Print Close |
|
This month's festival pick...Carnaval in RioThe
elephant in The Cultured Traveler’s living room
By Patrick TottyI’ve never been to Carnaval in Rio, so I’ll be damned if
I’m even going to try to fake saying anything relevant about it. The best I can do is say why I’d like to go, or what I’d
do if I ever get there. Each person who goes to Rio has his own reasons
for doing so, although Carnaval’s fleshpots probably would overwhelm
even the most sincere resolutions to visit museums and sample nearby
rain forests. So, along with indulging my prurient sugarplum visions of
buff, shimmying, sexy, gaudily semi-clad bodies, the prim anthropologist
in me would love to have a look-see at a people who can combine
Apollonian orderliness with Dionysian abandon and make it look like a
walk in the park. Consider: Almost the whole town (the comatose excepted)
wobbles its way into a whooping, hollering four-day-long samba trance,
shedding inhibitions, clothes and all sense of time. Yet even as Rio’s
population is twitching rhythmically everywhere the urge strikes,
members of the city’s famous escolas de samba (samba clubs) are
frantically practicing like British beefeater cadets to perfect the
routines they hope will win them honors at Rio’s great Sambódromo
competition venue. Who are these people who pursue their last splurge
before Lent with a German efficiency that they seamlessly meld with
Italian-like insouciance and African musicality? I’m certain I could
take good notes despite the. . .uh. . .did you see that?!.
. . distractions. Another part of me wonders what daily life is like in a city
that’s a dream to so many people worldwide. Rio has a downtown, with
high-rise buildings and a rush hour, department stores and schools, as
well as a heavily trafficked harbor. During the 361 other days of the
year when Cariocas have to wear their normal business suits and
thongs, what does the city feel like? Are the cabbies as hard-bitten as
New York’s? Are the bus drivers surly mumblers like the ones in San
Francisco? There’d always be the possibility of winding up in jail
during Carnaval. In a moment of exuberance or ignorance I could insult
the wrong person or make some goofy auslander move that ticks off
the locals and puts me in a cell. So, at the height of earth’s biggest
party, how do they treat prisoners in Rio stir? Do they pipe in samba
music? Do the guards look the other way if somebody passes around some
unconfiscated moonshine? Can you get a conjugal visit even if you’re
only in on a misdemeanor? Finally, I wonder about Rio’s smell. Aside from salt air
and tropical vegetation, the city must have other scents that belong to
only it. Most travel stories touch only lightly on smell, since it’s
the hardest of the senses to discuss. If you’ve never smelled vanilla,
how the heck does somebody describe it to you?
|
|