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NYC Pride Rally 2009

by Robert Doyle

EDGE Media Network Contributor

Sunday June 21, 2009

So much talent and passion: that's what marks the NYC Pride Rally, the official kick-off to NYC Pride Week. Even in the middle of a drizzly Manhattan Saturday afternoon, what becomes increasingly remarkable about the cavalcade of talent, speakers, and performers parading across the stage at Bryant Park is how incredibly gifted we are as a community.

Forty years ago, in 1969, the Rally was born one month after the Stonewall riots when more than 500 people gathered together in Washington Square Park in the name of "Gay Power." And as this year's speakers took the microphone and spoke in the name of love and equality, it was apparent that a groundswell of activism is upon us again. Oscar-winning screenwriter (for MILK), Dustin Lance Black, spoke about his own difficulties in growing up gay in a Mormon family and addressed the history of hatred and intolerance that has been foisted upon the LGBT community in the name of religion. Impassioned and eloquent, Black's speech was a call to arms for all LGBT people to join with our straight allies to come together as one, in the tradition of all great civil rights struggles.

Laugh in their faces.

Equally forceful were the words of lifelong activist and NAMES Quilt founder Cleve Jones who addressed a cheering audience and made them all promise to join him in October for the March on the Mall in Washington.

And then there was Marga- That would be Ms. Marga Gomez, the brilliant Latina lesbian comic who was the afternoon's co-emcee (with Michael Serrato of The Big Gay Sketch Show) and who persisted in utilizing her sly, incisive humor to remind us that the only way to survive in a world that wishes to smite us for whom we love is to laugh-in its face.

Bound together by love.

Love and laughter, those were the prevailing messages of the afternoon, with a heartfelt rendition of Simon and Garfunkel's "Bridge Over Troubled Water" sung by the charismatic and harmonic duo, Jason & deMarco, and an incendiary and sensitive set by the stunning hip-hop artist, Melange Lavonne. And though the rain commenced anew, by the afternoon's end, there was little question that the Rally had once again bound us together in the name of love and the pursuit of equality.

RELATED LINK
NYC Pride Rally 2009 Photo-Album

Long-term New Yorkers, Mark and Robert have also lived in San Francisco, Boston, Provincetown, D.C., Miami Beach and the south of France. The recipient of fellowships at MacDowell, Yaddo, and Blue Mountain Center, Mark is a PhD in American history and literature, as well as the author of the novels Wolfchild and My Hawaiian Penthouse. Robert is the producer of the documentary We Are All Children of God. Their work has appeared in numerous publications, as well as at : www.mrny.com.