This year's program for the Sydney Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras festival is its most diverse yet, with a range of events, shows, concerts, talks and exhibitions welcoming Sydneysiders to expand their horizons and celebrate the work of both local and international LGBTIQ+ talents and communities.
If you're keen for a night out, wonderful events like Sissy Ball and Club Briefs present an enthralling cultural escape. However, if the night life isn't for you, there are also plenty of family friendly daytime outings, as well as a number of intellectually stimulating panel discussions, covering a broad range of topics.
Long story short, there's something for everyone. Hard as it was, we did our best to round up a number of this year's festival highlights.
My Trans Story - The Next Generation
Source: The Project, Channel 10
Saturday 23 February.
Queer Thinking
Source: Mardi Gras
Take a break from the bright lights and lose yourself in some good old-fashioned discussion.
Saturday 23 February and Sunday 24 February.
Sissy Ball
Source: Mardi Gras
With multidisciplinary artist B'Henji's history-making now entering its second year as part of the Sydney Mardi Gras festival program, the local icon is upping the ante, flying in two of the culture's biggest names: Leiomy Maldonado and Dashaun Wesley, known respectively as the wonder woman and king of voguing.
For those who have already consumed RuPaul's Drag Race or Paris Is Burning, this event will serve up queer HISTORY - so watch and listen.
Saturday 23 February.
Requiem Mass: A Queer Divine Rite
As part of the 2019 Mardi Gras program, Sydney's iconic City Recital Hall will play host to a co-presentation of , an original choral work by American singer and composer Holcombe Waller. Stunning audiences around the world, the evening-length piece is said to invoke "remembrance and peace for the dead who suffered persecution for their sexual orientation or gender expression".
Queer Contemporary at National Art School
Sydney is hot. Art galleries have air conditioning. That should be reason enough to leave the house and take advantage of one of this year's most exciting creative hubs.
Held at the former site of Darlinghurst Gaol, Sydney's National Art School will become home to a wonderful program focusing on queer contemporary art this Mardi Gras season. The lineup features a number of exhibitions, workshops, panel discussions and kids activities. There will even be a pop-up bar, which is aptly named after former Darlinghurst inmate Bush Ranger Captain Moonlight and his lover, James Nesbitt.
History and art and cocktails? What more could you want?
Friday 15 February - Saturday 2 March.
The Rise and Fall of St George
Source: Twitter
A collaboration between two of Australia’s leading queer artists, pop icon Paul Mac and playwright Lachlan Philpott, The Rise and Fall of St George retells the story through the eyes of the community - offering a first-time look at the mural as it was made. The production is pegged as a celebration of our community's achievements, as well as "a thank you to all the allies who supported us, and an urgent call to arms to never let these hard-won freedoms go in these dark times".
The Butch Monologues
Source: Seymour Centre
Pegged as a "powerful and often humorous collection of secret stories", The Butch Monologues are based on the true stories of butch-identified women living both locally and all around the world. With a cast of six actors, the monologues explore themes of sexuality, vulnerability and desire - touching on the lived experiences of "butches, masculine women, gender rebels and transmen living world-wide."
Saturday 23 February - Friday 1 March.
Cake Daddy
Source: Mardi Gras
Performed and co-written by Ross Anderson-Dohert, along with esteemed playwright Lachlan Philpott, Cake Daddy is all about living as a fat person in a fat-phobic world. This scrumptious and celebratory cabaret, directed by Alyson Campbell, refuses to apologise for taking up space, sharing the message that fat people shouldn't be sorry for not dieting or trying to change their body size.
Koori Gras
Source: Carriageworks
Monday 18 - Saturday 23 February.
A live stream of the parade will be available on SBS On Demand and the SBS Twitter account and on Saturday 2 March. SBS Arabic 24 will report live from the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Parade to Arabic-speaking audiences around Australia.
You can watch the SBS parade coverage on Sunday March 3rd at 8.30pm.