Dear Friends,
As we dive into summer, the Boston Pride Committee would like to send a tremendous thank you to everyone who participated in our 40th Anniversary Pride Week. We hope that you got a chance to attend some of our events leading up to, and including, Pride Weekend. Despite the downpour on Saturday, the smiling, cheering, and dancing in the streets was a true tribute to our community spirit!
The amount of time we spend planning the Parade, Festival and Sunday Block Parties is enormous, but we are also very proud of the wide range of other events that appear on our calendar. Some we produce ourselves and others we co-present with fellow community institutions like Queer Women of Color & Friends, the LGBT Aging Project, and Club Café, to name a few. We are grateful for these lasting partnerships and look forward to making new ones.
This year, in particular, we were excited to offer the Club Sizzle dance party for LGBT youth, an event we co-hosted with Delta Phi Upsilon, and that we’ll be adding permanently to our Pride Week roster. We were also inspired by our inaugural theme-based Pride Rally. While potential rain turned the event into something more resembling a panel discussion, the Stuart Street Playhouse was alive with discussion about key issues facing our community. Moving forward, we are committed to providing a forum for ongoing dialogue about the enduring importance of the Pride Movement.
While Pride Week itself is over, we will continue the commemoration of our 40th Anniversary with more events and activities throughout 2010, and we hope to see you around town. Stay tuned for the launch of a new and snazzy Pride website, some exciting special events (including VIP tickets to Margaret Cho!), and the unveiling of a re-organized Pride Committee with fun and easy ways for everyone to get involved. Of course, we’re not going to change everything. This fall also brings the return of our online community vote for your 2011 Pride Theme and Marshals, so get your nominations ready!
While we all know that Pride is not just a week in June, we’re here to make sure everyone remembers that! We cap off four decades of LGBT activism and progress with the hope that another 40 years won’t pass before we achieve true and full equality. Regardless, we will be here to serve and celebrate you.
All the best for a wonderful summer,
Keri A. Aulita
Deputy Director
Boston Pride Committee
From there, our 10-day celebration of this year’s theme,
Friday, June 4 at 9:00 pm, it’s Guerrilla Queer Bar – PRIDE Edition! Join the Pride Committee and the guys behind GQB for a gay takeover of the Hard Rock Cafe (
Saturday, June 5, bright and early at 10 am, come on out for
Monday, June 7th:
Wednesday, June 9th: 


OPTIONZ: 4th Annual Multicultural Pride Party from Queer Women of Color and Friends.
The brain child of activist
That’s right! This year, every person who volunteers for at least one shift with Boston Pride gets to come on a
Alexis Arquette was born Robert Arquette in Los Angeles, California, to Brenda “Mardi” Olivia (née Nowak), an actor, poet, theater operator, activist, acting teacher and therapist, and Lewis Arquette, an actor and director. Arquette’s siblings are actors Rosanna, Patricia, Richmond and David. Arquette is also the sister-in-law of actress Courteney Cox, who is married to her brother David. At the age of twelve, Arquette’s first job was in 1982 where she was cast as “this little kid who’s on a ride with all these women and whatnot” in the music video “She’s a Beauty” by The Tubes. In 1986 Arquette debuted on the big screen with an uncredited bit part as “Alexis,” the white-faced friend/bandmate of the sexually ambivalent, angst filled teenager Max Whiteman in the classic hit comedy “Down and Out in Beverly Hills.” At twenty-two, Arquette landed her first significant acting role, playing a transvestite named Georgette in “Last Exit to Brooklyn.” Sixteen years later, she went through her own transition from male to female, an experience that was documented in the film “Alexis Arquette: She’s My Brother,” which debuted at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival.Arquette is also known for her work in the hit film “The Wedding Singer” and “VH1’s The Surreal Life.”
The Boston Pride Committee is pleased to announce the winners by community vote of this year’s Grand and Honorary Marshal honors!



