Tag Archives: Coronation

Imperial Court Turns 50!

{Thanks to Calgary Gay History Project correspondent, William Bridel, who attended the ISCCA Coronation Ball last month! Here are his photos and reflections! -Kevin}

On April 18, 2026, the Westin Hotel was transformed into a sea of black-and-gold glitz, glimmer, glamour, couture, and queer culture. With guests from all over North America alongside local drag artists and their supporters, the Imperial Sovereign Court of the Chinook Arch (ISCCA) celebrated its 50th anniversary, making it the longest actively running queer organization in Calgary. From humble beginnings in 1976, the Court has become a significant fixture in the city’s queer landscape. Kevin wrote about the Court’s history in a 2017 post, and the Court has also been featured in other stories on the site.

Nada Nuff and Shane OnYou were crowned Reign 50 Empress and Emperor at the April 18 event following community voting the week prior.

What has remained constant in the Court’s long existence is its focus on giving back. According to the organization’s website, “the Imperial Sovereign Court of the Chinook Arch is dedicated to fundraising and community support…focused on maximizing contributions to local charities and organizations both within and beyond the LGBTQ+ community”. Representatives from a reign’s chosen charities are presented with cheques at the ball, such as SafeLink, which was one of Reign 49’s chosen benefactors. Over the past 50 years, thousands and thousands of dollars have been given back to Calgary and the surrounding areas by the Court.

From left to right: Empress Fancy Pants of the Dogwood Monarchist Society (Vancouver), Empress Coco Lachine from the Imperial Court of New York, and the ISCCA’s Princess Jackie Lachine Lawrence.

An educational bursary, named after the late Jhaque Danyel Stewart Leong, is also handed out at the annual event, helping to support postsecondary students from the Court’s region, which includes all parts of Alberta south of Red Deer. I am particularly grateful for this bursary and Jhaque’s legacy, as a few of my students have been fortunate and grateful recipients over the years, students who have all studied or are studying sport in relation to, broadly, gender and sexual diversity. This year, the bursary was awarded to four deserving individuals, all at various stages of their academic journeys.

From left to right: Fred Udey, current ISCCA Vice-President, Princess Miss M from Vancouver’s court, and Barkley Huber, most recently Imperial Crown Prince 48 of Calgary.

Aside from the more formal arrangement with a reign’s chosen charities, the Court has also been generous over the years with other community organizations. Across the materials gathered for my research on sport in Calgary’s queer history, there were several references to the Court’s collaborative nature, contributing in various ways to Calgary’s growing queer community in the 1970s and 1980s, through to today. The program for the 1989 Connection softball tournament featured an ad for a performance of “Beehive, the 60s Musical” by Empress XIII, Justine Tyme, held at The Green Room, which was the upstairs of the Parkside Continental. One of my former students, Connor MacDonald, noted in some of his work that an interview participant, Fred, had commented on the longstanding relationship between the Alberta Rockies Gay Rodeo Association and the Court. Another interview participant, Kevin, who has been involved with Apollo Friends in Sport for many years, noted that Apollo had reached out to the Court more than once to “bring in some of their performers for the Sunday brunch during Western Cup.”

And that last point is an important one. Apart from giving back in material ways, the performances, the events, and the Pride Parade entries that the Court has shared with the Calgary community and beyond have brought an immeasurable amount of queer joy to those who have borne witness over the ISCCA’s five decades.

So here’s to another fifty years!

{WB}

Early Court Snippets

January, in Calgary, can be a cold month. Bringing some warmth and frolicking good times in January 1977 was “Winter Wonderland,” the Imperial Court of the Chinook Arch’s first Coronation Ball.

The Calgary Gay History Project was fortunate to interview Dale Campbell this week. Active in the early years of Calgary’s court system—now called the Imperial Sovereign Court of the Chinook Arch (ISCCA)—he shared photos and memories of that first Coronation ball.

{Note: the ISCCA is still going strong and will be hosting Coronation 47 this April at the Hyatt. Click here to read a short history of the storied organization in Calgary.}

Dale, also known then as Countess Dixie Lee Ann, has fond memories of the parties (sometimes boozy) and the camaraderie of the 1970s gay community. Yet, soberingly, many individuals in these early Court photos would later be lost to AIDS.

Here are a few snapshots of those early years.

Countess Dixie Lee Ann with Empress 1 Veronica Dawn
Calgary’s first Coronation Ball
The Coronation of Emperor 1 Jack and Empress 1 Veronica Dawn
Emperor 1 Jack Loenen wearing his signature leather vest

Thank you, Dale, for sharing your memories and these images!

{KA}

Full Court Press decades on in YYC

{Our sympathies go out to the friends and family of David Crosson, a lovely, witty man who passed away this week. A successful interior designer, he was also pivotal in the city’s gay media history through his work as editor of Outlooks Magazine from 1997 – 2005. He will be missed. – Kevin}

No other gay organization in Calgary has the long and storied history of the Imperial Sovereign Court of the Chinook Arch (ISCCA). A chapter in the International Court System, the ISCCA hosts many drag events throughout the year as well as their signature coronation ball which elects a new Empress and Emperor annually. ISCCA events are dependably fabulous and fun. They often are also fundraisers for important community causes.

The Court System started in 1965 in San Francisco, and the first Canadian chapter began in Vancouver in 1971.  In the early 70s, a handful of gay friends from Calgary who were active at Club Carousel escaped to Spokane, Washington for a long weekend road trip. By chance, they encountered a drag ball hosted by the Imperial Court of Spokane. Not only did they have a terrific time, but they met other gays from all over North America who were also in attendance. The Calgarians were hooked: in the next couple of years, they travelled to other Court events in Seattle, Portland, Vancouver, and Anchorage.

Jack's vest for ISCCA post

Court organizer and First Emperor, Jack Loenen, owned a leather vest with souvenir pins from Court events he travelled to.

Organization of the Calgary court began in April 1976. An application was made to the Mother Court of Canada in Vancouver, and by June of that year, Calgary’s charter was granted. The organizers looked for local inspiration in naming their court, settling on “Chinook Arch” as an iconic Calgary phenomenon. Legally they registered themselves as a daughter group of the Scarth Street Society which also operated Club Carousel. Their first major function was the coronation ball held in January 1977 at the Holiday Inn. With a small loan of $500 from the Club, they hosted an event that made history. It was one of the most elaborate balls the Court system had seen to date, featuring a sit-down dinner and the crowning of Calgary’s first Empress Veronica Dawn and first Emperor Jack. Representatives from Courts in San Francisco, Seattle, and Alaska were in attendance.

In the first year of operations, the Calgary Court had paid back their loan and ended the year $1700 in the black. Generally speaking, any profits the Court makes from their activities are donated to worthy causes. However, in the 70s it was sometimes difficult to find charities who would accept support from the gay community. Emperor Jack, in an Outlooks interview, remembered that the children’s hospital rejected their potential donation then because it came from a gay group. In contrast, the Children’s Wish Foundation was a group who early on did accept gay monies and consequently has been a recipient of ISCCA’s philanthropy ever since.

Ziegfield

Coronation ’78 Advertisement in Gay Moods Magazine (GIRC)

In the Court’s fourth year of operations, it decided to become independent of the Scarth Street Society and go its own way. There were some communication issues between the two groups, and Club Carousel itself had come to a natural end as members migrated to the more popular commercial gay bars which had emerged in Calgary.

Like the police/pride debate of this summer, Calgary’s LGBTQ2 community has been polarized before. In 1980, the community was extremely divided on the idea of having a gay rights march as part of the national conference of the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Rights Coalition which the city was hosting. A representative from the Court said to the Calgary Herald: “the minute you start flaunting yourself, you’ve got a problem [The march] is an embarrassment to the entire community.”

However, feelings changed. 11 years later at Calgary’s first Pride Parade, Calgary’s 15th Empress, Tiffany (Lawrence Steedman), led the parade in a purple beaded gown and confidently faced down protesters who spat and cursed. Tiffany said: “I’m proud to represent my community. Every drag queen wants to be empress, it’s an honour.” Member of Parliament Svend Robinson, who spoke at that event gave the nod to the Court explaining that it had been drag queens who bravely were the vanguard of the gay rights movement in North America.

Coronation 86

Coronation ’86 Poster from the Broach Magazine

Toronto writers from The Body Politic were bemused by the Court when they wrote an in-depth feature about Calgary’s gay community published in September 1980:

“The court system seems to be a purely western phenomenon, and rather bizarre to most easterners. Most gay activists, even western ones, seem slightly embarrassed by the whole thing and tend to react as if they’re being forced to talk about a tribal custom they really wish the anthropologists hadn’t discovered. [The Court] simply throws the biggest gay parties Calgary gets to see, and the intrigue behind who gets elected Emperor and Empress probably makes a run at the Calgary mayoralty seems rather tame.”

Ironically, a Toronto Court would form later in that decade holding its first coronation ball in November 1987.

Other notable Calgary Court events include Mayor Ralph Klein’s famous impromptu speech at the 5th annual coronation ball in 1981. The speech, in support of the gay community, proved ground-breaking and those in attendance gave him a three-minute standing ovation. Sadly, he recanted his sentiments in the controversy that quickly followed.

In 1989, Court members ended up in a court of the legal kind, over a tiara snatching incident. The crown was stolen as a ransom for an outstanding debt on ball gowns which allegedly was owed by the queen who had won it.  The judge eventually acquitted the five accused of stealing the headpiece “due to an honest misunderstanding.”

Empresses

Empress XIII Justine Tyme and Empress XIV Ty Morgan on the cover of AGLP.

The ISCCA also has sponsored daughter Courts into existence.  In September 1990 they were instrumental in granting a charter to Regina’s Court: the Imperial Sovereign Court of the Governing Body, Golden Wheat Sheaf Empire.

However in Calgary, perhaps the ISCCA’s biggest impact has been philanthropy. The Court took a leadership role during the AIDS crisis in Calgary, advocating for HIV prevention and conducting pivotal fundraising for AIDS research and housing of people with AIDS. Since its inception more than 40 years ago, the Court has raised and donated hundreds of thousands of dollars for causes close to their heart. Good work we can all celebrate.

{KA}