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Billy Porter delivers powerful speech at Miami Beach Pride after receiving key to the city

Billy Porter delivers powerful speech at Miami Beach Pride after receiving key to the city

Billy Porter
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"There's no room for silence. We speak, we write, we do language. This is how civilizations heal," the two-time Tony Award winner said in a speech.

simbernardo

Billy Porter has the keys!

During a VIP media event to celebrate the start of Miami Beach Pride on Thursday, April 12, Broadway legend and Our Son star Billy Porter was presented with the keys to the city of Miami Beach by city commissioner Alex Fernandez.

Fernandez said in his speech to Porter:

"For what you signify to all of us, and because you are the key to the happiness and the joy of so many, it's my distinct honor on behalf of our mayor, on behalf of our city commission, but most importantly, on behalf of our residents and our community, to present to you this beautiful key: the key to the city of Miami Beach."

Instagram (@commissioneralexfernandez)

After receiving the keys to the city of Miami Beach, the Pose actor delivered a powerful and passionate speech about the currently challenges faced by the LGBTQ+ community.

"I was 16 years old at the beginning of the AIDS crisis. We didn't have the luxury to hide," Porter said. "We didn't have the luxury to not be active. We had to go straight to the front lines to fight for our lives, and that's exactly what we did. We came together as a community, we fought back, and we succeeded in. Yes, the world changed because we came together."

He continued:

"We're now in a position where we must come together again. We must fight the forces of evil that are trying to destroy us. The one thing that I do know, and the one message that I try to exude everywhere I go, is that the change has already happened. We don't have any time for fear. Toni Morrison says, this is precisely the time when artists go to work. There's no need for fear. There's no room for silence. We speak, we write, we do language. This is how civilizations heal."

"I'm an artist," Porter added. "The only way I know how to do it is through my art. I am grateful that I can do it through my art. I am grateful that the people are receiving that, that you are receiving what it is that I'm trying to do. (…) Coming from the civil rights movement, you know, there's a song called 'A Change Is Gonna Come.' I love that song, but the change came, and the change went. What are we gonna do now?"

He concluded:

"It's time for all of us to come together and figure out what 'going high' looks like in this new world order. It is not 1963. We cannot use the same tactics. I am not a politician, so I don't know what the answer is. But it's not what we're doing now. It's time to re-engage. It's time to pay attention again. It's time to get in these streets again. This is not a parade, it's a march. That's what it was when we started. This march [is] political."

For more information about Miami Beach Pride 2024, visit MiamiBeachPride.com.

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Bernardo Sim

Bernardo Sim is the deputy editor of Out, as well as a writer and content creator. Born in Brazil, he currently lives in South Florida. You can follow him on Instagram at @bernardosim.

Bernardo Sim is the deputy editor of Out, as well as a writer and content creator. Born in Brazil, he currently lives in South Florida. You can follow him on Instagram at @bernardosim.