Versuchen GOLD - Frei
It's time to come out, sprinkle the glitter and enjoy the Pride of London
The London Standard
|July 03, 2025
From how to see the parade to the best after-parties, here's your ultimate Pride guide
As the blinds roll down on a sweltering June and Pride Month, London is readying itself for perhaps the biggest party of the year — the Pride march, which this year falls on Saturday July 5 (Trans+ Pride follows on Saturday July 26, and UK Black Pride on Sunday August 10).
More than 35,000 people are expected to attend, from more than 500 LGBTQ+ community groups; each will be marching not just in celebration, but in protest. It is sometimes forgotten, obscured by all the sequins and rainbows, that Pride began and remains an LGBTQ+ protest against the discrimination and injustice that many of the 1.8 million British adults in the queer community still face, sometimes with depressing regularity.
Pride has been marching in London since 1972, inspired in heavy part by the June 1969 riots in Greenwich Village, New York, when gay bar Stonewall was raided by police from the “Public Morals Division”. The raid itself was not unusual — the NYPD unit of the 1960s enforced all “vice” laws, and had the power to arrest gay people by force — but the bar fighting back was. The officers barricaded themselves inside, and the riots ran for the five following nights.
The idea of Pride — of people standing up for themselves, their sexuality, their freedom — was born.
Since those early marches in the 1970s, the Pride march has changed somewhat, becoming what Londoners might recognise today — a joy-filled day of unfiltered, unadulterated self-expression, of music and dancing and more than a handful of outfits that make Carnival goers look demure. A day, at heart, of love.
From the parade itself to the unmissable parties and artsy ways to celebrate, here's where and how to get involved.
THE PRIDE PARADE
The main event. The parade, on Saturday July 5, is this year themed around “the power of communities”, recognising the positive change that solidarity among minorities can enact.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 03, 2025-Ausgabe von The London Standard.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The London Standard
The London Standard
MP Jeremy Corbyn dines at Mestizo, picks up books at Foyles and loves a trip to Park Theatre
I lived in a bedsit owned by a lovely Italian man who made wine in the basement, which he pressed from grapes he brought back in his Fiat
2 mins
November 20, 2025
The London Standard
One to Watch
LOUD, ANNOYING, HILARIOUS- THE ISLE OF WIGHT'S HOT NEW PUNK DUO THE PILL ARE THE MEDICINE WE NEED
2 mins
November 20, 2025
The London Standard
Turn up the volume with this brand new hair tweakment service
John Frieda Salon is on a mission to help revive and restore thinning locks
2 mins
November 20, 2025
The London Standard
Can Arsenal cope without the league’s most influential player?
Their defensive colossus is the one player they don’t want to be missing in title chase.
3 mins
November 20, 2025
The London Standard
At the table: The perfect antidote to imperfect times
Perfection is blander than personality.
3 mins
November 20, 2025
The London Standard
MI5 sends fresh warning over Chinese espionage
WHAT THEY SAY \"The warning was meant for British parliamentarians, of course, but MI5 and the government are also trying to send a signal to China,\" writes Dominic Waghorn.
2 mins
November 20, 2025
The London Standard
Review: Need a sound night's sleep? These earbuds can even cancel your neighbours
I am incredibly noise-sensitive. I have the disposition of an irritable bat, which is only exacerbated in a sleep setting. And I have neighbours whose noise is constant: coughing, kids screaming, shouting.
1 min
November 20, 2025
The London Standard
CHEAT THE INTERNET
THE STORIES LIGHTING UP SOCIAL MEDIA THIS WEEK
2 mins
November 20, 2025
The London Standard
Shabana Mahmood faces revolt over her asylum changes
DAILY MAIL “For the millions in this country who want an end to unchecked illegal migration, Shabana Mahmood’s proposals for a Danish-style asylum system are a decent start. There are simple, commonsense tweaks to rules widely regarded as far too generous. A key sticking point will be Mahmood’s struggle to sell the proposals to her own backbenchers.
3 mins
November 20, 2025
The London Standard
Is London's Billionaires' Row really back in business?
The once ghost town of the uber-rich is now attracting the likes of Ariana Grande.
6 mins
November 20, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

