Parades to demonstrate gay pride may be a well-established fact of life in cities such as Paris and Berlin – but this is not the case in Sion. In this Catholic stronghold, which is also capital of the ruggedly mountainous Swiss canton of Valais, a group of six women and a man, led by Marianne Bruchez, dared to organise the first gay parade ever held in this small provincial town. The date: July 2001. It took real courage not to yield to the forces working against them: the community officials refused to issue the required permit for the parade, local protesters published a slanderous full-page article in the local newspaper associating “queers” with “devils” (“Aunts in Sion = diabolic temptation!”), and the gay community itself fell to wrangling, accusing the Valais organisers of being “too timid”. Marianne Bruchez, a young thirty-year-old woman with no previous experience as a gay activist, suddenly found herself making front-page news in Swiss newspapers, and being forced to accept high-profile media visibility of the worst sort. –SwissFilms.ch
Born in 1975 in Lausanne. Since 1992 co-manager and programmer at the Rex cinema in Aubonne. Since 1996 assistant director for various films and commercials. 1995-98 Studies Arts at the University of Lausanne. Since 2001 Head of Cinema department at ECAL (École Cantonale d’Art de Lausanne). –SwissFilms.ch