Unless something ELSE happens, the event starts gathering at 6 PM on Sat., Oct. 23, at Farnsworth Park amphitheatre.
Park officials had cancelled the event by performance artists Annie Sprinkle and Elizabeth Stephens, who have married each other and different aspects of nature in several “weddings” performed around the world. They had planned a “purple wedding to the moon” in Farnsworth Park, which was cancelled after parks officials read about the nature of the event in Altadenablog, citing crowds and public safety.
In a press release titled “LA COUNTY PARKS AND LAPD ALLOW BIG, GAY, ECOSEXUAL ART- WEDDING IN FARNSWORTH PARK TO GO ON,” organizer Lindsay Kelley writes that officials relented when faced with constitutional legal challenges and ample evidence that the park and amphitheater can handle the number of people expected.
The release says that constitutional lawyer Terry Gross, who is also the Burning Man Festival’s general counsel, “forced the LA Parks and Rec Department to withdraw its cancellation, by demonstrating to the Parks and Recreation Department that the cancellation violated state and federal constitutions and laws — just in time for the upcoming nuptials to proceed as planned.”
LA County Parks officials have backed off, and it looks like the “eco-sexual purple wedding to the moon” is back on at Farnsworth Park.
Park officials had cancelled the event by performance artists Annie Sprinkle and Elizabeth Stephens, who have married each other and different aspects of nature in several “weddings” performed around the world. They had planned a “purple wedding to the moon” in Farnsworth Park, which was cancelled after parks officials read about the nature of the event in Altadenablog, citing crowds and public safety.
In a press release titled “LA COUNTY PARKS AND LAPD ALLOW BIG, GAY, ECOSEXUAL ART- WEDDING IN FARNSWORTH PARK TO GO ON,” organizer Lindsay Kelley writes that officials relented when faced with constitutional legal challenges and ample evidence that the park and amphitheater can handle the number of people expected.
The release says that constitutional lawyer Terry Gross, who is also the Burning Man Festival’s general counsel, “forced the LA Parks and Rec Department to withdraw its cancellation, by demonstrating to the Parks and Recreation Department that the cancellation violated state and federal constitutions and laws — just in time for the upcoming nuptials to proceed as planned.”