Krewe celebrates 25 years in Mardi Gras Fashion


The
Krewe of Centaur turns 25 this year and presented King Larry Ryan and
Queen Diane Aillet at the Grand Bal XXV on Jan. 16 at the Shreveport
Convention Center. The Centaur parade, one of the largest parade in
North Louisiana, rolls at 4:30 p.m. Jan. 30, beginning on Clyde Fant
Parkway near Sci-Port: Louisiana’s Science Center and ending at Preston
Street at Kings Highway.
Angela
Costakis has been a member of Centaur for about 13 years. “This is the
largest event in the Ark-La-Tex pulling in over half a million people
for the Centaur parade on a weekend with good weather,” she said. “You
get to tailgate, and it’s family friendly. It’s easy to park and easy to
get here.”
Krewe of
Centaur King 25 is Larry Ryan and even though it’s his first time as
king, he’s been involved from the beginning. In fact, him and his late
wife, Suzy, helped bring Mardi Gras to Natchitoches.
“Every
year, the Centaur parade and crowds get bigger, he said. “We put about
400,000 people into that parade route. They come from Nebraska and
Kansas and Missouri and Texas and Oklahoma. We wanted it to be really
fun. We’ve had blue collars and white collars and commanders from
Barksdale, and every one of them stood there with a hammer and paint
with women bossing them around.”
•••• CENTAUR ROYALTY ••••
The
Centaur membership as a whole elects the king and queen, while the
dukes and duchesses volunteer and are selected by drawing.
“They are ceremonial,” Costakis said.
“They
have no real governing power over the krewe, but they represent the
krewe ceremoniously to the community and at other Mardi Gras events. The
captain and the board of directors govern the Krewe of Centaur. Under
them, you have a lieutenant guarding every float, and the riders report
up to the lieutenants. The lieutenants elect a lieutenant coordinator
who sits on the board and represents them on the board.”
The Krewe of Centaur has actually created its own royal lineage.
“If
you serve as royalty, you carry that with you,” Costakis said. “You are
still invited to royalty events even if you aren’t serving anymore.
Once you serve as a king and queen, you are recognized at virtually
every Centaur event. You will always be King 24 or Queen 14.”
There
are many parties and gatherings hosted by various krewes and their
royalty leading up to Twelfth Night, the official kick-off of the Mardi
Gras season.
“Actually,
you hear of the days of the British and the French court and the
courtesans that are constantly visiting one another,” Costakis said. “We
have 14 krewes in this area and a captain’s council that meets monthly.
We have a lot of royal inter-krewe events during the months between
coronations and the actual parades. It is based in tradition and
history.”
•••• ART IN THE BEGINNING ••••
Harvey
Dillahunty is a founding member of Centaur, serving as King No. 9 in
2000, and he remembers the very first meeting back in 1991, at a popular
bar and hangout called Cowboys. “My sister Linda told me they were
having a meeting at Cowboys to talk about the Krewe of Centaur and when
we got there, there were 200 people. I hardly knew anybody in that
room.”
Dillahunty
said he quickly got to know more people in the krewe. “Just by working
on the floats, we met 40 or 50 people that year. That’s what it’s all
about. It’s a wonderful social organization, and it’s all about fun,”
Dillahunty said.
Surprisingly,
there hasn’t been a whole lot of change in Centaur except for the
tremendous growth of the organization and the parade it presents to
North Louisiana. That growth means more people and more parties, but the
bar for creativity was set pretty high very early on.
“Some
of the people who helped organize Centaur were artists, and it was an
off year for Christmas in the Sky,” Dillahunty said. “They kind of set
our creativity level, and it just keeps getting better.”
Dillahunty
said the Mardi Gras season for this year is shorter since it falls on
Feb. 9. “When I was king, I got to enjoy my reign for two months. The
ball is real exciting. It’s very formal and personalities change when
you put on a mask,” he said.
•••• FLOATING ON ••••
Technology has brought change to the floatmaking process, which Dillahunty said just keeps getting better.
“Our
floats can now hold 40 people. LED lighting, and better wiring and
generators make it easier, but the basic float is on a trailer.”
That
was not always the case. Capt. Randy James, who leads Centaur’s board
of directors, remembers the acquisition of two school buses from the
Caddo Parish School Board auction well.
“We
took them to Pipes, and they took each one down to a hood, the fender
the steering wheels. They also left the seats and the two doors. I had
to drive it down [Interstate 20] one time, with a friend following me.
When we got to a red light there were three ladies standing on the bus
stop. I pulled up next to them and asked, ‘You girls going uptown or
downtown?’ I took off without a word and when I turned around to look at
them they were still standing there shocked. My favorite float ever was
that same float when we turned it into a long guitar and riders dressed
up as their favorite musicians.”
Costakis
pointed out the school bus floats are the only ones with real drivers.
“The driver actually sits down. All the rest of the floats are towed by
trucks.”
Dillahunty
had his own experiences to share about the bus floats. “One year, we
had just started the parade and got to Shreve City and when we stopped,
the float died in the middle of Shreveport Barksdale Highway. We all got
out and pushed and got the driver to pop the clutch, and it cranked
right up.”
Another
year, the parade had just begun pulling out of the Pierre Bossier Mall
into the parade route when a tire went flat. “We didn’t have a spare,”
Dillahunty said. “They pushed our float over to the side at I-20.
Brock’s in West Shreveport got a spare tire and put it on our float and
got it going again, but the police chief said it was too late. But Mike
Middleton just happened to be riding the float with us, and he was a
Caddo Parish Deputy. He pulled the police officers to the side and said,
‘Please don’t do this to them. They’ve worked all year long on this.’
He talked them into letting us go, but the parade was almost to the
Shreveport Barksdale Bridge. They gave us a police escort and I felt
like I was in the movie ‘Animal House’ with the float is racing down the street.”
The
captain and the entire krewe were holding the parade on the bridge to
let the tardy float, catch up when, to make matters worse, a car ran
right into the side of the float.
“It
didn’t cripple the float,” Dillahunty said. “The officers just said,
‘Y’all keep going.’ We were the last float, and we still had all of our
throws we hadn’t thrown in Bossier, so we had a ton of throws for the
crowd. Now all Centaur floats carry a spare tire.”
“When
you’re in a krewe, you’re assigned to a float, and you spend a lot of
time with your float family,” Costakis said. “Every float has its own
little stall, and the float people, the riders, typically have
refrigerators, grills and tailgating set ups.”
•••• CELEBRATING CENTAUR ••••
There
have been many milestone celebrations for Centaur, with celebrities
such as Bill Paxton and local Bill Joyce serving as grand marshal, but
Mardi Gras 2012, shortly after the 9/11 attacks, was particularly
memorable.
“After
9/11, we actually brought firefighters and police officers from New
York to participate,” Dillahunty said. “We made them grand marshals.”
Mardi
Gras is all about the crazy, however. “We’ve seen fathers put kids on
their shoulders and walk right up to the first level and the kids will
just put their arms around a throw container and just start
scooping and dumping throws down to all the people,” Costakis said.
“That is the equivalent of walking into a jewelry store and stealing
everything you can. Not to mention the safety. We’ve also had people in
the crowd throw whole cans or bottles of beers at riders. We don’t love
that.”
James said the krewe stresses the importance of being family oriented.
“We
stressed that we were going to be the fun group, the family crew,”
James said. “We really think we are making this community better. It’s a
free parade for the entire community, and it just makes people happy.”
“I
have ridden in New Orleans Mardi Gras and I have friends there,” added
Dillahunty. “But whenever you ride in your home town, it’s just so much
more fulfilling. Upstate, as I call it. You see all these people you
know when you’re throwing. It’s really special. There is less pain, such
as the wildness of the French Quarter, but the pomp and circumstance of
it all is definitely similar. It’s a wonderful time.”
Learn more:
For more information about the Krewe of Centaur, go to kreweofcentaur.org.
For a complete listing of Mardi Gras parade times and street closure information, go to www.shreveportla.gov/index.aspx?NID=407.
Mardi Gras Calendar
Jan. 23 • Line up at 3 p.m., start at 4:30 p.m. Minden Fasching Parade. • 1 p.m. Springhill Parade Info: 539-5681.
Jan. 29 • 5:30 to 9 p.m., Krewe of Centaur Float Loading Party
Jan. 30 • 4:30 p.m., Krewe of Centaur Parade, Clyde Fant, Shreveport- Barksdale, Kings Highway (ends at Preston)
Jan. 31 • noon, Barkus & Meoux Pet Parade, Bossier City (former location of Reeves Marine, Bossier Parkway)
Feb. 5 • 5 p.m., Krewe of Gemini Float Loading. Open to the Public. Located at Gemini Den 2101 East Texas St. Bossier City
Feb. 6 • 4:30 p.m., Krewe of Gemini Parade,Clyde Fant, Shreveport- Barksdale, Kings Highway (ends at Preston)
Feb. 7 • 1 p.m., Krewe of Highland Parade, Highland Neighborhood. For more information, email kreweofhighlandparade@gmail. com or follow their Facebook page.