Camps were set up throughout the crowd, pink and purple being the clear true contenders with helium balloon creations and gigantic blobs of rowdy fans, flags, noisemakers, candy. The ceremony began.
And then...murga (see word of the week for definition). My favorite part. A thumping brass band brought in specifically to animate the crowd, plays while the candidates and their supports and everyone else dances, jumps, screams. I liken murga bands to New Orleans brass bands, but murga crowds are nothing like their US counterparts. Everyone knows this dance, grew up with it, knows when to jump and scream and when it's all coming. Queen supporters use murga time as the time to prove to all the other queens that their queen is the best, deserves the biggest crowd, the most excitement, the best dancing. Each queen entered, to much fanfare, while the murga played and they did their dance up to the stage (that's right, queens aren't just escorted in. They dance in.).
Several murga breaks, performances from a break dance team, folkloric dancers, and one passa-passa (kind of like pop-n-lock) dancer later, the votes had been counted. The whole crowd on it's feet, the girls in their gowns, everyone sweating, a teacher announced the winner.
Fuchia.
The crowd erupted. More flag waving, dancing, dancing, and more dancing, which finally filed out into the street with the band to make the circle through town all the way back to Maricris' house. Miss Ruby, a blooming seventh grader, will be the school's representative at every event until next year's crowning, arriving to festivals, parades, and fairs amidst more murga to dance and wave.
As you may have already guessed, being a queen is a huge deal here, and people put a huge amount of effort into it. Girls start waving and dancing as young as five years old (seriously, my friend's school had a five year old queen this year). Reaching the big time means being a contender at carnaval, your face everywhere in the streets starting only a month after the last carnaval ends. There are songs, lights, glitter. Our high school coronation is only one part, one humble reflection of what it's like.
In any case, here's a part of it:
Maricris' (fuchsia) entrance |
trying to capture the fans dancing |
all the candidates on stage with last year's queen |
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