With a swirl of glitter, sequins and samba, Rio de Janeiro kicks off its famed carnival parade Sunday, the climax of the festival's first full-on edition since COVID-19 and Brazil's bitterly divisive elections.
The world's biggest carnival, which officially opened Friday, will hit peak party level at the all-night parade competition Sunday and Monday.
The city's top 12 samba schools will vie to become the champions with dazzling floats, thundering music and thousands of singers, drummers and dancers in skimpy, feather-covered costumes.
"The happiness is double. With this carnival we can celebrate the end of (former president Jair Bolsonaro's) government and also leave behind the horrors of the pandemic," Amanda Olivia, 34, told AFP hours before she was due to participate in a parade.
"It's a different carnival," she said.
She was not alone in her sentiments.
After two pandemic-disrupted carnivals and the polarising presidential election in October, in which leftist Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva ousted incumbent Bolsonaro - an ultra-conservative carnival critic accused of authoritarian tendencies - Rio is ready to party.
The city cancelled carnival in 2021, and held a reduced version last year, banning the epic street parties known as "blocos" and postponing the parades by two months because of the pandemic, which has claimed nearly 700,000 lives in Brazil.
Now, the full-on festival is back.
Mayor Eduardo Paes declared the party open Friday, symbolically handing the key to the city to "King Momo," the jovial "monarch" who "rules" Rio for the four-day free-for-all.
"It is with great happiness, celebrating life, celebrating democracy, that I have the honour of handing the keys to the city to King Momo," said Paes, an avowed carnival lover.
Return to roots
"This is a moment of rebirth," said Pericles Monteiro, a founder of the massive annual street party known as "Heaven on Earth".
"We went through a very dark period, in terms of both politics and the pandemic," he told AFP at the party's 2023 edition - one of hundreds of street parties being held around carnival for the first time in three years.
The samba schools, the pride of Rio's impoverished favelas, spend months assembling the costumes and creating the over-the-top floats that are the trademarks of the parades.
The parades were often politically charged during the Bolsonaro years, with thinly veiled criticism of the far-right government over issues such as racism, religious intolerance, environmental destruction and Brazil's disastrous management of COVID-19.
This year's parades are less political.
Many of the schools are returning to their roots, choosing themes linked to founding figures of the samba genre, the Afro-Brazilian culture from which it emerged, and Brazil's northeast - the poor, majority-black and multiracial region that is the percussion-heavy musical style's spiritual home.