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Report
from the Golden Triangle
Rainbows
barred from Mardi Gras parade
Busted
Flat in Port Arthur
by
Ann Walton Sieber
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"Dont
compromise yourself. You are all youve got."
former Port Arthur resident Janis Joplin
The
Beaumont/Port Arthur gay community has been making
strides in small-town gay visibilitymost
recently, the Lamar University Gay and Lesbian
Association (LUGLA) decided to make their most
public statement yet by riding on their own float
in the February 25 Port Arthur Mardi Gras parade.
The activists were ready to be out there and proud,
and the crowd seemed ready for them ... but parade
officials gave the gay group a difficult time,
that so far has only galvanized this growing community.
It
started when Angie Alvarado sent in an application
for a LUGLA float to the Mardi Gras of Southeast
Texas association, and she was told it would have
to be put to special scrutiny. The LUGLA group
had already made the decision not to spell out
their acronym. "We were afraid that people
werent ready for us," Angie said. "So
we left out the gay and lesbian."
But in a meeting with MGST president Floyd Marceaux,
he told LUGLA members that in order to ride in
the parade, they also had to take the rainbow
off the LUGLA banner. Marceaux told the (Lamar)
University Press that he was concerned that
the crowd along the parade route would react negatively.
"The
other concern is that, at Mardi Gras of Southeast
Texas, we really and truly strive to be a family
affair, and we didnt find that their making
a public statement as to what they stood for was
consistent with that," he told the school
newspaper.
In
the same article, the mayor of Port Arthur, Oscar
Ortiz, echoed this ridiculous sentiment:
"I
have to agree with Floyd, because we said from
the very beginning that the Mardi Gras parade
was strictly a family function, and when you think
of family, of course, you think of man, a woman
and her children."
Such
"family"-oriented prejudice rings especially
false to Angie, whose children have become a familiar
sight at LUGLA and PFLAG meetings. "Just
remember, Scott, she said that she jokes
with her son, You have no family.
What gets me is Ortiz, hes Hispanic,"
she continues. "Youd think hed
know about discrimination."
The
day of the parade, the LUGLA crew arrived in all
their resplendent finery, their float decorated
to the hiltthe only place they didnt
have rainbows was in the logo, as stipulated.
"We wanted to be smart asses, so we put rainbows
everywhere else," says Caleb Hutchins, who
is president of Beaumont PFLAG and secretary of
LUGLA, as well as working as a counselor at the
Triangle AIDS Network, "including me, who
was wearing a rainbow flag."
The
10 or so in the LUGLA float waited around with
all the other parade entrants, but just before
it was their turn to push out, they were pulled
out of line and told they had to take all the
rainbows down because they were in violation of
the agreement whereby they were permitted to ride
in the parade. Oh, and also, no "cross-dressers"
they were told by the parade officials, who meant
the two drag queens who had come from the Copa,
a local gay bar. The two float riders who were
transgendered were okay.
After
that showdown, the actual parade went much better
than expected, with the crowd cheering on LUGLAs
float and guys shouting out, "Im straight,
but throw me beads!" As the drag queens made
their way through the crowd, they were asked by
onlookers why they werent allowed to participate,
and generally shown sympathy and support.
"To
be honest," said Angie, " we were shocked
that the public received us so well. "Even
if it is our last parade, it was worth it....
At first I was so frustrated and down. But then
several people came up to me and said You
made it possible.
"My
girlfriends not outher familys
big in Jehovahs Witnessesand she came
up and said, Im so proud of you. You
did something that others cant do. They
want to but they cant. That made it
perfect."
The
Beaumont/Port Arthur gay scene is growing, but
still largely a behind-closed-doors situation,
according to Angie and Caleb. Although Beaumont
is larger in population, Port Arthur has a bigger
gay community, with quite a few gay-owned businesses,
although few feel secure enough to be outespecially
since Floyd Marceaux is also president of the
Golden Triangle Merchants Association.
"Port
Arthur is still kind of a little podunk town,"
Caleb said, whos spent all his life here.
"Its more than tolerant, but less than
accepting."
"We
lose a lot of good people because they just cant
deal with the backdoor life," Angie says.
"You can go to the clubs at night, but in
the day you have to put on a different suit and
pretend to be somebody else."
The
principle gay organizations are LUGLA, PFLAG,
and the gay Church of Kindred Spirits, which meets
at the Unitarian Church. Beaumont has three gay
bars, the Copa, the Crocker Street Station, and
Dions. There are two HIV-testing and -treatment
centers. Lamar University is somewhat accepting,
especially in the more gay-friendly departments,
such as theater and nursing.
Angie,
Caleb, and the other activists in the area are
still trying to figure out what to do next about
the Mardi Gras controversy. They consulted lawyer
Mitchell Katine, but said he didnt think
their chances were good for a suit against the
parade commission. What has happened is that the
controversy has helped bring the gay community
together with greater urgency. The three gay organizations
are starting to meet under the umbrella of the
Gay Alliance of Southeast Texas, with the goal
of making gay life more visible.
"We
put ourselves in the closet," Angie said,
"because were so afraid of making waves.
But if we get together, we can do something about
it. We dont need to take this anymore! Thats
our new slogan."
Although
small in numbers, the Golden Triangle activists
have started putting themselves out there. They
had three representatives at the Millennium March
on Washington last April, they came to Empower
in Houston last fall, and several marched in the
Austin lobby day at the end of March. You can
show your support for our brave comrades in Beaumont/Port
Arthur, because theyre going to be bringing
their censored float to Houston to participate
for the first time in the June Pride paradeand
the more rainbows, the better.
If
you have any comments about this article, please
email them to letters@outsmartmagazine.com.
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