Rio’s Carnival parades cap days of partying
Rio put on its final night of Carnival parades Monday, capping days
of extravagant processions and street festivities backing the Brazilian
city’s boast it is host to the Greatest Party on Earth.
Nearly 800,000 Brazilian and foreign tourists have swelled Rio’s
population of six million to take part in the dancing, drinking,
flirting and spectacles underway since last Friday beneath gray,
sometimes rainy, skies.
The festival effectively wraps up Tuesday, after the last of a dozen
samba schools put on their world-famous parades featuring skimpily clad
dancing queens and sumptuous floats costing millions of dollars,
although some street festivities will continue for days.
The all-night parades, held under intermittent drizzle, were in fact
a competition fought as intensely as any football game in this
soccer-mad nation.
This year, the reigning champion samba school, Unidos de Tijuca,
looked set to retain its title after wowing the crowd of 70,000 packed
into the Sambodrome parade stadium with a show early Monday paying
imaginative homage to Hollywood.
Floats recalling “Avatar,” “Jaws” and “Raiders of the Lost Ark”
roused wild cheers as a dragon from Pandora flapped its huge wings over
a mountain of blue Na’vi aliens, a mechanical shark lunged from a pool
with a boy in its mouth and an Indiana Jones dodged a big boulder.
There were also “Legend of Sleepy Hollow” ghouls whose heads appeared
to detach and drop in a nifty optical illusion.
The other schools stuck to more traditional representations of myths,
such as a near naked Lady Godiva on a horse and a Neptune accompanied by
sea worshippers. Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bundchen made an appearance
as the goddess Venus.
Many Brazilian media tipped a new victory for Unidos de Tijuca, which
last year delivered Batman on skis and a Michael Jackson impersonator
doing dance moves on a float inhabited by aliens.
However, among the last schools to parade in the early hours of
Tuesday was Grande Rio, which lost almost its entire parades props and
floats in a warehouse fire a month ago.
The group, which has since stitched together a hasty replacement
wardrobe, was certain to get sympathy cheers after vowing it would put
on a show regardless.
Visitors watching the parades have been impressed. Among the VIPs was
Canadian actress Pamela Anderson.
“I love it. I think about this all the time. It’s nice to see it
live,” she told AFP from one of the hospitality boxes.
Joey Whineray, a 27-year-old tourist from Britain who paid $160 for
her seat said: “It’s manic — completely off the wall. It’s buzzing.”
Some, like Nina, a 37-year-old Norwegian, paid for a costume to take
part in the parades.
“It’s totally incredible. Everything is so well organized, I can’t
believe it. I went to a rehearsal last week and it looked chaotic. But
now everybody knows where to go,” she said. AFP
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