RIO DE JANEIRO, Feb 13 — Brazil’s superstar drag queen Pabllo Vittar was the closing highlight in Rio de Janeiro’s final samba parades yesterday, further turning up the political temperature at a carnival that has castigated the country’s leaders.

The last six parades in the two-night extravaganza at the 72,000 capacity Sambodromo stadium began with the famed Unidos da Tijuca samba school.

After the traditional fireworks salute, Tijuca kicked off in a thundering barrage from drummers in glossy blue suits. Massed ranks of dancers and singers dressed as jellyfish, then a float representing a coral reef, came on their heels — the first contingent of some 3,000 performers.

Vittar was due to appear in the last parade with the Beija Flor school in the early hours of Tuesday.

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The hugely popular singer’s participation promised a new edge to the annual samba contest, whose first night on Sunday was already marked by colourful digs at unpopular politicians.

Tall, with long blond hair, Vittar fits perfectly into the flamboyant, anything-goes atmosphere of the Sambodromo. On arriving to watch parades Sunday, the drag queen was met with shrieks and cheers from fans.

“I am very emotional,” the singer said on Globo television of his “great love” for the Sambodromo.

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“This was part of my childhood. I always followed the Rio carnival and today I am fulfilling my dream.”

Vittar will bolster one of Beija Flor’s principal themes in its parade — the fight against sexual and other forms of intolerance.

It’s an issue of deadly importance for gay and transgender Brazilians: the rights group Grupo Gay de Bahia reported in January that there were 387 murders of LGBT people in 2017, a 30 per cent increase over the previous year.

Carnival-phobic mayor

Beija Flor will also use floats and costumes to take aim at a corruption scandal that has spread from national oil company Petrobras through Brazil’s whole political class over the last four years.

This follows a first night during which two of the seven parades featured stinging attacks on government graft and Rio’s carnival-unfriendly mayor, Marcelo Crivella.

Crivella — a bishop in the evangelical mega-church founded by his billionaire uncle — can hardly conceal his disdain for the carnival’s excesses of the flesh ahead of the start of Roman Catholic Lent on Ash Wednesday.

He has halved carnival subsidies and refuses to attend the parades.

The Mangueira samba school responded with a big bare plastic backside on one of their floats.

“The bum represents the mayor for cutting our budget, for trying to end our happiness,” said Mangueira staff member Helton Dias, 28.

Centre-right President Michel Temer, who has single-digit support in polls and is awash in corruption scandals, was portrayed in the Paraiso do Tuiuti school’s parade as a money-grabbing vampire.

‘Anesthetic’ for hurting country -

The faceoff between the samba schools in the purpose-built Sambodromo is taken every bit as seriously as the city’s other great love, football.

The 13 competing schools each get about an hour to parade in front of judges and tens of thousands of hyped up fans.

Last year, the contest ended in a draw between the Mocidade and Portela schools. The new champion will be announced on Wednesday.

For many, carnival offers a moment to forget about Brazil’s profound problems — at least for a few days.

Latin America’s biggest country is only just emerging from its worst recession in history. In swaths of Rio, crime is out of control, the economy remains moribund and social services for the poor are in tatters.

“People need these fantasies,” said physiotherapist Marcio de Castro, 53, as he prepared his costume for the Sao Clemente school’s parade. “It’s as if during carnival, we all take an anesthetic.”

But reality still intrudes.

Samba composer Moacyr Luz arrived by taxi at the Sambodromo’s staging area in the early hours of Monday and was promptly robbed, O Globo news site reported.

The thieves even took his costume. — AFP