Skip to main content

‘Pride Prom’ welcomes DC-area high school students

WTOP is marking Pride Month by showcasing the people, places and important issues in the LGBTQ+ communities in the D.C. area. Check back all throughout June as we share these stories, on air and online.

[connatix_element_embed script_id=e913ba570aea41f8bb3992b8ffecf4e1 player_id=017c7a1c-d539-4b52-8914-7f990221b730 video_id=885df985-ffce-4cae-9fa5-1fa981bde342 align=right]

High school students from all around the D.C. area kicked off Pride Month Friday by putting on their dancing shoes and heading to Old Town Alexandria, Virginia, for Safe Space NOVA’s Pride Prom.

This is the second year in a row that the Torpedo Factory Art Center has been home to the Pride Prom, according to Amy Cannava, Safe Space NOVA’s program manager. The school psychologist who has helped plan six Pride Prom events said even with discounts, it costs between $10,000 and $15,000 to put on the event.

“It’s like putting on a wedding each year and going home single,” Cannava said. “I hear those voices and I hear from them year after year how much it meant, and then it’s all worth it.”

Fairfax high school student Satchel Blocker attended the Pride Prom for the first time with friends. They took a break from the dance floor and told WTOP what made this prom special.

“At Pride Prom, you can be who you are and date who you want,” Blocker said. “This place is more accepting than at a regular prom.”

For the second year, Kingswell McLean and their brother came from Cheverly, Maryland, to Alexandria to have fun at the prom.

McLean said they feel lucky to be there: “There’re a lot of individuals that don’t get to be themselves freely in their schools and have the opportunity to be in an accepting environment.”

D.C. area high school students packed Alexandria, Virginia's Torpedo Factory Art Center for Safespace NOVA’s Pride Prom on June 1, 2024.
D.C. area high school students packed Alexandria, Virginia’s Torpedo Factory Art Center for Safe Space NOVA’s Pride Prom on June 1, 2024. (WTOP/Jimmy Alexander)

Ethan Siegrist is a NoVa Pride board member.

“They are able to be their true selves without having the fear of being judged by their peers at a typical high school prom,” Siegrist said.

Siegrist, a private school Spanish teacher, performed at the prom in their drag persona “Evita Peroxide.”

Kat Beatty, a student at West Potomac High School and the daughter of a colonel in the Marines, said her father loved that she was going to the prom.

“He is someone that does not have a lot of emotion. He almost cried when he saw me in this (prom gown) because I looked so happy,” said Beatty.

Fairfax Co. police: Woman charged with assault for restraining daycare children with tape

An Alexandria, Virginia, woman who runs a county-licensed at-home daycare in Fairfax County turned herself in on Tuesday on charges of assaulting children who were under her care. Police received an initial report of an assault in the 3600 block of Paul Street in Bailey's Crossroads on Aug. 1, according to a news release shared by the Fairfax County police on Friday.
Read Next Story