MSNBC
San Francisco, U.S. Fete Gay
Pride
Parades also outline equal rights
struggles.
Actor Sir Ian McKellen waves to the crowd Sunday as
he
participates in the 32nd annual San Francisco Gay
Pride
Parade in San Francisco.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO, July 1 — Clad in
a long white coat and waving the British flag, actor Sir Ian McKellen leaped
from a silver convertible and raced to hug cheering fans during the city’s
annual gay pride parade.
‘We’re very fortunate to live here,
and we know it. Little by little the changes are happening and when
(my son is) an adult, it’s going to be
nothing.’
— JEAN
FICHTENKORT
Bay Area
lesbian mother
MCKELLEN, WHO starred in “The Lord of the Rings: The
Fellowship of the Ring” and “Gods and Monsters,” served as one of the celebrity
grand marshals in his first San Francisco parade.
“For generations the people in San Francisco have set standards for the
rest of the world to catch up to,” said McKellen, who decided to come out in
1988 while performing Shakespeare here.
Thousands
of rainbows appeared under the blue sky Sunday as an estimated half million
people lined the streets to celebrate diversity and progress.
Marchers and onlookers were just as colorful as the flags they
waved — gay, straight, young and old. Some wore leather, feathers or held
balloons while others sported little more than a smile.
The Dykes on Bikes, a rumbling motorcade of several hundred women on
motorcycles, kicked off the event followed by their quieter, male counterparts
pedaling bicycles as part of the Mikes on Bikes.
SERIOUS SIDE
But mixed in with the fun, the parade also
had a serious side outlining battles such as AIDS, domestic partner benefits and
hate crimes that still have a long way to go in the gay community’s struggle to
obtain equal rights.
Jean Fichtenkort, a lesbian
from Berkeley, was there with her 16-month-old adopted son, Michael Heffner. She
and her partner of 14 years have attended many parades, and she’s thrilled they
keep getting bigger.
“We’re very fortunate to live
here, and we know it,” she said. “Little by little the changes are happening,
and when he’s an adult, it’s going to be nothing.”
Jerry Hatch, a veteran of the Korean War,
carries an American
flag during the 33rd annual Gay Pride Parade in
Chicago.
Alice Hoglan marched in support of her son, Mark Bingham,
who was believed to have helped thwart the terrorists on Sept. 11 aboard Flight
93, which crashed in Pennsylvania. A day earlier, Bingham’s rugby team won the
Bingham Cup, an international gay tournament held in his honor.
ACROSS THE NATION
San Francisco wasn’t the only city that
closed off the streets to party — there were celebrations across the nation,
including New York, Chicago, Atlanta, Seattle and Minneapolis.
Hundreds of thousands turned out for Chicago’s
33rd annual parade, which marks the end of Gay and Lesbian Pride Month
designated by Mayor Richard Daley.
In New York,
Mayor Michael Bloomberg was applauded as he marched near the front of the
parade.
“That’s what makes New York so great, that
everyone can live here and live here together, can build a career, can express
themselves and can celebrate the greatness that is New York,” he said.
Tens of thousands of spectators lined the Fifth Avenue
parade route to cheer the marchers.
Some 50
same-sex couples kicked off the parade with a mass wedding at Fifth Avenue and
Central Park South. The ceremony performed by clergy of several faiths was not
legally binding but served as a rallying point for activists who would like to
see gay couples accorded the same rights as heterosexual couples.
© 2002 Associated Press. All rights
reserved.
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