"If you cheer when we're underwater, you're not helping — we won't hear you," Signe Harriday chided friends and family gathered on the St. Louis Park High School pool deck before the Subversive Sirens' final dress rehearsal.
The first bars of Prince's "Let's Go Crazy" cued Harriday and the other Sirens into the pool, where the fivesome floated in an arrow formation, moving their arms to the beat. Then four Sirens lifted the fifth out of the water in the victorious pose of an aquatic Prince trophy, with purple lipstick and the late musician's sequined symbol emblazoned on the front of her bathing suit. The crowd, as instructed, whooped and hollered.
When the Sirens took up synchronized swimming two years ago, as a duo, and became a fivesome just last fall, their experience ranged from a few years of preteen practices to absolutely none whatsoever. But after receiving guidance from a group of local "synchro" masters, the Sirens now plan to perform a polished Prince-medley routine at the Paris Gay Games on Tuesday.
The Sirens, who range in age from 39 to 49, aren't just proving that it's possible to become a competitive athlete in middle age. The group — which is majority queer and women of color — is bringing greater diversity and inclusivity to a sport that has long hewed close to tradition.
Out of the water, the Sirens work in creative fields (graphic design, theater, art) or those with a social justice bent (community organizing, activism). They see synchronized swimming as an extension of both spheres.
"Our mission is explicitly around black liberation, body positivity, queer visibility and equity in the aquatic arts," said Harriday.
Siren call
Harriday first heard about the Gay Games, a quadrennial international sporting event, from friends who had competed. It sounded fabulous.
"In my imagination, it was this amazing unicorn paradise where us gay folk and LGBTQ folk were in a happy-happy wonderland," she recalled. "Disneyland for the gays mixed with the Olympics."