After two tragedies, Orlando’s nightlife scene has to learn how to party again
ORLANDO—Outside of the venue, balloons wave in the wind as melted candle wax stains the sidewalk. Hand drawn posters for slain singer Christina Grimmie tower over piles of flowers left by mourners.
The Plaza Live, a major Orlando music venue which saw the first of a pair of grisly shootings at popular nightlife spaces in the city last weekend, will open its doors to the public on Thursday for the first time since Grimmie was killed during a meet-and-greet event last week. The 49 deaths the following night at popular gay nightclub Pulse have left a pair of gaping holes in the city’s thriving young nightlife scene.
Now, Orlando’s entertainers, musicians, and clubgoers aren’t sure how the city will move on from the trauma.
“When I’m on stage performing, I don’t have any protection,” Ralph Francis, a local stand-up comedian and improv actor, told me. “And after these two events, I have to be honest with you, that makes me very nervous to get back on that stage.”
Kyle Raker, owner of Norse Korea, a local company that books gigs around town, told me that one artist cancelled a show he booked, partly out of fear of appearing on stage. Others are understandably asking for security assurances before they start setting up for the night.
Akeem Collins, a gay black Orlando resident, echoed that sentiment during a recent gathering in honor of the Pulse victims. “Back to back nights, people getting shot,” he said. “I feel like it’s gonna affect everything…I’m going to hold off on going out for a while until everything cools down.”
Security measures for nightlife hotspots across the nation have been called into question following the tragedies. Locally, the Orlando Police Department is conducting an ongoing review of the security at local clubs and bars. In an article in the Orlando Sentinel, a woman expressed her outrage that water bottles were taken from patrons as they filed into Plaza Live the night of Grimmie’s shooting, yet somehow a shooter was able to sneak a pistol in.
“This has to spark some sort of change. It just has to,” she said.
In Orlando, a city that has for years been an incubator of talent thanks to its thriving local music scene, the anxiety over the recent tragedies threatens to crush the vibe, especially after a singer in a local band was killed in the Pulse shooting.