What Does Pride Mean to Pittsburgh?

This year’s Pride Month in Pittsburgh leans into joy, and feels more necessary than ever.

A woman places two rainbow veggie flatbread pizzas on a table with other pride foods.

Celebrating Pride Month in Pittsburgh

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Pride. The word has carried various meanings across history. In Late Old English it represented someone guilty of the sin of pride. In Old French, however, it signified someone who is brave or valiant. What are the nuances of the word within the LGBTQIA+ community today? TABLE looked for answers with an office Pride Party that brought together leaders in the Pittsburgh community.  

A man in a suit climbs on a ladder to hang up pink decor around a circular light.

A Joyful Party at TABLE Studios

On a sunny day in the city, rainbow colors bounce off the windows at TABLE Studios in Shadyside. Tables are lined with glasses of bubbly, homemade rainbow popsicles, beautiful vegetable skewers, and other handheld foods. What at first looks like a fun party (which of course it was), has a much deeper meaning. As of January 2025, LGBTQIA+ human rights have come under fire. New executive orders recognize only two genders, stop transgender treatments and surgeries in major medical institutes, restrict those under 18 from transitioning, undo protections that have been in place for ages, and even take down essential LGBTQIA+ and HIV resources on the federal websites. How does the LGBTQIA+ community respond to such a siege? By living authentically. Emphasizing joy. Keeping discouragement at bay. 

A woman holding a pride popsicle cocktail greets a man in a black long sleeve with glasses.
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The guest list for our party included several small local LGBTQIA+ business owners like Richard Parsakian from Eons Fashion Antique and Donal Levi Donovan of the fitness company Free Will PGH. The list also included influential individuals in charge of uplifting diversity in the city such as Hazell Azzer of AIDS Free Pittsburgh and Gina Winstead of the Carnegie Museum of Art. Our Pride Party, like the month-long celebration of Pride each June, welcomed everyone with a space for conversation, solace, and a few extra treats to help celebrate the persistence of the community.  

A man in a black hat holds a forkful of food up to his mouth.

Pride Then and Pride Now

TABLE Magazine Editor-in-Chief Keith Recker helped put together this gathering with memories of Pride Month dating back to the 80s. For him, celebrating Pride isn’t just another way to bring queer people together. It’s a way to fight back, to appreciate those who have fought before us, and to do it all with EVERYONE involved. Gay, bisexual, transgender, non-binary, and allies: everyone can flock together. With bravery, confidence, and determination. With pride.  

A woman smiles at a crowd of people at a pride aprty.
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“I went to my first Pride parade in 1986, a few months after moving to NYC after grad school,” tells Recker. “I was 24. And worried. Just when most people pulse with the confidence and invulnerability of youth, I was getting acquainted with death. Friends from my undergrad years at CMU had died of AIDs, guys whose radiant faces I still remember and whose memory still stops my heart. Other friends were falling ill.”

A man leans forward with a LOVE pin in silver on his jacket.

“Pride was an afternoon of relief from all of that. For a few hours, we felt invincible. Together, who could beat us? Pride was like both a celebration of how far we’d come, and how far we would go. Together, the buttoned-up businesspeople among us, the ‘out there’ protesters, all the genders, all the colors, a spectrum of allies, ALL the people who were with us, pressed the energy and unity of Pride into the public sphere throughout the years.” 

Two wine glasses hold a red cocktail with a rainbow popsicle sticking out of each.

Where Pittsburgh’s Pride is Heading

The consensus of our party guests? That’s the energy we need again. To feel joy while also making a statement. As guests munched on rainbow bites like fruit parfaits, potato pancakes, and flatbread veggie pizzas from Square Cafe and our TABLE team, they worked toward that goal, expressing their plans for the future and their concerns about the present. Free Will Gym owner Donal Levi Donovan sees events like these as a gateway to overcoming those obstacles.  

A blue platter with rounds of fruit like strawberries, blueberries, and mandarin orange pieces.

“We need to gather together right now to communicate our needs and show up for each other’s specific challenges,” explains Donovan. “I think we need to unify as much as possible and protect each part of the community, especially when it comes to laws and discrimination. Pride looks like joy, and it can only be held together with support and safety.” 

A person in a neck scarf holds a wine glass with a red cocktail and rainbow popsicle while talking to a man in a black shirt.

Showing Pride Outside of June

It’s not just the leaders and business owners of Pittsburgh that are facing this challenge. Drag performers and queer citizens alike are finding their own rights and lives in danger. Performer, host, and drag show producer Luna Skye experiences challenges daily. But it’s being confident in who she is and what she does that pushes her to keep stepping onto that stage each night, no matter what threats are fired at her.  

“I think pride within queer people is just even stepping out of their safe spaces every single day,” says Luna Skye. “Because no matter what, it could be a little scary out there. But whenever anyone is just living their authentic selves, it doesn’t matter what other people think. Knowing what they know within themselves and being happy and prideful is everything. Like just walking around every day and knowing in their own mind at the gas station while pumping gas that, ‘Oh, yeah. I’m gay as hell, living my best life, pumping this gas, slay.’” 

A man with an open jacket and no shirt underneath holds a wine glass with a red cocktail in it.

Truly, that’s only the starting point. There’s still a long way to go until safety and security for the full community is in place. But, in times like these, it’s important to remember those who came before us in a time where being gay or transgender could get you arrested. Or fired. Or harrassed. Brave people of the past stood arm in arm, fighting for rights for people they did not even know. Out of that unified effort came marriage equality, autonomy of trans folks, and frankly, the capacity to just be. If so much progress could be made decades ago in the face of a resistant system, why couldn’t we make even more progress today? We can. 

Small fried brown bals with a white sauce on top sit on a red plate.

Try Our Rainbow Pride Recipes

Make your own Pride party at home using these delicious, rainbow recipes.

Pride Popsicles

7 rainbow pride popsicles sit on a black table with lemon slices sitting beneath a few of them.

Easy Rainbow Pesto Veggie Flatbread Pizza

Two rainbow veggie flatbread pizzas sit on a black counter top.

5 Tips for Fruit and Vegetable Skewers

Various rainbow vegetable skewers sit in a large bowl on a black table.

Rainbow Fruit Parfait for Pride Month

A rainbow pride fruit parfait in colored layers sits in a clear with whipped cream adn granola on top.

Story by Kylie Thomas
Photography by Jeff Swensen
Food and drink by Sheree Goldstein, Square Café, and the TABLE team
Event design by Star Laliberte

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