logo
At Nats Park, a Tradition Continues and a Ballpark Becomes a ‘Safe Space'

At Nats Park, a Tradition Continues and a Ballpark Becomes a ‘Safe Space'

Yomiuri Shimbun10 hours ago

Hannah Foslien/For The Washington Post
Mari Con Carne performs during a drag show before the Nationals-Cubs game on Thursday.
Sasha Colby got the invite, then got to work. The first trans woman of color to win the reality TV competition 'RuPaul's Drag Race,' Colby said she had been practicing for her ceremonial first pitch at Nationals Park, and – as she toed the rubber Thursday – felt pretty good about her chances of throwing a strike. But it turned out there was a minor oversight in her preparation.
'I didn't do it in heels when I practiced,' Colby, who wore a custom, unbuttoned Nationals jersey over a hot pink dress, said after bouncing her pitch to Nationals mascot Screech, who sported a rainbow jersey for the Nationals' Night Out, the team's annual Pride night. 'But I've heard that I did better than some people in flats.'
(Colby heard right.)
The errant toss didn't put a damper on a festive and meaningful evening. Colby wasn't the first drag queen to take the mound at Nationals Park – another former 'RuPaul's Drag Race' winner, Bianca Del Rio, did the honors at last year's Night Out, but there was a bit of Night Out history made before Washington's 7-1 loss to the Chicago Cubs.
Shortly after the gates opened, the stage on the Budweiser Terrace, which typically plays host to cover bands, featured a 30-minute drag show, a first for Washington's Pride night.
'On the count of three, I want you to pretend this is a Beyoncé concert,' host Inita D said before opening the show. Three other performers in sparkly, sequined costumes followed, dancing their way through the gathering crowd, lip-synching and even breaking out an occasional cartwheel while collecting tips from smiling fans.
Team DC, a nonprofit that educates the LGBTQ+ community on the benefits of team and individual sports participation, booked the pregame entertainment for Thursday's game. The volunteer organization's president, Miguel Ayala, said he was thrilled to have Colby take part given her track record as a transgender advocate, including during an appearance at a White House reception in 2023.
Team DC has partnered with the Nationals to host Night Out since the inaugural event at RFK Stadium in 2005, when staffers worried they wouldn't be able to sell their allotment of 200 tickets. This year, the number of special tickets sold, which came with a Pride-themed Nationals jersey and benefited Team DC's student-athlete scholarship fund, exceeded last year's record total of roughly 7,500.
The prevailing message among those in attendance was one of support.
'Sometimes the sports world is not as friendly to the LGBTQ community as I would like,' Nationals fan Younger Oliver said after the Gay Men's Chorus of Washington sang the national anthem. 'So it feels important for me to come and show my support as an ally and be part of it, and spend my money and show MLB and the Nats that this is something that I care about.'
'This feels like an easy way to stand up, show up and be around community, which is really nice, because things are really depressing right now,' Oliver's friend, Hannah Cook, said, referencing the current political climate. 'You don't always take time to experience the joy, and I think that's more important than ever.'
With D.C. hosting WorldPride, the world's largest LGBTQ+ festival, it's perhaps no surprise that the 20th edition of one of the longest-running Pride events in professional sports was the biggest version yet. But it was also held against the backdrop of the Trump administration's attack on transgender rights and diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, which has led some brands to distance themselves from Pride events.
Within Major League Baseball, Pride nights have drawn attention in recent years, often because of players pushing back on the celebrations for religious reasons. In 2022, five Tampa Bay Rays players refused to wear the team's Pride night uniform, which featured rainbow colors on the jerseys and caps. In 2023, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, citing a 'desire to protect players,' said the league told its teams to avoid putting Pride logos on uniforms. That year, Nationals pitcher Trevor Williams invoked his Catholic faith when he voiced his opposition to the Los Angeles Dodgers' decision to honor the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a group whose members dress in colored habits and cloaks, on Pride night.
Every MLB team except the Texas Rangers will celebrate Pride in some fashion this month. The Nationals, in partnership with Team DC, leaned into their celebration.
'From our end, it's a no-brainer that we're going to continue having a Night Out again and again, because our philosophy is that baseball is for everyone,' said Betsy Philpott, chief legal officer for the Nationals and a member of the organization's Pride employee resource group.
'It feels right, it feels like it's needed and like a good time to do it,' said D.C.-based drag queen Mari Con Carne, who wore black thigh-high boots and a flower-print top for her pregame performance. 'It's beautiful, it's love, and it's part of the resistance we're trying to show in any political climate. It's not just the past few months. It's been here forever, and celebration is a part of the resistance.'
'For the Nationals to really put themselves out there and make themselves an ally – not just saying things and not just having one Pride night, but doing things throughout the year – it's special, and it makes you feel safe as a queer person walking around,' said Colby, who will host a party at Atlantis on Friday and perform on the main stage at the WorldPride street festival on Saturday. 'Who would've thought that [a baseball stadium] would be a safe space for us?'
While Night Out is among the Nationals' most successful special-ticket events, Philpott noted that the team holds various theme nights to celebrate many other cross-sections of the community throughout the season.
'We want to make sure that everyone in the DMV area feels comfortable coming to games and that they can be part of this experience of watching the Nationals with us,' Philpott said.
On Thursday, a Pride flag flew beyond left field as a crowd of 30,402 filled the stands. Tom held up a Pride flag after winning the Presidents' Race, which featured Team DC scholarship winners at the finish line. The stadium lights and scoreboards featured rainbow colors and imagery throughout the night. Colby said the Nationals' latest celebration of the LGBTQ+ community came at an important time.
'It just seems so pertinent right now, especially for a lot of queer people, a lot of people of color,' she said after her ceremonial pitch and a pregame meet-and-greet with fans. 'We're feeling oppressed. Pride is a protest, so this is a perfect time to really just protest with absolute queer strength and celebration. That's our weapon of choice.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tokyo Pride 2025 aims to promote rights of sexual minorities
Tokyo Pride 2025 aims to promote rights of sexual minorities

NHK

time2 hours ago

  • NHK

Tokyo Pride 2025 aims to promote rights of sexual minorities

An LGBTQ+ event is being held in a park in Tokyo to promote understanding of gender diversity with the goal of achieving a society free of discrimination and prejudice. Tokyo Pride 2025, organized by a Tokyo-based NPO, got underway in Yoyogi Park in Shibuya Ward on Saturday. The event coincides with Pride Month celebrations in Japan, which aims to boost the rights of LGBTQ+ people. About 180 groups, including universities, companies and LGBTQ+ groups, are taking part in the two-day event, showcasing their activities and programs. Students from Ryukoku University in Kyoto asked attendees how they felt about the current situation surrounding sexual minorities. They had to identify one of three categories -- expectation, anxiety and anger -- and leave a message. On stage, pairs of women engaged in ballroom dancing which is traditionally danced by a man and a woman. One participant said while the LGBTQ issue seemed sensitive, learning about it at this event was fun. Pride Parade, one of features on Sunday, is scheduled to start at noon with people from the LGBTQ+ community and their supporters taking part.

At Nats Park, a Tradition Continues and a Ballpark Becomes a ‘Safe Space'
At Nats Park, a Tradition Continues and a Ballpark Becomes a ‘Safe Space'

Yomiuri Shimbun

time10 hours ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

At Nats Park, a Tradition Continues and a Ballpark Becomes a ‘Safe Space'

Hannah Foslien/For The Washington Post Mari Con Carne performs during a drag show before the Nationals-Cubs game on Thursday. Sasha Colby got the invite, then got to work. The first trans woman of color to win the reality TV competition 'RuPaul's Drag Race,' Colby said she had been practicing for her ceremonial first pitch at Nationals Park, and – as she toed the rubber Thursday – felt pretty good about her chances of throwing a strike. But it turned out there was a minor oversight in her preparation. 'I didn't do it in heels when I practiced,' Colby, who wore a custom, unbuttoned Nationals jersey over a hot pink dress, said after bouncing her pitch to Nationals mascot Screech, who sported a rainbow jersey for the Nationals' Night Out, the team's annual Pride night. 'But I've heard that I did better than some people in flats.' (Colby heard right.) The errant toss didn't put a damper on a festive and meaningful evening. Colby wasn't the first drag queen to take the mound at Nationals Park – another former 'RuPaul's Drag Race' winner, Bianca Del Rio, did the honors at last year's Night Out, but there was a bit of Night Out history made before Washington's 7-1 loss to the Chicago Cubs. Shortly after the gates opened, the stage on the Budweiser Terrace, which typically plays host to cover bands, featured a 30-minute drag show, a first for Washington's Pride night. 'On the count of three, I want you to pretend this is a Beyoncé concert,' host Inita D said before opening the show. Three other performers in sparkly, sequined costumes followed, dancing their way through the gathering crowd, lip-synching and even breaking out an occasional cartwheel while collecting tips from smiling fans. Team DC, a nonprofit that educates the LGBTQ+ community on the benefits of team and individual sports participation, booked the pregame entertainment for Thursday's game. The volunteer organization's president, Miguel Ayala, said he was thrilled to have Colby take part given her track record as a transgender advocate, including during an appearance at a White House reception in 2023. Team DC has partnered with the Nationals to host Night Out since the inaugural event at RFK Stadium in 2005, when staffers worried they wouldn't be able to sell their allotment of 200 tickets. This year, the number of special tickets sold, which came with a Pride-themed Nationals jersey and benefited Team DC's student-athlete scholarship fund, exceeded last year's record total of roughly 7,500. The prevailing message among those in attendance was one of support. 'Sometimes the sports world is not as friendly to the LGBTQ community as I would like,' Nationals fan Younger Oliver said after the Gay Men's Chorus of Washington sang the national anthem. 'So it feels important for me to come and show my support as an ally and be part of it, and spend my money and show MLB and the Nats that this is something that I care about.' 'This feels like an easy way to stand up, show up and be around community, which is really nice, because things are really depressing right now,' Oliver's friend, Hannah Cook, said, referencing the current political climate. 'You don't always take time to experience the joy, and I think that's more important than ever.' With D.C. hosting WorldPride, the world's largest LGBTQ+ festival, it's perhaps no surprise that the 20th edition of one of the longest-running Pride events in professional sports was the biggest version yet. But it was also held against the backdrop of the Trump administration's attack on transgender rights and diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, which has led some brands to distance themselves from Pride events. Within Major League Baseball, Pride nights have drawn attention in recent years, often because of players pushing back on the celebrations for religious reasons. In 2022, five Tampa Bay Rays players refused to wear the team's Pride night uniform, which featured rainbow colors on the jerseys and caps. In 2023, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, citing a 'desire to protect players,' said the league told its teams to avoid putting Pride logos on uniforms. That year, Nationals pitcher Trevor Williams invoked his Catholic faith when he voiced his opposition to the Los Angeles Dodgers' decision to honor the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a group whose members dress in colored habits and cloaks, on Pride night. Every MLB team except the Texas Rangers will celebrate Pride in some fashion this month. The Nationals, in partnership with Team DC, leaned into their celebration. 'From our end, it's a no-brainer that we're going to continue having a Night Out again and again, because our philosophy is that baseball is for everyone,' said Betsy Philpott, chief legal officer for the Nationals and a member of the organization's Pride employee resource group. 'It feels right, it feels like it's needed and like a good time to do it,' said D.C.-based drag queen Mari Con Carne, who wore black thigh-high boots and a flower-print top for her pregame performance. 'It's beautiful, it's love, and it's part of the resistance we're trying to show in any political climate. It's not just the past few months. It's been here forever, and celebration is a part of the resistance.' 'For the Nationals to really put themselves out there and make themselves an ally – not just saying things and not just having one Pride night, but doing things throughout the year – it's special, and it makes you feel safe as a queer person walking around,' said Colby, who will host a party at Atlantis on Friday and perform on the main stage at the WorldPride street festival on Saturday. 'Who would've thought that [a baseball stadium] would be a safe space for us?' While Night Out is among the Nationals' most successful special-ticket events, Philpott noted that the team holds various theme nights to celebrate many other cross-sections of the community throughout the season. 'We want to make sure that everyone in the DMV area feels comfortable coming to games and that they can be part of this experience of watching the Nationals with us,' Philpott said. On Thursday, a Pride flag flew beyond left field as a crowd of 30,402 filled the stands. Tom held up a Pride flag after winning the Presidents' Race, which featured Team DC scholarship winners at the finish line. The stadium lights and scoreboards featured rainbow colors and imagery throughout the night. Colby said the Nationals' latest celebration of the LGBTQ+ community came at an important time. 'It just seems so pertinent right now, especially for a lot of queer people, a lot of people of color,' she said after her ceremonial pitch and a pregame meet-and-greet with fans. 'We're feeling oppressed. Pride is a protest, so this is a perfect time to really just protest with absolute queer strength and celebration. That's our weapon of choice.'

Hiraku Morilla: ‘Pride means respect for those who walked so we could run'
Hiraku Morilla: ‘Pride means respect for those who walked so we could run'

Japan Times

time2 days ago

  • Japan Times

Hiraku Morilla: ‘Pride means respect for those who walked so we could run'

Hiraku Morilla, 40, has been the director of the Nakamura Keith Haring Collection since 2014, curating exhibitions and events about the American artist in the museum's facilities in Yamanashi Prefecture. Morilla advocates for the LGBTQ+ community through his work, combating discrimination and the stigmatization of HIV. 1. Can you tell us about your cultural background? I'm Japanese and Nuyorican (New York Puerto Rican). Expressing both Asian and Latino cultural identities at once has always felt disjointed — they're so far apart that embodying both never feels seamless. 2. How was your experience growing up in the Bronx? I was surrounded by rhythm and style. The way we spoke had cadence. The way we moved had rhythm. Manhattan was right there, but it felt like a different universe. We walked through metal detectors every morning at school. That's what it looks like when a system abandons the community. 3. What was it like being multiracial and queer? In my senior year of high school, I wrote a letter to myself that said, 'Do not come out as gay, no matter what.' I didn't want to be associated with the gay men who were mocked on TV, beat up in school or gossiped about. That changed when I started meeting them in real life. 4. How did your early life experiences shape your career? In Japan, New York becomes a kind of resume. But being Japanese and authentically New York throws people off. My New York isn't aesthetic or curated. It's survival. It's contradiction. It's lived, not borrowed. 5. How was working as a creative director under designer Patricia Field ('Sex and the City,' 'The Devil Wears Prada')? She valued authenticity. (Her brand) was a place where we had to prove ourselves — but we were family. Some of my pieces ended up on the cover of Vogue, on Beyoncé, on K-pop idols. Now it sounds surreal. Back then, it was just another Tuesday. 6. Why did you relocate to Japan? The catalyst was my mom's passing of pancreatic cancer in 2014. When I learned her condition had suddenly worsened, I packed up everything and flew straight to Japan to be with her. Just a few days after I arrived, she passed. 7. How are NYC and Tokyo different? What I like about living in Tokyo is the certainty. If I call a cab, it'll wait for me until I come out. In New York, if you take too long, it's gone. If the train's running late, Tokyo will tell you exactly how late. If you line up for something, you'll get in. If a package says 'open here' and you tear that part, it actually opens. 8. How did you end up as the director of the Nakamura Keith Haring Collection? Patricia suggested I visit the museum while I was in Japan. I did, and by chance I ran into the collector himself, Dr. (Kazuo) Nakamura. After a long conversation, he offered me a position. It was a rare chance to stay connected to New York while being in Japan. 9. What kinds of people visit the collection? All kinds. Older visitors often don't come for Haring; they just enjoy the area and happen to see a museum and drop by. Younger visitors tend to know Haring through K-pop. We also get a lot of Japanese celebrities and influencers. And of course, we have many LGBTQ+ visitors. We're not just the only Keith Haring museum in the world — we're also the only queer museum in Japan. 10. How does the location impact the visitor experience? Being in the mountains of Yamanashi — two hours from Tokyo by train or car — definitely affects our foot traffic. For some people, that distance feels like a burden. But at the same time, that distance creates something special. When you arrive, it's just you and Haring's work. No city noise, no gallery-hopping — just this one space, in nature, dedicated entirely to him. That isolation creates a kind of intimacy. It invites people to slow down, to really spend time with the art. 11. When did you first become aware of Haring? Growing up in New York, Haring was ubiquitous. As a kid, I automatically recognized his figures. Later, I also recognized him as a gay icon. But I really became aware of his depth as an artist and activist when I first visited the museum. "Haring's activism (is) not just relevant, but necessary," says Morilla of how the American artist's themes resonate in a contemporary Japanese context. | Koichi Nakazawa 12. What draws you to his work? The messaging. Take his faceless figures. They're simple, but emotionally loaded. That ability to express so much with so little is really powerful. Also, Haring's work is openly queer and deeply sex-positive. He's clearly attracted to masculinity, but not in a toxic way. That tenderness keeps drawing me in. 13. Why is Haring's legacy still relevant today? Unfortunately, we're still dealing with the same issues we were facing in the 1980s. But at the center of his work was always kindness. Keith would stand with you against racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, all of it. 14. How does your advocacy for LGBTQ+ issues and HIV awareness relate to Haring's legacy? Haring was openly gay and disclosed his HIV-positive status. In 1980s America, that meant putting himself at risk. In Japan, HIV infection rates are still increasing, and the government still hasn't recognized same-sex marriage. That makes Haring's activism not just relevant, but necessary. 15. What's your view on LGBTQ+ issues in Japan? There's a disconnect I see within the community here. There's a small, vocal group doing incredibly important work, pushing for rights and visibility. But sometimes, the focus is more on being digestible to straight audiences — presenting queerness as family-friendly, polished and easy to sympathize with. 16. What's the present situation of HIV awareness in Japan? Most guys I talk to know what PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis, a medication to prevent HIV infection) is. The message of U=U (an undetectable viral load equals untransmittable HIV) is more visible too. But PrEP is still not covered by national health insurance. Routine HIV testing still isn't normalized. We also need more mental health care. If prevention is neglected, we need support after diagnosis. You can't ignore people on both ends. 17. Do you face any discrimination in your daily life as an openly gay man in Japan? The fact that my human rights as a queer individual aren't recognized means I'm facing discrimination every day, whether it's obvious or not. 18. What do you think about Tokyo Rainbow Pride finally moving to June, in line with the rest of the world? I always thought it was kind of strange that it wasn't. Maybe it was because June is the rainy season here. The upside was that it added to Tokyo's eccentricity. But in terms of global visibility, aligning with the rest of the world makes sense. 19. What are your plans or projects for Pride Month this year? I'm hosting a lip-sync battle featuring Miss Grand Japan contestants at fancyHIM (a bar in Shinjuku Ni-chome). I've been one of the judges since 2018. I'm also doing a diversity, equity and inclusion workshop at (the hotel) W Osaka. I've been doing this with W every June. W Union Square was kind of a haven for us nightlife gays in New York. 20. What does Pride mean to you? When I was younger, Pride meant the NYC Pride parade. By the time the parade ended at Stonewall, I'd be making out with someone. But as I got older, I learned that Stonewall was the place where it all began. That's when Pride started to mean something deeper. Pride is respect for those who walked so we could run — or make out with boys in the street without fear.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store