Skip to main content

Mummers Parade

My big plans for New Year's Day include watching the Mummers Parade.  It is the most amazing parade ever.   It is huge and is held on New Year's Day in Philadelphia.   I grew up watching it and then had to suffer withdrawal for years because it was not televised in this part of the country. 

Now, thanks to the Internet, it is online.  I can watch at phl17.com and listen to Steve Hightower announce.  He is an expert on the parade and has been the announcer for years. 

What is unique about the Mummers Parade is that they put on a show – a performance.  There are full marching bands, string bands, everyone in costume and they stop and act out a little play to music, while playing and while marching.  There are sets and backdrops.  It is like tiny little musical performances in the street and there are scores of them.  The parade lasts for six hours.  It is a spectacle for sure.  When I was a child, I was fascinated with the costumes.  Now, I am in awe of the stamina and ability of the Mummers.

Each performance is a separate local club (they come from all over the Mid-Atlantic and New England states) and they compete in one of four categories – comics, fancies, string bands, and fancy brigades.   These clubs work on the movable scenery and set and their act for the whole year. 

When I watch the Mummers Parade and listen to the announcers and interviews and see the familiar sites of Philadelphia, I get homesick.  It brings back my childhood and I love hearing the accents of my youth.  I feel a part of it and miss hearing those voices and sounds.  There are no other parades like it and I look forward to it each year.  It is a fabulous show and a call back to my roots. 


Comments

  1. I'll be right there beside you, sweetie You've gotten me hooked!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Overwhelmed

I had been chiding myself or really driving myself crazy trying to figure out how to address the torrent of shocking, frightening, unbelievable new policies, orders and changes to our society.  I have been zooming back and forth – a call here, a letter there, a petition, protests, town halls, posting – trying to figure out what I can do.  The feeling of inadequacy is compounded by my physical limitations.  This morning I realized that if I had 500 times the energy and 1000 times the physical strength, stamina, and fitness I still wouldn’t be able to address all that I care about.  There is simply too much.    There are numerous things that touch on my personal life, things that hurt people I know and love, and things that are wrong and impact many people.  I am for free speech, civil rights, reproductive rights, voting rights, equality, a welcoming immigration system, a government that works for the people.  I care about education, social servic...

Harborsick

I feel harborsick.  I am not homesick because I don't really feel a sense of home anywhere.  I read books about people who are so comfortable and familiar in their towns, homes, work, and relationships and I don't feel that right now.  I do feel that there are familiar harbors – people and places that I feel comfortable and "at home" with.   But, I don't have a spot I long to put anchor.  There is not a place I belong . I want to claim my familiar harbor.   A feeling of belonging and purpose and where I know I am always welcome and I can be completely comfortable and myself.  I want to feel there is a place I can return to and feel I fit.  A port where everyone speaks my language.  A Cheers vibe if you will. I was talking to my sister this morning and she brought up some ancestral ties to other countries and where we would like to visit.  There are a few countries I would like to visit.  Italy, especially, has al...

Patterns

I wonder how much of my jaded instantaneous instinct to squelch is learned and how much is a part of my personality.  I so quickly turn to no.  Yet, I feel that as a child I was sunny.  I was bright and wanted to believe in hope and good.  My experiences as a child and the ways of reacting to life I saw as examples in my life were the exact opposite of hope and good.    How much damage did the abuse do?  What did it change or form in me? Was nature part of it – did I pick up skepticism from my parents through DNA?  It is easy to trace some responses in my life directly to what I saw modeled.  Other things I have worked for years to change my reaction to learn a new way.  That is just as important and it might be that it only redirected me back to my natural essence.    I wonder about these things.  And a part of me examines my thoughts and responses to events in life from things as simple as a chance remark overheard t...