Brazil: Carnival starts in Rio: parades start in the Sambodrome

Brazil
Carnival starts in Rio: parades start in the Sambodrome

Groups perform at the Rio Carnival in the Sambadrome. photo

© Philipp Znidar/dpa

The Rio Carnival is considered the largest party in the world. A total of seven million people are expected in the city. Now the hustle and bustle has begun.

Hot rhythms, thousands of costumes and loud samba sounds: In In Rio de Janeiro, the world-famous parades in the Sambodrome have begun with the promotion class samba schools. The “União do Parque Acari” school started on Friday evening (local time). During her parade in a starry night, she told the story of “Ilê Aiyê – 50 years of struggle and resistance”. Brazil’s first Afro-bloc is a symbol of black culture and resistance to discrimination against the black Brazilian population.

Seven other samba schools that qualified for the promotion class of the parade performed until the early hours of Saturday morning, taking spectators into another world with their magnificent floats. The carnival also thrilled the crowds in other Brazilian cities such as Recife, Salvador and São Paulo.

Rio’s mayor Eduardo Paes had officially rung in the colorful hustle and bustle at Sugarloaf Mountain during the day by handing over the city keys to “King Momo”, the symbolic figure of the carnival. This process was even recorded in a decree published in a special edition of the Official Gazette.

Millions in front of the television

The top twelve schools will perform on Sunday and Monday. Tens of thousands in the stands and millions watching television in Brazil and around the world usually watch parades on the oversized catwalk designed by famed Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer in 1984. This year Tribünenstrasse is celebrating its 40th anniversary.

The Rio Carnival is the largest party in the world, with the city administration expecting a total of seven million people in the city. It is estimated that the carnival will generate an economic turnover of five billion reais (about 934 million euros) – with services directly or indirectly linked to the celebrations. Hotels would operate at 85 percent occupancy during the festive season, it said. Since last weekend, the “Cariocas”, as the residents of Rio are called, and tourists have been getting in the mood for the carnival with musicians and dancers in the streets of various parts of the city. It’s currently midsummer in the southern hemisphere – the thermometer at Sugarloaf Mountain showed over 30 degrees on Friday.

“Blocos” as a parallel carnival

At the street carnival in the coming days, dozens of carnival groups – the so-called blocos – will parade through the streets of the districts to create atmosphere. The “Blocos” have always formed something of a parallel carnival to the strictly regulated parades in the Sambodrome, in which a jury awards marks like figure skating. The city administration approved 453 moves this season. “Rio de Janeiro uses Carnival to show the world the best that the city has to offer,” said Ronnie Costa, president of the Riotur tourism agency, which is responsible for organizing the carnival.

According to the city administration, this year’s carnival is the largest carnival investment in the history of the state with 62.5 million reais (around 11.6 million euros). The carnival artists spent a total of 960 hours preparing over the course of the year. Planning begins more than four months in advance “to ensure the festival is brilliant,” Costa said.

dpa

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