet in contrast to past years. Police barricades sat at the end of each block and officers were told to only allow access for residents, people who work in local businesses or hotel guests. The St. Charles Avenue median, usually swarming with parade lovers, was empty but for the occasional jogger or streetcar.

A group founded by the late jazz clarinet player Pete Fountain, the Half Fast Walking Club, gathered outside Commander’s Palace restaurant as usual, but they did not march. Souvenir shops in the French Quarter were largely empty and staffers at some restaurant­s eagerly motioned for passersby to come in.

Gibson had been to Mardi Gras before, and remembered what it was like. “This whole street — you’d hardly be able to move,“he said.

To the east, Mobile, Alabama, which boasts the nation’s oldest Mardi Gras celebratio­ns, had also canceled parades. The city was not locked down as tightly as New Orleans. Bars were allowed to open. But some downtown streets were shut down to allow for additional outdoor seating and more space for social distancing. Frigid temperatur­es that brought morning snow flurries helped keep down large crowds through early afternoon.

There was no snow in New Orleans but at 10 a.m., the temperatur­e was 27 degrees Fahrenheit (-3 Celsius), with the wind chill making it feel like 19 (-7.2), National Weather Service lead meteorolog­ist Phil Grigsby said.

Dave Lanser, trying to get into the spirit of the season, donned a luminescen­t green cape and a black mask with a sharp curved beak nose before heading to the quarter with a few friends.

“I’m going for the ‘plague doctor’ look,” he said.

“It’s hard to wrap my head around it,” the New Orleans lawyer said as he looked up and down a nearly empty Bourbon Street.

 ?? Jon Cherry / Getty Images ?? New Orleans Police officers stand on an empty Bourbon Street during Mardi Gras on Tuesday in New Orleans. Traditiona­l Mardi Gras celebratio­ns have been disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Jon Cherry / Getty Images New Orleans Police officers stand on an empty Bourbon Street during Mardi Gras on Tuesday in New Orleans. Traditiona­l Mardi Gras celebratio­ns have been disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
 ?? Bryan Tarnowski / Bloomberg ?? People dressed for Mardi Gras stand on a balcony near a sign reading "How The Covid Stole Carnival."
Bryan Tarnowski / Bloomberg People dressed for Mardi Gras stand on a balcony near a sign reading "How The Covid Stole Carnival."

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