In 2011, The New Orleans Pride Organization was formed as its own organization and acquired a 501c3 status. The event struggled several years and decided they no longer wished to try to rebrand the event and gave all rights for PrideFest to the 20 local Grand Marshals. In 2011 the LGBT Community Center decided to no longer produce the Pridefest event. A parade was once again held during the 2008 celebration, with a gathering in Washington Square. There was no parade for 2006 or 2007, with only an organized festival being held. At the same meeting, it was decided to schedule only a street parade during the weekend, putting the other daytime events on hiatus during a year of restructuring. The board voted to move Pridefest back to June. In 2002 the parade was rescheduled from Saturday afternoon to Sunday night and the event was called "Pridefest" In 2005, Gay Pride was being presented by the LGBT Community Center of New Orleans. In 1998, the festival was moved back to Armstrong Park. In 1995, the celebration was rescheduled from June to October. In 1988 "Gay Fest" was changed to "Gay Pride." Through the 1980s, several organizations spearheaded the annual events.īy the 1990s, "Pridefest was being sponsored by the New Orleans Alliance of Pride. By the mid-1980s, Gay Fest, under the direction of Ambush Newspaper, was plagued by financial difficulties and personality conflicts. In 1981, the event moved to Armstrong Park, and was emceed by New Orleans native Ellen DeGeneres. The first street parade was held in 1980. Later that year, a larger event called "Gay Fest" was presented in Washington Square, just outside of the French Quarter. This event was hosted by the Pink Triangle Alliance. The 1978 event, held in Jackson Square, was the first to be identified as gay pride. In June 1971, the Gay Services Center and the local chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis organized a Gay Day Picnic at Popp Fountain at City Park. Several other gatherings were held throughout the city that year, and intermittently thereafter until it became an annual event in 1978. New Orleans Gay Pride is a festival that began in February 1971, when the newly formed Gay Liberation Front of New Orleans presented a "Gay In" picnic in February in City Park, the first such event in the state of Louisiana. The 2016 Pride parade passing the Café Lafitte in Exile