Carnevale 2025
Corso Garibaldi is the street where the Magnolias bloom in Lucca.
We are on the cusp of a change of seasons in Italy. No, not winter into spring quite yet (though here in Lucca the Magnolias are just beginning to bloom). I mean the shift from the season of Carnevale into the season of Lent.
The last Carnevale events in Lucca and Viareggio are scheduled for the first week of March, a last bit of fun and folly just before the seriousness of Lent begins on the 5th.
In Lucca, the biggest Carnival event was the Sfilata delle Maschere (Parade of Masks) on February 23rd. The procession began along Lucca’s historic walls and slowly worked its way to the center of town, ending in a big celebration in Piazza San Michele.
The sfilata involved much more than just masks. Viareggio sent groups of costumed performers and some of their smaller floats.
While the huge floats in Viareggio’s parades require big crews to operate them and move them along, the ones sent to Lucca were the smaller carri (wagons) that take just one or two persons to operate.
The parade began with the arrival of Burlamacco and Ondina, the official mascots of the event. Their arrival was followed by a marching band and a special float – a large leopard created especially for Lucca.
This leopard was one of the biggest floats, requiring a tractor to pull it along the parade route.
Then came groups of costumed dancers and performers. Could I tell you exactly what some of these groups represented? Not a chance – but all were entertaining and, in the tradition of Viareggio’s Carnevale, a bit political, with a dash of the allegorical, and a whole lot of wild.
One group of carri, each with a single person steering it, represented the spoils of war and the big money interests that favor it (at least that is my interpretation). The giant money hungry pig was certainly impressive. The sign on his float translates to “Lunch is served. As long there is war there is hope”. His waiters served up barrels of oil and tanks. This type of social commentary is exactly what I expect from Viareggio during Carnevale.
My favorite group of floats brought graceful acrobats twirling high above the crowd. The were called In Equilibrio Sopra La Follia which translates to Balanced Above the Madness. Seemed an appropriate theme for this year to me.
The final float was the largest. A train full of paper mâché people waving to the crowd.
Alongside the parade, the crowd included lots of costumed children and adults too.
What a fun way to celebrate Carnevale before the much more sedate season of Lent arrives.