In Brazil: Rio carnival under party-pooper mayor counting down

Rio's annual carnival is seen as a money-making extravaganza for the city. But evangelical Mayor Marcelo Crivella isn't a fan and slashed funding for next month's parade, forcing samba schools to cut their cloth accordingly.
Before
his bombshell announcement in June that he was halving the budget of
some $7 million, newly-elected Crivella broke with tradition by not
attending the opening of the event in what was widely seen as a snub to
its wild party culture.
Rio's 13 elite samba schools reacted by threatening to call a halt to the world's most famous carnival.
But
the storm has since subsided, and one month to the day before the start
of the party, the sewing machines are busily whirring in Samba City, a
zone of warehouses and workshops where the magnificent floats and
costumes are made.
"With or without money, I enjoy the carnival" is the theme of one of the best known Samba schools, the Mangueira.
It's a school whose idea of "sin" -- in a dig at former evangelical bishop Crivilla -- is "not to enjoy the carnival."
"The
subsidy cut forced us to adapt our resources to make a beautiful,
grandiose carnival, though one that is accommodated to this new
reality," artistic director Leandro Vieira told AFP, even if he believes the mayor's motives to be religious rather than financial.
'Show will go on'
"It's been a difficult year" of preparation, said Fabio Pavao, who helps manage the Portela school.
"The schools need the support of the public authorities, and with a mayor who likes carnival, everything is much easier."
The
city's top samba schools -- the so called Special Group -- compete at
Rio's Sambadromo arena with spectacular parades featuring lavishly
decorated floats and thousands of dancers dressed in sequined
micro-costumes.
Many schools see
Crivella's subsidy cut as a declaration of war on the event, which last
year brought in close to a billion dollars in tourism revenue to the
city.
"We did not have the money to
pay the subsidy in a comprehensive way, my responsibility as the mayor
is huge and I cannot leave the hospitals without medicines and I cannot
leave the schoolchildren without snacks," the 60-year-old mayor said, justifying the cuts as an inevitable reflection of Brazil's economic crisis.
But carnival director Vieira said Crivella had other motivations.
"For the evangelical doctrine, the carnival is the festival of the devil," said Viera.
"An
evangelical can think this way, but the mayor of Rio cannot. It's a
tradition that brings powerful income to the city and that's what scares
me the most, because it shows that this conservative thinking can even
go against financial logic."
'Not a reveler'
The head of the city's Riotur tourism office, Marcelo Alves, insisted there were no political or religious reasons for cutting resources.
"The
mayor is not a reveler. We should respect that. But that doesn't mean
he doesn't like carnival. It's very different, he likes it so much that,
in a meeting, he even sang a samba that he recorded," Alves told AFP.
He
added that not a day went by that Crivella -- a renowned gospel singer
-- didn't call him for reassurance that preparations were running
according to plan.
Riotur in fact worked
to get private funding for the samba schools to try to close the gap
left by the budget cuts. The schools were grateful but regretted the
extra funds had not arrived sooner, as they had already been forced to
plan for a smaller parade.
The big question is whether Crivella will attend.
"I hope he's there, because it's his role to be there. And who knows, if he sees the parade he may even like it," said Pavao.
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