Manchester Pride

Manchester Pride
Crowds watch the Manchester Pride celebrations in 2008

Manchester Pride is the current name of the annual Gay Pride festival held in the city of Manchester in the North West of England in the United Kingdom.

It is one of the longest running in the country and attracts thousands of visitors to the city's Gay Village, which centres around Canal Street, each year. The current Ten Day Festival includes a "Pride Fringe" with a series of arts, music and cultural events all over the city as well as community events including poetry readings, quizzes and film showings, culminating in "The Big Weekend", a 72 hour party during the August bank holiday weekend in Canal Street and the surrounding area, with a Pride march through the streets of Manchester.

Contents

History

Currently there is some confusion over the date of the first LGBT August Bank Holiday fundraiser. In 2011 a colour photograph was published on the Manchester Pride website. This shows a jumble sale on Canal Street and Solway House on Aytoun Street can be seen in the background.

Research done by the Facebook group Facts About Manchester Pride found that this building no longer existed by August 1990; it had been demolished to make way for the tram system and court extension. So the colour photo seems to show an event from a date earlier than the middle of that year. Ironically this colour photo was published by Manchester Pride as part of its supposed 21st birthday.

So all we can say for definite at present is that, at some time in the second half of the 1980's, the event began as a jumble sale outside the Rembrandt Hotel.

It was not a Pride event in those days. This is confirmed by a booklet that the Village Charity published for its annual general meeting in 1994, which states: "many volunteers of the charity get upset when the press call our weekend the 'Northern Pride'. It's not and never has been." The purpose was solely to raise money for HIV and AIDS causes and in particular for the ward at Monsall Hospital where people received treatment.

In 1991 the event was expanded to include a full programme of activities from Friday to Monday and it was christened "the Carnival of Fun Weekend". The jumble sale moved into Sackville Park. On the Monday night there was a substantial fireworks display that was funded by the North West Development Agency and it was announced that good-luck telegrams had been received from Diana Princess of Wales and other high-profile people.

Over the following years, the event grew and was known as Mardi Gras. It developed with support from the VBA (Village Business Association).

According to a report in The Pink Paper just after the 1996 Mardi Gras, the Village Charity hoped to top the £77,000 raised with a further £50,000 from donations included in ticket sales to the Sunday Freedom GALA at the G-Mex centre. Total: £127,000.

Entry tickets and fences were first introduced during the council-run event in 1999, but despite a large income, there was no money for charity that year.[1] As a result, the event reverted to community control in 2000, 2001 and 2002.

From 2000 to 2001 the event was called Gayfest and was organised and managed by a committee of volunteers led by local businesswoman Julia Grant. During this time the Gayfest team bid for, and successfully won, the right to host Europride in 2003.

In 2002 the event reverted to the name MardiGras and was organised by a committee of the Village Business Association. During these three years, no entry fee was charged, yet money was still raised for charity: Gayfest 2000 collected £105,716.77, Gayfest 2001 collected £87,666.63, and Mardi Gras 2002 collected £65,007.

In 2003, about 37,000 people paid for tickets for EuroPride which was hosted that year by Manchester. This can be gleaned from the fact that Operation Fundraiser sold the £10 tickets and gathered £388,946 from tickets and bucket collections, with a final figure of £127,690 for good causes.

At the closing ceremony in 2003, it was announced that the event would be now be known as "Manchester Pride" (the manchesterpride.com domain name was registered by the web designers on behalf of Pride in April 2003) and in 2007 it became a Charity in its own right (charity number 1117848). One reason for this change was because in 2006 Customs and Excise had tried to charge back VAT for several years. This happened because, in their view, Manchester Pride was no longer a charity fundraiser. Increasing commercialisation meant that a dwindling percentage of the income reached a final good cause. By 2010 just over 11% of Manchester Pride's total income was reaching a good cause in the end.

The event has had a turbulent history due to disputes between Manchester City Council, police, the community itself and local gay businesses and charities. As a result its name has changed a number of times.[2][3]

Arguments often centre around how it is run and how funds are raised.[4][5]

Since Europride 2003, the event has been organised by a Pride committee, in conjunction with Marketing Manchester, the Lesbian and Gay Foundation, and George House Trust. The area is once again cordoned off and gated, and wristbands must be bought to gain entry to the "compound". Some of the performers over the past 7 years include The Gossip, Kelis, The Human League, Samantha Fox and Dana International, as well as popular LGBT performers like Claire Mooney, Heather Peace and Valentino King, a Drag King.

Totals for charity

2011: £105,000. £7,000 of this came from the "Pride Dinner" the previous November (pay event)

2010: £115,000 (pay event)

2009: £135,000 (pay event)

2008: £105,000 (pay event)

2007: £95,000 (pay event)

2006: £121,000 eventually, after challenging a £56,000 VAT bill (pay event)

2005: £120,772 (pay event)

2004: £129,426 (pay event)

2003: £127,690 (pay event)

2002: £65,007 (free event)

2001: £87,666.63 (free event)

2000: £105,716,77 (free event)

1999: zero raised (pay event - the first year with the ‘pledgeband’/wristband)

1996: The Pink Paper reported £77,000 and that the Village Charity was hoping for a further £50,000 from donations included in ticket sales to the Sunday Freedom GALA. Total: £127,000.

When comparing different years the effects of inflation should be taken into account, which might be 30% over the course of a decade.

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DSgxGnAWWQ BBC North-West Tonight report - no charity money in 1999
  2. ^ http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/fury-over-16350-charge-to-join-gay-pride-march-408392.html The Independent: Fury over £50 charge to join gay pride march
  3. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jHvFvPmtAU Manchester Pride Cancelled 2002
  4. ^ http://www.g7uk.com/manchester-pride-investigation.shtml Manchester Pride Investigation
  5. ^ http://bodypositivenw.blogspot.com/2007/07/manchester-pride-2007.html< Body Positive Blog Manchester Pride 2007

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Manchester — This article is about the city of Manchester in England. For the wider metropolitan county, see Greater Manchester. For the larger conurbation, see Greater Manchester Urban Area. For other uses, see Manchester (disambiguation). Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Manchester — City of Manchester Kathedrale Koordinaten …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Manchester derby — City or region Manchester Greater Manchester First contested 12 November 1881 Teams involved Manchester City Manchester United Number of meetings 161 Most wins Manchester United (67) …   Wikipedia

  • Pride Park — Stadium Daten Ort England …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Manchester Arndale — Location Manchester, England Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Pride Of Manchester Awards — The Pride Of Manchester Awards competition is voted for annually every January in Manchester, England and was devised by the Pride Of Manchester group of entertainment websites. It celebrates the best in the city from the previous 12 months.The… …   Wikipedia

  • Manchester City F.C. strip — This page is about the identity of Manchester City Football Club. For the main page see Manchester City F.C. Manchester City Football Club is an English professional football club founded in 1880 as St Marks (West Gorton) and currently based in… …   Wikipedia

  • Manchester Orchestra — For other uses, see Manchester Orchestra (disambiguation). Manchester Orchestra Robert McDowell and Jonathan Corley of Manchester Orchestra performing live Background information …   Wikipedia

  • Manchester City F.C. — Manchester City F.C …   Wikipedia

  • Manchester, New Hampshire — This article is about the city in New Hampshire. For other uses, see Manchester (disambiguation). Manchester, New Hampshire   City   View of downto …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”