Same-sex wedding occurs without incident on Rose Parade float
The first same-sex wedding in the history of the Tournament of Roses Parade went off without a hitch -- except for the planned one -- despite threats of protests and days of opposition on social media.
“Congratulations and our best wishes to Aubrey and Danny on their wedding day!” KTLA-TV Channel 5 news anchor Micah Ohlman said as the wedding-cake-shaped float passed by the viewing stands.
Spectators clapped their hands as grooms Danny Leclair, 45, and Aubrey Loots, 42, faced each other and recited their vows before the Rev. Alfreda “Freda” Lanoix on the float sponsored by the AIDS Healthcare Foundation. White doves were released into the bright blue sky afterward.
PHOTOS: 125th Tournament of Roses Parade
The vows took place near the end of the two-hour telecast of the 125th annual Rose Parade. There were no major incidents reported.
In the days before the parade, commenters on the Tournament of Roses’ Facebook page debated the merits of including a same-sex wedding. Opponents said it was offensive, citing biblical grounds. A Facebook page called “Boycott the 2014 Rose Parade” had more than 8,000 likes.
But some in the crowd said they came specifically to see the couple exchange vows. Jennifer Adair, 41, a Southern California native, came with her girlfriend, Bonnie Cortez, to watch from curbside seats.
“I’m going to cheer, ‘Gay rights! Gay rights! Equality! Equality!’” Adair said. “We’re a modern-day society, so accept it. Don’t worry about what other people do.”
Leclair and Loots, wearing dark suits and matching white-rose boutonnieres, waved to people on the sidewalk. The crowd cheered, took photographs and offered congratulations.
One woman yelled: “Where are you registered?” Leclair, grinning, shouted back: “Thanks for coming to our wedding!”
Kevin Ferguson, who lives in Los Angeles, watched the float go by at Orange Grove Boulevard and Lockehaven Street. He said he was supportive of the couple, even if people opposed thought it was too public a venue.
“You can’t put a timetable on another person’s freedom,” Ferguson said.
The couple said it had been a morning of nervous excitement.
The song “Power of Two” by the Indigo Girls played from the float on a loop. People stopped to take photos of the float, decorated with white and dark red roses and titled “Living the Dream: Love Is the Best Protection.”
Pasadena resident Monica Kibbee and her 8-year-old daughter, Ava, handed a branch of purple orchids to two women on the float. “I think it’s wonderful,” Kibbee said. She looked around and said: “I’m really happy to see there’s no one here protesting.”
[For the Record, 1:46 p.m. PST Jan. 1: An earlier version of this post incorrectly said KTLA-TV Channel 5 broadcaster Bob Eubanks, one of the live telecast show’s hosts, congratulated the gay couple getting married on a Rose Parade float. It was actually KTLA news anchor Micah Ohlman who offered the station’s best wishes.]
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