Even those who were there don't know why. The rebellion was not organized, and there were no particular leaders. The 2013 event featured more than 100 performers on five stages.The Stonewall Rebellion of late June 1969, in which New York City patrons of the Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street spontaneously rioted against routine police harassment, is often thought of as the first act of collective queer resistance, and the beginning of the Gay Rights Movement. The 2008 PrideFest had record numbers at the Seattle Center with over 50,000 people attending on a 95 degree day in June, with over 100 vendors and dozens of sponsors participating. The event was compressed from three days to one, and organizers negotiated a plan with the city to pay an outstanding debt from the 2006 event. Egan Orion of One Degree Events took over the Seattle Pride Festival just six weeks before the event was held, in order to save the event and help preserve the move to the Center the year before. In 2007, sponsor Seattle Out and Proud was threatened with bankruptcy because the downtown event had been so expensive. It was decided in 2006 to move the annual parade to downtown and festival to the Seattle Center to better accommodate the growing attendance.
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This event formerly took place in neighboring Capitol Hill‘s Volunteer Park, but outgrew that residential location. The festival takes place on the last Sunday in June between noon and 8 pm, immediately following the Pride Parade.
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Seattle PrideFest is held annually at the Seattle Center over Pride Weekend. The band also later performed a reunion show at Seattle Pride in 2000, following a resurgence of interest when their album was archived at the Country Music Hall of Fame. On June 30, 1974, Gay Pride Week concluded with a “Gay-In” at the Seattle Center that featured “zany dress, general frivolity, carousing and a circle dance around the main International fountain.” The local band Lavender Country, noted as the first known openly gay country music act, also performed during the 1974 festival. That evening, a street dance was held in Occidental Park that featured music by Blue Moon, Lavender Country and Sue Isaacs. Entertainment included music and a “Gayrilla theater.” Banners from the stage read “Proud to be lesbian, Proud to be gay.” In the afternoon, activities moved to Volunteer Park and included roller-skating and a sing along at the top of the Volunteer Park Water Tower. On June 29, 1974, a Saturday, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported that about 200 attended a picnic at Occidental Park in Pioneer Square. This included a poetry reading by Katherine Bourne, and music by Patrick Haggerty and Sue Issacs of the band
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This was followed by a one-woman show dramatizing the event entitled “Lavender Troubadour” written and performed and sung by Rebecca Valrejean On June 28, 1974, the Gay Community Center at 1726 16th Avenue held its official grand opening. On the evening of June 27 a Memorial Service was held at the Metropolitan Community Church to commemorate the victims of the 1973 Upstairs Lounge arson attack in the New Orleans gay bar that claimed 32 lives. June 26 was a discussion on transsexuality at the University of Washington Hub Ballroom. The week started off Monday evening, June 25 with an Open House and discussion sponsored by the Stonewall Recovery Center, a drug treatment program. This was the first event in the region in which the gay community as a whole came out of its collective closet.
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From June 24 to June 30, 1974, Seattle’s lesbians and gays celebrated the city’s first Gay Pride Week.