Leeds Pride 2014: Parade Manager report
The night before Pride, I attended Infernal where [TQA DJ and designer] Andy DJed, and Andromada [Liberte Egalite Cabaret star] and I danced like crazy. We were therefore relatively shitfaced when we started Sunday.
Surprisingly, none of the registered people turned up in advance, including a group who messaged me that very morning(!). Maybe they did at the last minute but sadly we did not know who they were. Therefore, we hired on the spot and along the Parade's march, which is how we assembled the group. Now for the detailed story.
Andromada and I had breakfast at Browns, and then went to Millennium square with the amp and banner. Being just the two of us, we just planted ourselves with the banner deployed in front of the Leeds City Museum. Not seeing anyone arrived, we started flyering and hiring people. We were quite a curiosity. Lots of people stopping, chatting, taking photos. A trans woman asked to have her photo taken while holding the banner. Compared to London, our banner and logo really stood out on the backdrop of the nice and gentle rainbow atmosphere of the Leeds Pride.
We started the parade with maybe twenty people, mainly: a small trans group of all ages with trans flags, a group of 18's who asked us whether they could carry the banner and hand flyers over (couldn't believe our luck!), and Pyromancer (the organiser of Infernal) with friends. The younglings did not believe their ears when we started playing Amanda Palmer; both they and I jumped and danced with a wide grin on our faces meaning: 'oh my god, is this really happening?'. Also, before the start of the parade, Andromada danced with a 3 year old kid from the group behind us, and who naturally went to her. This was awesome.
During the parade, we met the Leeds Goth / SOPHIE group who were watching the parade from the side, and whom Andromada invited in. After that, lots of people joined us on the path of the march. And this is where the magic that we wanted to see happening did happen. Our presence created lots of passion. As Andromada wrote: So many pictures taken, so many cheers, so many people coming up and asking for leaflets and saying where we do meet ups, such an in your face desire for non pop/disco LGBT+ music space. Also, we called to alt people of all churches: goths, metal, emo, punk, vampires, trans*. The awesome comment of the guy of the Yorkshire Bears on our Facebook page says it all. And so nearly 50 of us ended up marching behind the Queer Alternative banner.
The end of the parade was very different from London, because we arrived in the middle of a wide party, rather than the no man's land that is Whitehall. So the tendency was for people to go their own way to meetup with friends. So in the end we only went for drinks with a small part of the group. Again, nobody who registered seemed to be there, so I don't even know whether they came at all. It was therefore very much Pyromancer and friends, the SOPHIE group, a few individuals, Andromada and me. We went away from the buzz to Wharf Chambers, where we all got to know each other and had a small group photo (taken by the SOPHIE people).
Looking back, the biggest emotions for me were the disappointment at not seeing pre-registered people, and the joy at seeing how much we were able to gather people. What was clear also was that our brand has an incredibly high power of attraction and really stands out. My intuition tells me that the Leeds Pride has very much been taken over by institutional groups, and people want it to be just about people, without politics, and about being proud on that day. In this respect, I think we fulfil a need. I think, also that being 'just' a banner and an amp is the right approach; we are about the untellable that happens between gender, being alternative, and alternative musics. The only way of telling it is to perform it, walk, smile, stand tall, chant, dance, be silly. We are a unique space for that. I think Andromada and I communicated it perfectly (in all modesty, haha) since we are both very silly and very involved. And people communicated it back to us. Wonderful.
Next: talk to people and try to organise a TQA evening here sometime.
- The four younglings who carried the banner and distributed flyers. They were awesome. Super efficient and creative flyerers as well as recruiters on the road of the march. Unfortunately, they couldn't join us at the drink because one of them was just under 18, but next year for sure. They were also an awesome flyering team; they saw us in London to, and would be great flyerers there. Unfortunately, they left before I could take their details. We'll have to find them somehow. A big thank you also to other banner holders who volunteered later on!
- Jack Pyromancer the organiser of Infernal who joined us with friends. Honestly, it is thanks to him that we looked a tiny bit goth! Thank you also to Jordan Reyne, who had performed at the Library the night before, for joining us.
- The Leeds Goth / S.O.P.H.I.E. group, organised by the managers of the Soho's Leeds shop who hadn't registered to the Parade officially and were just watching it on the side, and whom we invited when we passed by. Note that one of their projects is to create a SOPHIE point of presence at their shop for alternative people victim of abuse for their alternative looks or persona.
- Nico, Leeds Parade Manager / London Float Manager