The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

‘Rock star for a day’: City celebrates Mardi Gras

- By Rebecca Santana

NEW ORLEANS >> From children clamoring for tossed strands of beads, to revelers dressed up as “blind referees” poking fun at the NFL, to high school bands marching down the street, people in New Orleans celebrated Fat Tuesday with flair and fun. Mardi Gras season began Jan. 6 and featured weeks of parades, fancy-dress balls, king cakes and generalize­d frivolity citywide. Fat Tuesday is the culminatio­n of Carnival. The festivitie­s kicked off in Tuesday’s predawn hours with the Northside Skull and Bone Gang in skeleton costumes waking people to celebrate the day. The fun continued throughout the day and across the city with parades, costumes and balls. “I feel like a rock star for a day,” said Van Bender, carrying a sequined replica of the Death Star from the Star Wars movies and joined by friends carrying sequined images of Darth Vader, Boba Fett and a Stormtroop­er. He said there’s a sense of joy on Fat Tuesday. “It feels like peace on Earth. Everyone’s filled with love. Everyone gets along. Everyone helps each other.” After rainy weather affected some parades Sunday, Tuesday dawned cold but sunny. People — some of whom came out before sunrise to stake a good spot along the parade route — bundled up under multiple layers. Lorenzo Bridgewate­r of Slidell, Louisiana, got out at about 4:30 a.m. “I doubled up my jeans, doubled up my socks. I’m wearing a sweater underneath this and underneath that a thermal with a shirt over it. So I’m pretty layered up,” he said. Pete Fountain’s Half-Fast Walking Group was again a crowd favorite. The clarinetis­t died in 2016, but the walking group he led for years still meets each Carnival Season at Commander’s Palace restaurant and strolls the parade route. Lance Pierce, of Leonardtow­n, Maryland, got up early, ahead of friends, to see the group. “I enjoyed watching Pete before he passed, coming down here and playing so that’s my thing. Everyone else is kind of sleeping in, taking it easy, getting their costumes ready to go. But I like to come out here and watch the guys come by,” he said. Then the Zulu Social Aid & Pleasure Club paraded, followed by the Rex Parade. Zulu’s practice of wearing black makeup during its parade drew criticism amid recent national headlines that two Virginia politician­s once wore blackface. Zulu issued a statement in February saying their parade costumes bear no resemblanc­e to those worn by “blackface” minstrel performers at the turn of the century. Rather, the group said, the costumes are designed to honor garments worn by South African Zulu warriors. Zulu’s custom-designed coconut throws are perennial favorites with fans who vie for the chance to get one. The Rex parade stopped for a toast at a home along St. Charles Avenue that has been an important stop for the Rex king along the parade route since 1907. A fire on Feb. 20 caused massive damage to the three-story, 150-year-old mansion whose occupants over the years have included four kings and a queen of Rex. Local media showed a sign that had jokingly been hung up outside the mansion, reading, “We are ready for Ash Wednesday.” This year’s Carnival season also featured numerous jabs at the NFL and its commission­er Roger Goodell, over the now-infamous “no-call” during the Jan. 20 NFC Championsh­ip game between the Los Angeles Rams and the New Orleans Saints. NFL officials acknowledg­ed flags should have been thrown.

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 ?? CHRIS GRANGER — THE ADVOCATE VIA AP ?? Rex royalty take an extended pause in front of the charred carcass of a St. Charles Avenue mansion to make a toast, carrying on a tradition that began in 1907, at a house that looms large in krewe and Mardi Gras history in New Orleans, Tuesday.
CHRIS GRANGER — THE ADVOCATE VIA AP Rex royalty take an extended pause in front of the charred carcass of a St. Charles Avenue mansion to make a toast, carrying on a tradition that began in 1907, at a house that looms large in krewe and Mardi Gras history in New Orleans, Tuesday.

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