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Airdate: 2020 Sydney Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras

Mardi Gras is Live on SBS, NITV & SBS on Demand, including with geo-blocking lifted for viewers the world over.

The 2020 Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras parade taking place on Saturday 29th February is broadcast Live on SBS for the first time.

Joel Creasey, Narelda Jacobs, Courtney Act (courtesy of Studio 10) and Zoë Coombs Marr are hosts.

The broadcast will also stream live via SBS On Demand and NITV with the geo-block removed, making it available to watch around the world, with interviews from Sam Smith, Dua Lipa and Kesha -and a special performance from Courtney Act.

Joel Creasey said: “I am equal parts thrilled and astounded that SBS are allowing me to broadcast Live on the gayest night of the year (after my birthday, of course). What could possibly go wrong? All jokes aside, I could not be more excited to be hosting again alongside the sensational Narelda Jacobs. Plus Zoe Coombs-Marr is back to bring us all the color and camper-y from the streets. And, I am of course thrilled to welcome the incredible Courtney Act to our glittery team. What a treat! Dust off your hot pants and crack out the (biodegradable) confetti, it’s time to celebrate!”

Courtney Act said: “My first time hosting Mardi Gras on SBS and they raise the stakes by making it live! I promise to securely fasten all wigs and dresses to ensure there are no live TV wardrobe malfunctions (again)! Mardi Gras is a celebration for the queer community where we invite the world to come and watch our radical self expression, to share our stories, and amplify the voices of our siblings whose stories need to be heard.”

Narelda Jacobs said: “Mardi Gras is so much more than an incredible party. It brings people from all walks of life together to celebrate diversity and sends a message to the world that being LGBTIQ+ isn’t just normal – it’s fabulous! My first Mardi Gras experience was in 1998 as a 21 year old, who’d just come out. I was brought up in a fundamentalist Christian family where it was an accepted belief that being homosexual was a sin and gays were damned to hell. The pilgrimage to Sydney all those years ago allowed me to stand proud as a lesbian. I felt a strong sense of belonging and identity. The same arms that welcomed me over two decades ago, have welcomed countless others. This Mardi Gras, ‘What Matters’, is at the core of the party, and what matters most is each other. In 2020 I’m looking forward to giving all my love to this beautiful and generous community. Let’s celebrate together!”

Zoë Coombs Marr said: “I’m absolutely bloody stoked to be back onboard for another year of sideline mischief at the Mardi Gras broadcast. Last year I talked to bears and pop-stars and baby-dykes and even tourists! In face paint! Our community never ceases to delight me, so who knows what treasures this parade will hold. You bring the party poppers, and I’ll do my best to contain my excitement on the night.”

SBS Director of Television and Online Content, Marshall Heald said: “We are delighted and honoured to be broadcasting the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras parade Live across Australia and around the world on SBS On Demand. ‘What Matters’ to SBS is giving a voice to underrepresented communities and promoting social inclusion and acceptance through our content. We can’t wait to share another amazing evening of love with our audience.”

The Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras remains one of the world’s largest and most loved LGBTIQ+ celebrations. This year the festival is themed What Matters?, to acknowledge how far the LGBTIQ+ community have come, and how much further there is still to go.

For the first time, NITV will simulcast the live broadcast on Saturday 29 February at 7.30pm. Throughout the entire month of February, they will celebrate the LGBTIQ+ community with a slate of special programming including Killing Patient Zero, a documentary about the man wrongfully accused of being patient zero for the AIDS crisis, as well Black Divaz, about the inaugural Miss First Nation pageant.

In the lead-up to the big night, SBS Radio will explore ‘What Matters’ to gender diverse members of CALD communities in 2020 with deeply personal stories in over 25 languages. SBS Arabic 24 will report live from Oxford Street to Arabic-speaking audiences around Australia on Facebook Live.

From Monday 24 February, SBS World Movies will showcase the best of LGBTIQ+ films with Queer Cinema Week, including Love Is Strange starring Alfred Molina and John Lithgow and the Golden Globe© nominated Pride. SBS VICELAND will air an encore of the broadcast at on Sunday 1 March at 10.45pm.

Local series Cloudy River will headline the Rainbow Pride movie collection on SBS On Demand. Cloudy River is a bold new series about pansexual artist Emma (Rebecca Robertson) and her musician lover, River (Rowan Davie), whose open relationship is put to the test when they move in together. Tangerine and Lovesong starring Riley Keough and Jena Malone will also feature in the collection.

Coverage of the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras is produced by Blink TV for SBS.

Broadcast times across Australia:

NSW/VIC/TAS/ACT 7:30pm – 10:30pm AEDT
QLD 6:30pm – 9:30pm AEST
SA 7:00pm – 10:00pm ACDT
WA 7:30pm – 10:30pm AWST*
NT 6:00pm – 9:00pm ACST
*WA viewers can watch the broadcast live via SBS On Demand

Melbournians will also be able to enjoy a special live screening of the broadcast in Federation Square, kicking off at 7.30pm on Saturday 29 Feb. Regional Australians can also join in the celebration, by checking out live viewing parties.

Regional live viewing sites:

Broken Heel Festival / The Palace Hotel, Broken Hill
Central Coast Pride & Coastal Twist Festival
Tropical Fruits, Lismore
Charles Stuart University, Bathurst
Feast, Adelaide
Wagga Mardi Gras, Wagga Wagga
THROB, Darwin
Lismore Civic Centre

2 Responses

  1. Still will watch it with the mute button on I do not like personally Joel Creasey hosting still. He always walk over other people and also makes jokes that are from the 1980s

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