Rio carnival goers shake off clothes, and Brazil's worries
The annual mega-bash is famed for lavish and skimpily dressed samba parades and all-night street dancing.
Dancers from the Vai-Vai samba school perform on a float during a carnival parade in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
'We sell everything from things that cost two reais ($0.51) to 550 reais ($142) for a headdress, but my biggest sellers are around 70 to 80 reais ($18-$21),\" he said.
Marcelo Servos, 47, who owns Casa Turuna, one of the oldest costume retailers, said he was doing good trade but at the lower end of the range.
A saleswoman at Souad Modas, a costume store, said times were tough. \"The place is almost empty. In previous years it was crammed with people. I was able to sell 60,000 reais (about $15,420) worth of costumes in a week, while now I'll be lucky to sell 15,000 reais ($3,860)worth,\" she said.
But many street parties are purely amateur affairs involving colorful, low cost costumes, lots of live samba music, and rivers of beer.
Some are huge, like the Bola Preta party which will be held in central Rio on Saturday and which hopes to attract up to two million people. Others come with a message, like one party where samba was put to lyrics urging dancers to 'Chase away Zika!'
The picture is more mixed when it comes to the other side of Rio's carnival frenzy -- the street parties and impromptu neighborhood parades.
\"The situation has been difficult for four or five years, but this year was worse because everyone is in crisis and prices are rising,\" the administrator of the Uniao da Ilha samba school, Marcio Andre Mehry de Souza, said.
Big ensembles competing in the Sambadrome say that city funding has dried up and that private sponsors are also running scared, while the plunging value in the national currency means importing mostly Chinese fabrics for costumes has driven up prices.
Another drag on the party atmosphere is the country's prolonged economic recession.
Soldiers are being deployed to help health workers in a door-to-door campaign to teach people about clearing up stagnant water, which mosquitoes use to breed in, while in Rio special teams are regularly checking and fumigating sites like the Sambadrome and Olympic stadiums.
Brazilian officials have echoed that warning for Olympics fans, but at the same time are desperately trying to eradicate the mosquito.
Gate crashing this year's show, though, is the Zika-carrying mosquito and threat of microcephaly, which has led the World Health Organization to declare an international emergency and several governments to advise pregnant women not to travel to Brazil.
Some five million people, including one million tourists, are expected to take part citywide.
The dancing king and his court will then preside over the five-day extravaganza, which peaks Sunday and Monday nights with parades by competing samba schools, featuring dancers in wildly imaginative costumes, or alternatively smothered in sequins and feathers -- and almost nothing else.
Officially the carnival begins when Mayor Eduardo Paes, who is also overseeing work to host the Summer Olympics this August, symbolically hands over the city keys to the carnival leader, known as King Momo.
\"The carnival is for forgetting all this,\" said Teresa Curi, 61, who was selling costumes in an old Rio neighborhood of narrow streets, small stores, and thick crowds.
Throw in the country's worst recession since the 1930s, strikes, more than 10 percent inflation, brutal crime -- and no wonder Cariocas, as locals call themselves, can't wait to party.
Like the rest of Brazil, Rio de Janeiro is struggling to respond to fears that the mosquito-transmitted Zika virus causes microcephaly, a horrific birth defect in babies.
The annual mega-bash famed for lavish -- and skimpily dressed -- samba parades and all-night street dancing couldn't come at a better time for morale.
The Brazil Carnival got rolling in Rio de Janeiro on Friday, giving the city a chance to wiggle its hips and shake off worries over Zika and the economy.
Dancers from the Vai-Vai samba school perform on a float during a carnival parade in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
The annual mega-bash is famed for lavish and skimpily dressed samba parades and all-night street dancing.

Next Story





















