8 JANUARY 29-FEBRUARY 4, 2026 westword.com WESTWORD | MUSIC | CAFE | CULTURE | NIGHT+DAY | NEWS | LETTERS | CONTENTS | Over the Rainbow ARE PRIDE FLAGS TOO FREAKY FOR SHREK THE MUSICAL IN PARKER? BY ZAC HARY VISCONTI The Town of Parker is facing public backlash after Parker Arts staff informed Sasquatch Productions, the creative team behind Shrek the Musical at the PACE Center, that Pride fl ags could no longer be used during one of the show’s musical numbers, citing complaints received after opening weekend. According to multiple members of the production, the request was communicated on January 20, when representatives from the Town of Parker, through its arts arm Parker Arts, told the company that the Pride fl ags used during the song “Freak Flag” were considered offensive by some audience members. “Freak Flag,” which appears late in the show, is a celebratory number about embracing differences and rejecting shame. “I blocked it with Pride fl ags because that’s what I think the song is about,” says Kelly McAllister, the director of Shrek the Musical and co-leader of Sasquatch Produc- tions. “It’s about acceptance, and who we are. To me, the rainbow fl ag is not a political fl ag. It is a fl ag of inclusion, love, joy and hope. I was dismayed and shocked that people were so fucking angry about a beautiful moment in a show that I am very proud of.” Rather than quietly altering the staging, the cast chose a different response. During the January 23 performance, actor Bekah-Lynn Broas broke the fourth wall just before the number. Standing onstage, she told the audi- ence that the cast had been asked not to fl y the fl ags they had rehearsed with and that had previously been approved. She then explained that the cast had met during intermission and collectively decided to perform the song as originally staged, Pride fl ags included. “This show is about inclusion,” Broas told the audience. “It is community and loving your neighbor no matter what they look like or how they identify ... We respectfully, as a cast, and peacefully and with fi re in our eyes, protest this request. And this is our protest. We resist this.” Videos of that moment quickly spread on social media. In one post, cast member Lucas Barta shared a message framing the decision as one of consistency and integrity. “It wouldn’t have sat right with any of us to sing about letting your freak fl ag fl y and never taking it down, while being asked to literally take them down,” Barta wrote. “Freedom of expression is essential, and it’s so important that people see themselves positively repre- sented in the stories we tell.” The controversy prompted an offi cial statement from the Town of Parker on January 24, which was sent to media outlets and posted on the Parker Arts’ Facebook page. In that statement, the town empha- sized that it acts as a presenter, not a creative authority, for productions staged at the PACE Center. Town of- fi cials said they received a “variety of complaints” after opening week- end, but stressed that they did not demand any changes to the show. “As a Town-owned perform- ing arts venue funded in part by taxpayer dollars, the Town has a responsibility to remain neutral,” the statement read. “The Town did let the producers know about the concerns brought to the attention of the Town but did not demand or require that any part of the show be removed or modifi ed. However, as a community partner, the producers considered the information and suggested a possible alternative that would still sup- port their creative vision but alleviate the discussion that was taking away from the production itself.” Several artists involved said what the town characterized as a neutral sugges- tion felt like pressure driven by donor and sponsor concerns. According to McAllister. Parker Arts staff initially fl oated the idea of modifying the number to avoid refund re- quests and the possible loss of sponsorship. The sponsor was a Lutheran organization, which withdrew its support following the January 23 performance. When the creative team suggested adding additional fl ags to broaden the imagery, they were told the Pride fl ag itself was still the problem. “We were told, essentially, that the Pride fl ag was too much,” McAllister says, “which is wild, because it’s a show about outsiders fi nding belonging. There was an opportunity where I could have and should have said, ‘Fuck you,’ or, you know, some more nicely worded version of that. But I didn’t, and I will forever be ashamed of that. The cast had a meeting and decided to stop and address the issue. That was one of the most exciting, in- spiring nights of theater I’ve ever witnessed.” While Parker Arts never explicitly or- dered the change, the message was clear. “They’re above us in the food chain,” McAl- lister says, describing the town’s role as both presenter and contract holder. “When they say, ‘Could you consider this?’ you under- stand what’s at stake. You want the show to go on. You want to reach people. And sometimes that leads to compromises you later wish you hadn’t made.” Those compromises came to a head be- fore the January 23 performance. After a series of conversations with Parker Arts earlier in the week, cast members gathered before the house opened and again dur- ing intermission to decide how to respond. While there was debate over tactics, the company ultimately voted to keep the Pride fl ags in the show. “There wasn’t unanimous agreement on how to handle it,” recalls cast member Mosés Brown, who plays Donkey. “But there was agreement that what was happening wasn’t right.” Broas, who plays the Sugar Plum Fairy/ Gingy and begins the number “Freak Flag,” says she decided on her own to address the audience directly. “If we didn’t say some- thing, no one would ever know what had happened,” Broas says. “It felt too important to let it pass quietly.” She emphasized that no one asked her to speak out, but once the decision to use the fl ags was made, she felt compelled to explain why. “I was proud in that moment,” Broas says. “I would do it again. I wish I didn’t have to do it, but I would do it again.” The town’s decision and the cast’s re- sponse quickly spilled beyond the theater. On Parker Arts’ Facebook page, some com- menters echoed the original complaints, arguing that Pride fl ags introduced discus- sions of sexuality into a children’s show. Others sharply criticized the town’s stance. “Remaining ‘neutral’ and enabling bigotry are not the same thing,” wrote local scenic designer Brian Watson, who said he would no longer work at the PACE Center. Actor Johnathan Underwood called the request “erasure pure and simple,” and accused the town of misunderstanding the very mes- sage of Shrek. That reaction spread to other Front Range theater communities. On January 24 , Lafayette Arts Hub publicly announced it would replace fl ag props in its production of Legally Blonde with Pride fl ags for the remainder of the run, writing that it stood with the Shrek cast “who bravely stood up for their right to continue showcasing inclusion and diversity.” Several members of the Shrek team stress that the stakes are not abstract. Olivia Kisicki, one of the few openly queer cast members, says the removal of the fl ags hit on a deeply personal level. “There are real people being affected,” she says. “We are the people that it hurts when these symbols get taken away.” As of now, Shrek the Musical continues its run at the PACE Center with the Pride fl ags still part of “Freak Flag,” unchanged from the version the cast rehearsed and originally staged. While the dispute has exposed ten- sions around sponsorship, artistic control and what neutrality looks like in a publicly funded venue, the company says its focus now is on performing the show and invit- ing the community into the conversation it has sparked. “Come see the show,” Brown says. “Art is not supposed to be censored. My big ask is that this should spark a broader conversa- tion — that we reach out to our art institu- tions, our museums, our city councils, and say, ‘How are we protecting artistic integrity during this time where there is so much pushback on what we should do as artists?’ We’re tired of shutting up and singing. We’re tired of shutting up and dancing or dribbling a ball. We have our values, too. Come to the show. If you don’t like it, that’s fi ne, but art is supposed to spark a conversation.” Email the author at [email protected]. NEWS KEEP UP ON DENVER NEWS AT WESTWORD.COM/NEWS Pride fl ags in Shrek the Musical at the PACE Center in Parker. COURTESY OF TRACY HOLT DOT Y