Classroom lesson 路 Festival馃嚭馃嚲 Uruguay

Carnaval - the longest party in the world

More than 40 days of music, dance and street parades

Bright costumes and feathered headdresses at a Uruguayan Carnaval parade in Montevideo

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Uruguay's Carnaval is the longest carnival in the world - lasting more than 40 days. From late January to early March, Montevideo and other Uruguayan cities fill up with parades, costumes, drumming, dancing and live shows on neighbourhood stages. It is the biggest celebration of the Uruguayan year.

Tell me more

Uruguayan Carnaval is different from many others. Most of it happens in the neighbourhoods, not just in the city centre. Every neighbourhood builds its own outdoor stage, called a 'tablado', where groups come to perform on different nights. Families bring chairs, neighbours bring snacks, children sit cross-legged at the front.

Two parades stand out as the biggest of the season. The Desfile Inaugural ('Opening Parade') marches down 18 de Julio Avenue in the centre of Montevideo, with thousands of performers in glittering costumes. A few weeks later, the Desfile de Llamadas ('Call Parade') fills the streets with candombe drums - dozens of groups, each with their own colours, walking and drumming together.

Different kinds of groups perform in Carnaval. Murga groups sing songs about the year. Candombe groups drum and dance through the streets. Other groups perform comedy sketches, children's plays or stories from Uruguayan history. Each group practises for months to put on the best possible show.

Children grow up part of Carnaval. Many primary schools have their own little Carnaval show before the school year ends in December - with pupils painting their own faces, making cardboard hats and singing simple songs about their school year. By the time they are 10, most Uruguayan children know dozens of Carnaval songs by heart.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might a country make its Carnaval last more than 40 days?
  2. 02In Uruguay, Carnaval happens partly on neighbourhood stages. What would change if everyone celebrated in their own street instead of going to one big place?
  3. 03If your school invented its own Carnaval show, what kind of group would you join - a singing one, a drumming one, a comedy one, a story-telling one?
Try this

Classroom activity

Plan a 'class Carnaval' to mark the end of a term. Each small group prepares one tiny show: a song, a dance, a sketch, a drum rhythm. Make masks or hats out of paper. Perform them all for another class.