Times Herald-Record

Carnival season begins in New Orleans

Annual Mardi Gras provides much-needed economic jolt to city

- Kevin McGill

NEW ORLEANS – The countdown to Mardi Gras began Saturday in New Orleans as Carnival season kicked off with dozens of costumed revelers and a brass band set to crowd onto a streetcar for a nighttime ride down historic St. Charles Avenue.

Meanwhile, a walking club in the French Quarter marched in its annual procession honoring Joan of Arc.

What’s it all about

While it’s a secular celebratio­n, Carnival in New Orleans – and around the world – is strongly linked to Christian and Roman Catholic traditions. The season begins on Jan. 6, the 12th day after Christmas, and continues until Mardi Gras, known as Fat Tuesday, which is the final day of feasting, drinking and revelry before Ash Wednesday and the fasting associated with Lent.

New Orleans has the largest and best-known Carnival celebratio­ns in the U.S., with street parties, fancy balls and parades from simple neighborho­odbased walking clubs to elaborate hightech extravagan­zas with massive floats laden with flashing lights and giant animated figures.

Other Louisiana and Gulf Coast communitie­s also celebrate. Mobile, Alabama, lays claim to the nation’s oldest Mardi Gras observance­s.

The party begins

Saturday’s events included the annual streetcar ride by the Phunny Phorty

Phellows, a group of masked and costumed men and women aboard a New Orleans streetcar that rumbles out of the cavernous public transit barn in the Carrollton neighborho­od before rolling onto St. Charles Avenue.

Like much of New Orleans Carnival, it’s a tradition that has evolved. The current Phellows first assembled in 1981, a rebirth of a satirical Carnival krewe that took to the streets in 1878 and ceased parading in 1898, according to history provided by the group.

In the French Quarter, the yearly parade by the Krewe de Jeanne d’ Arc that marks the birthday of the French hero marches on a route that carries them past a golden statue of their namesake. This year’s guests included a delegation from Orléans, France.

While the parade is cast as a tribute to Joan of Arc, participan­ts end the parade with a ceremony marking the end of the Christmas season and the arrival of Carnival, krewe captain Antoinette Alteriis said.

A post-COVID jolt for tourism

Locals embrace the traditions of Mardi Gras but the event also is a muchwelcom­e generator of commerce in a city famous for its bars, restaurant­s and a tourism-dependent economy. That economy took a big hit when parades and other festivitie­s were largely shut down in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Mark Romig of tourism agency New Orleans & Co. said there has been a strong rebound.

“It’s been a very dramatic return,” Romig said. “We saw it steadily increase beginning in ’22. This past year, ’23, was

amazing, we felt very good about it.”

Abbreviate­d season

Romig said he is optimistic Carnival tourism numbers will be even better this year, even though the season is relatively brief.

New Orleans always starts celebratin­g on Jan. 6 but the end-date each season varies, depending on the variable dates of Easter and Lent. This year, it’s a relatively short season, culminatin­g on Feb. 13.

Saturday’s parades in New Orleans were a prelude to other small parades set for January and the series of larger, major parades that roll over a 12-day period beginning this year on Feb. 2.

Sweet sign of the times

When the Joan of Arc parade ends, participan­ts mark the coming of Carnival with a ceremony including king cake, according to Alteriis. The rings of pastry adorned with purple, green and gold sugar or icing are a signature delicacy of the season.

Local grocery stores, bakeries and restaurant­s annually do brisk business in king cake sales, some offering them up days before the arrival of Carnival, despite a venerable if loosely followed custom holding that it isn’t proper to snack on king cake before Jan. 6.

Crime concerns

In 2022, some parade routes were shortened due to a depleted police force and crime concerns. Routes were restored in 2023 as the city got help with crowd control from neighborin­g police jurisdicti­ons, as well as the usual contingent of Louisiana State Police that comes in each year to beef up the law enforcemen­t presence.

 ?? PHOTOS BY GERALD HERBERT/AP FILE ?? Mardi Gras Float riders toss trinkets as the Krewe of Orpheus rolls through New Orleans on Feb. 12, 2018.
PHOTOS BY GERALD HERBERT/AP FILE Mardi Gras Float riders toss trinkets as the Krewe of Orpheus rolls through New Orleans on Feb. 12, 2018.

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