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THE HECTIC, HARRIED EIGHTIES
The
Fat Tuesday of 1980 dawned on another unusual dichotomy to
Carnival.
Though the economic problems facing the nation were effectively
shutting
down all 'unnecessary' events and programs everywhere else, Mardi Gras
in New Orleans was going strong. This is one of the effects of
Louis
Prima's observations about the timeline in the city. Though there
will be those who will contradict your humble Professor, generally
the conditions of the nation are seldom reflected in Carnival
celebrations
(with the exception of current events ripe for satirizations-in this,
New
Orleans is always at the forefront). So, while the rest of the
country
languished in the grips of a recession, New Orleans reveled through the
Eighties like the characters in a night-time soap opera!
The early years of the decade were
festive and fertile, as all Carnivals should be. The moratorium
on
street parades in the late Seventies did little to decrease the fun for
those in Orleans Parish, and much to help the party spread out across
Jefferson
and St. Tammany Parishes. 23 new parading krewes formed during
this
time, while 18 krewes disbanded. Technically, this sets the
Eighties
apart as the decade with the worst krewe losses, but still finishes
with
a gain of 5 krewes; another hallmark of the heights and depths that
marked
much of the era. And there were some hard roads to get around
during
this lush period. In 1982, three people lost their lives during
the
revelry, which led to the creation of the mayor's Mardi Gras Task Force
to enforce stricter safety measures. In 1984, the World's Fair
set
up shop at the foot of Canal St., and was a financial failure for
the city (for more information on the World's Fair, click
here), but the
folly provided ripe fodder for masquers and parades the following Mardi
Gras. It was this same year that the Krewe of Palmares introduced
self-propelled floats. 1986 was a banner Gras, with a
record-setting
55 parades in the Orleans-Jefferson-St. Bernard Parish area.
Unfortunately, it was also the last year for the satiric Krewe of
Clones, whose final parade was a jazz funeral for the krewe. Zulu
came under fire from a city ordinance in 1987, when the tossing of
coconuts
became illegal under the city's new insurance policies. Fans of
the
krewe and of the tradition carried their objections to the Louisiana
state
legislature. The same year, the highly satirical Krewe du Vieux
made
its first appearance, originally formed with two subkrewes from the
late Krewe of Clones.
1987 also marked the return of Rex
to Lundi Gras, and his spectacular arrival on the Mississippi.
Once
again, the Mayor met Rex on the Riverwalk and ceremoniously turned
control
of the city over to the King of Mardi Gras. Befitting this new
appreciation
for royalty, in 1988 the British Broadcasting Company broadcast a live
4-hour special on Mardi Gras in New Orleans, one of the highest-rated
shows
in Great Britain at the time. And, in June, the state legislature
passed the "Coconut Bill", which once again allowed Zulu to hand down
their
prized collectables to their adoring fans.
Next up, the Nineties deals
a blow
to Carnival that has deep and lasting effects as Mardi Gras forges on
to
the next millenium.