This year's Twin Cities Pride should be big.
"Everything this year is going to be bigger than it has been," said Felix Foster, the nonprofit's board chair. "And some things are the biggest we've ever done."
Take the June 25 Saturday night concert, headlined this year by Carly Rae Jepsen — "the biggest name we've ever gotten," Foster said, at the biggest venue they've ever programmed, the Armory.
And after years of street construction and COVID constraints, the June 26 Sunday march will return to Hennepin Avenue. "We're so excited to be back," Foster said.
Since it's also a big anniversary — the 50th year of Pride in the Twin Cities — the theme is Past, Present and Future. So there are three Grand Marshals: Jean-Nickolaus Tretter, who marched in 1972, represents the past; Nic Zapko, an activist and ASL interpreter for Gov. Tim Walz, reflects the present, and Hildie Edwards, an 11-year-old trans youth activist, will embody the future.
Note that the Twin Cities LGBTQ+ Pride March on June 26 is billed as a march, not a parade — reflecting the work that remains.
"It's still a walk for justice and protest and equality," said Foster, but Pride leaders "felt that until everyone in the GLBTQ community has been equally and fairly represented, it's not going to be called a parade."
Police will be present at this year's Pride, a decision that's grown more controversial since the police killing of George Floyd in 2020. OutFront Minnesota announced last month that it would not participate in Twin Cities Pride events as it "directly conflicts with our efforts to practice anti-oppression and anti-racism."