The main events
This is no ordinary Pride month in New York. The city is hosting — the first US edition of the global celebration of LGBTQ rights — and also honoring the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall riots, which gave birth to the gay rights movement from the streets of Greenwich Village. Expect an extra 3 million tourists for the festivities, which officially kick off June 24 with a at Pier 97, hosted by the LGBT Community Center, offering bites from 20 local restaurants, including queer-helmed faves like Vic’s in Noho, and Brooklyn’s MeMe’s Diner. Whoopi Goldberg will emcee the two days later, with a splashy fund-raiser at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, headlined by Cyndi Lauper along with Billy Porter and Ciara. For its of🌜ficial on June 30, WorldPride will commandeer Times Square, New Year’s Eve-style, for a free concert from Melissa Etheridge — all are welcome, but be sure to pre-register.
Meanwhile, , the umbrella name for this year’s NYC Pride events, kicks off June 28 with , a commemoration (free, from 6 to 9 p.m. at Christopher Park), of the proto march that took place a month after the Stonewall riots, when 500 people came together for a Gay Power demonstration. (Expect nex🍬t week’s numbers to be, well, somewhat larger.) — not a parade as in many cities, emphasizing that the fight for equal rights for LGBTQ folks is not over — begins at noon on Junඣe 30 (see route above). This year’s Grand Marshals include a trio of transgender cast members from FX’s ballroom drama “Pose” as well as activists and the youth organization The Trevor Project. With a staggering 150,000 marchers expected, it’s sure to wind late into the evening. Watch, too, for the new march, which begins earlier in the day as an alternative to the main event, shunning corporate sponsorship and focusing on Act Up-style activism.
Party city
, the splashy two-day party on Pier 97, is already sold out (although you can usually snag last-minute ticket resales). It’s no surpr൲ise, as the June 29-30 bash is headlined by a twofer of epic women: “Material Girl” Madonna and “Bond Girl” Grace Jones. Or head to the Park rᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚestaurant, which hosts the DJ-driven fund-raiser on June 29, as well as the sexy party the next day, anchored by DJ Mary Mac (she’s toured with Madonna — so who knows if Madge might make a cameo?).
Barcelona, Spain-based, circuit-party specialist Matinée is touching down in NYC June 30 for the hedonistic, if awkwardly named, a 3,000-strong dance party at the enormous Terminal🐭 5 mega-club. If you find all that shirtless dancing a bit of a drag, opt for boat cruise on June 22 instead, captained by queen Petra Fried and “RuPaul’s Drag Race” breakout Aja: expect outré costumes and quippy one-liners. For Insta-worthy views of a rainbow-lit Empire State Building (not to mention spiked Sno-Cones and cotton candy), head to Monarch’s annual Fly on June 30. Meanwhile, the star attraction at Converse-supported fund-raiser (on June 28 in Brooklyn’s hipster nightclub House of Yes) is Desmond is Amazing, the tween drag star who grew up right here in NYC.
Rainbow connection
The city is festooned with ROYGBIV bites that champion LGBTQ rights. Scarf a slice of rainbow cake ($7) from ; every calorie is offset by a contribution to LGBTQ youth organization Hetrick-Martin. is selling a “Love Salad” and “Rainbow Sandwich,” benefiting the nonprofit NYC Pride, while rainbow shortbread cookies support The Trevor Projec♓t and the rainbow macarons help the city’s LGBTQ community. The all-natural rainbow ice cube of “Pride” margarita ($15) is Instagram catnip — and benefits the LGBT Center.
Family time
Pride’s efforts at inclusivity have been particularly pronounced around LGBTQ families, 💖with an increasing roster of kid-friendly events. Tonight, at the free on Pier 45, drag queen Miss Ri▨chfield 1981 (inset) will emcee a screening of Pixar’s “Coco” against the backdrop of the Hudson River (the movie starts at 6:30 p.m., but games and entertainment begin earlier in the afternoon).
And at the LGBT Community Center’s Family Pride Picnic, “🐬,” on June 29, there’ll be more live music, games, face-painting and light refreshments — rain or shine — on the High Line park. The same day, a🧔t SummerStage in Central Park, teens and tweens can head to , which will spotlight a slew of young performers, including teen DJ Nhandi and 15-year old rapper Deetranada.
Culture club
Most major museums in the city are dedicating exhibition space to Stonewall, Pride or other LGBTQ subjects this year in honor of the landmark 50th anniversary. Current shows include “” at the Museum of the City of New York, highlighting the photojournalism of the late Village Voice staffer Fred W. McDarrah, and “” at the New-York Historical Society, featuring images from New York’s marches over the last five decades. At Brooklyn’s Historical Soc🅰iety, there’s an intriguing survey of the now-forgotten queer communities that once thrived at its fringes, “,” while “Love & Resistance: Stonewall 50” is the New York Public Library’s contribution, focusing on LGBTQ civil rights: Expect treasures from its extensive archive, including rarely seen photos by Diana Davies, now 81, who was one of the first to document that struggle. If you need a little light relief, head to the extravaganza on June 23; a clutch of Broadway regulars will come together for this campy, joyous fund-raiser, which spotlights the deep-throated women (think: Cher, Tina Turner, Kelly Clarkson) who’ve been the soundtrack to the last five decades for many LGBTQ folks.