aguecoke.pages.dev


Gay pride parade montreal

The story of Pride in Montréal

Those marches inspired LGTBQ+ activists around the world to plan Pride marches of their own, including Montréal’s very first Pride march in June 1979organized by La Brigade Rose, to mark the 10th anniversary of Stonewall. La Brigade Rose organizers drew 52 marchers in 1979. Forty years later, in 2019, total attendance at the Fierté Montréal Festival was more than three million.

In the beginning

Pride celebrations were a spotty affair in Montréal until Divers/Cité was co-founded by Puelo Deir and Suzanne Girard in 1993, directly inspired by queer resistance to the violent Montréal police raid on the historic Sex Garage loft party in the early morning hours of July 15, 1990. That raid ignited 36 hours of clashes between Montréal’s LGTBQ+ community and the city’s police force, which at the time harboured a customs of homophobia. Sex Garage is now widely considered to be Montréal’s Stonewall: it brought together anglophones and francophones, and politicized a generation of LGTBQ+ activists who would change the Québec political landscape.

Divers/Cité

Montréal Pride shows its colours

Fierté Montréal Festival celebrations will be held downtown on the Esplanade Tranquille in the Quartier des spectacles from July 31 to August 3.

The Loto-Québec Stage on the Esplanade Tranquille at the corner of Sainte- Catherine and Clark streets will present Lumière des nations spotlighting Indigenous artists on July 31, followed by Transcendance, celebrating trans excellence. 

On August 1, FeminiX celebrates queer women. The much-anticipated Mundo Disko on August 2 pays tribute to boogie music, nightlife and gay revolutions, and on August 3, the signature show ImmiX presents artists such as Lisa LeBlanc, Gabrielle Destroismaisons, Martine St-Clair, Calamine, Safia Nolin and Lennikim.

Also onsite is the Pride Has Its Flags exhibition (La Fierté a ses drapeaux) about the various identity Pride flags since the creation of the Rainbow flag in 1978. Runs July 30 to August 3 on the Esplanade Tranquille, then relocates to the Esplanade of the Olympic Park from August 7 to 10.

The French-language comedy show Katherine Levac et invité·e·s

Fierté Montréal Festival is the largest LGBTQ+ gathering in the Francophone world. In addition to the city’s welcoming LGBTQ+ bars and hangouts, Montreal is putting on a star-studded show that's focused on community and involvement.

The 2025 parade theme, "Blossom here, now!", celebrates the right of the 2SLGBTQIA+ community to grow, thrive, and love openly. 

Montreal’s first Pride march was held in June 1979 to mark the 10th anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising of 1969. La Brigade Rose organizers in Montreal drew 52 marchers in 1979. Forty years later, in 2019, total attendance at Montreal Pride topped 3 million.

This summer’s festival features live in-person performances, concerts and activities on the Esplanade of the Olympic Park—Montreal Pride’s main site—as well as in the LGBTQ+ Village and downtown. 

What time does the Event parade start in Montreal?

The 2025 Pride parade is on Sunday, August 10 at 1 p.m.

When is the Fierté Montréal Festival?

This 19th edition of Fierté runs from July 31 to August 10, 2025.

What are the festival highlights?

Expect

Don't miss the 2025 Celebration Parade!

Community organizations, sports and socio-cultural clubs, associations, unions, businesses and political organizations join their voices to celebrate and make seeable the realities of the 2SLGBTQIA+ communities in a festive and colorful atmosphere.

Public participation will be allowed and even encouraged at the end of the quotas. Come march or attend the parade to support the 2SLGBTQIA+ communities!

On August 10, 1 pm, at René-Levesque Blvd.

2025 Lgbtq+ fest Parade Theme

Blossom here, now!

Blossom here, now means asserting our right to expand, to fully shine, and to love freely. We grow together, bound by our stories, our struggles, and our pride.

Blossom here, now means turning a garden of thorns into an untamed field of a thousand colors. It means weeding out the soil of adversity.

Blossom here, now means celebrating our existence and identities in a meadow where every struggle is a budding hope.

Practical Information

  • Join thousands of marchers to celebrate the advances of the 2SLGBTQIA+ communities' rights, and to amplify our demands. Following the parading contingents, we invite all attendees to join the march and t

    .