love the thread, a lot
love learning new things and dusting off old thoughts
:hatsoff:
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Life's challenges are not supposed to paralyze you, they're supposed to help you discover who you are: Bernice Johnson Reagon.
RANDOM TIDBITS
Shrove Tuesday, the day before Ash Wednesday, is the
religious name for Mardi Gras. New Orleans's fabled French
Quarter, a neighborhood along Bourbon Street, is the center
of Mardi Gras activities.
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The Brazilian celebration is called Carnival. Portuguese
immigrants first celebrated Carnival in Rio in the early
1800s with a game called entrudo, during which poor people
sprayed each other with mud and sewage, while the elite
used perfume sprays. The first masked ball was held in 1840,
while the first street parades took place a few years later.
They have evolved into a vast spectacle involving thousands
of participants and hundreds of thousands of spectators.
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Around 1900 in New Orleans there was increasing interaction
between poor black musicians, whose drum playing was
influenced by African musical styles, and mixed-race
Creoles, who were trained in European classical music. The
fusion of the various traditions created jazz, which soon
spread up the Mississippi River to Memphis and Chicago, and
across the country to Harlem, New York.
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"Krewe" is a fanciful spelling of "crew." In 1857 a group
of men founded the Krewe of Comus, because they feared the
wild antics at Mardi Gras would prompt the authorities to
stop the celebrations. They felt a secret organization
might have a better chance of surviving. Since then, a
number of other krewes have been established.
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King Cakes are large, round cinnamon rolls covered with
white icing and sprinkled with the Mardi Gras colors. A
plastic baby the size of an almond is hidden inside.
Whoever finds the baby is the next king or queen and must
host the next King Cake party.
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In 1872 Russian grand duke Alexis Romanoff visited New
Orleans during Mardi Gras. A group of businessmen organized
the Krewe of Rex to hold a parade and named a king and
queen for the day, a tradition that has endured. They also
used the colors of the House of Romanoff: purple for
justice, green for faith, and gold for power. These have
remained the official colors of Mardi Gras.