Macy's parade still to roll in NYC

Event revised for safety, but casts to perform, balloons to fly

Performers walk off the set Wednesday during a pretaping of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in front of the flagship store in New York.
(AP/Mary Altaffer)
Performers walk off the set Wednesday during a pretaping of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in front of the flagship store in New York. (AP/Mary Altaffer)

NEW YORK -- The pandemic, which shut down theaters in March, may have upended most traditions this holiday season, but the annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade will march on with balloons, dancers, floats, Broadway shows and Santa -- albeit heavily edited for safety.

"Traditions like this are comforting and they're uplifting," said Susan Tercero, executive producer of the New York City parade. "New York has always been a tough city. It bounces back. It takes its blows and then it continues on. And I think it's extremely important for us to be that display this holiday season. Regardless of what's happened, New York needs to be that beacon of light in the darkness and this parade, I think, is symbolic of that."

The Macy's parade has been a traditional holiday season kickoff for more than 90 years, and spectators often line up a half-dozen deep along the route to cheer about 8,000 marchers, two dozen floats, entertainers and marching bands. At last year's parade, the big fear was high wind. This time, it's a pandemic that has made crowds untenable.

The biggest change this year is that the usual 2½-mile route through crowded Manhattan has been scrapped in favor of concentrating events to a one-block stretch of 34th Street in front of the retailer's flagship Manhattan store. Many performances have been pre-taped and most of the parade's performers will be locally based to cut down on travel.

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The parade will feature performances from the Broadway casts of "Hamilton," "Mean Girls" and "Jagged Little Pill," a musical built around the music of Alanis Morissette. The Broadway performances were taped days before the parade.

Things felt a lot different for actor Derek Klena, who was in the 2017 parade as part of the cast of "Anastasia." This year, he's Tony Award-nominated for his role in "Jagged Little Pill" and helped perform "You Learn" from the Tony-nominated show.

The cast was quarantined for two weeks before taping and tested regularly for the virus. Cast members rehearsed in masks until the moment cameras started rolling and kept socially distant. They sang live this time instead of years past when casts lip-synched.

"Although the circumstances were much different, it was still so magical and fulfilling to get to share that experience with your fellow castmates after being distant for so long," said Klena.

"I think it was important to everybody to find a way to still celebrate this event and celebrate the shows and the companies that all get to share in this amazing event."

This year's lineup of balloons includes Snoopy, "Diary of a Wimpy Kid," "The Elf on the Shelf," Chase from "Paw Patrol," Pikachu, the Pillsbury Doughboy, Ronald McDonald, SpongeBob SquarePants and "Trolls." New this time are "The Boss Baby" and Red Titan from "Ryan's World."

The giant cartoon-character balloons will be flown without the traditional 80 to 100 rope-pulling handlers assigned to each inflatable and will instead be tethered to specialized vehicles.

Pentatonix, Ally Brooke, Keke Palmer, Sofia Carson, Leslie Odom Jr. and Jordin Sparks will perform, and there will be floats from "Blue's Clues," "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" and Lego. There will be a New York City Ballet ballerina with a performance from "The Nutcracker," an all-female samba drumline and acrobats from "The Big Apple Circus," and the Rockettes will be out in force. The parade ends with an appearance from Santa Claus.

Another change this year was the decision to spotlight many of the New York City parades that were canceled in the spring and fall because of the pandemic -- the St. Patrick's Day Parade, the Mermaid Parade, the Puerto Rican Day Parade and NYC Pride March.

"We're going to be highlighting them, and we're going to be really giving them a chance to shine," said Tercero. "You're going to be able to see creativity in this entertainment come to life that has sort of been dormant for the past seven months."

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