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2025 Winter Party Festival Lights Up Miami Beach

| By Amber Dodd
2025 Winter Party Festival Lights Up Miami Beach

“We will rebel on the dance floor because that is joy and liberation, and you can’t take that away from us,” – Jeremy Rye, Board Member of the Task Force

WASHINGTON – From February 26 to March 4, Winter Party Festival returned to Miami and Miami Beach as a cornerstone of queer culture and advocacy. 

The 2025 Winter Party Festival’s “Dance is Revolution” theme is a nod to the 1998 “Dance Dance Revolution” and a commentary on the state of queer liberation and the need to fight back against the unrelenting attacks on queer people. 

Since its founding in 1994, Winter Party Festival has created a space for queer liberation in Miami Beach. The Task Force took over production of the Festival in 2005 with a promise to donate a significant portion of its proceeds to the local organizations serving the LGBTQ community. From the money raised through Winter Party, and its sister event, the National LGBTQ Task Force Gala, the Task Force has donated over $4 million to support queer organizations. 

“Throughout history, dance has been more than just a movement –  it has been a form of resistance, liberation, and social change,” say Festival co-chairs Rene Wolfensberger and Jason Hellinger. “Our community has long used dance to break down barriers, challenge social norms, and create spaces where we can truly be ourselves. When we dance together, we don’t just move our bodies, we move society forward.”  

Jason Hellinger, this year’s co-chair of Winter Party, poses with festivalgoer at this year’s Under One Sun event. (Source: ALBRET LALAMAIEV)

Held a month after the Task Force’s Creating Change Conference, the music festival and dance party sought to lighten the load of advocacy work in today’s political climate. Anti-trans and anti-queer executive orders and laws have intensified the need for queer visibility and joy. 

Jeremy Rye, a Winter Party Festival attendee since 2017 and board member of the Task Force since 2020, says that the Task Force’s back-to-back events, are crucial to the vast experience of being queer in America today.  

“Creating Change activates our community and gives us the tools and know-how to organize and defend the rights that we have and advance our rights. Winter Party provides a space for joy and a way to introduce folks to the organization which could then hopefully catalyze them to be involved in our movement,” Rye said.   

“We will not give up our joy. We will dance in our bodies. We will control our bodies.” – Jeremy Rye, Task Force Board Member

To kick off the weekend, the iconic Palace welcomed Winter Party Festivalgoers with fabulous drag performers and a welcoming vibe. For his contributions to Winter Party Festival and the Task Force annual gala over 20 years on staff, February 26 was officially named “Michael Bath Day” by the Miami Beach City Commission.  

“I’m really blown away,” Bath said. “Thank you so much. I’ve been so fortunate to have this job, and volunteers are the best people and those with the biggest hearts. Winter Party is a labor of love for the people who spend countless hours and who go above and beyond.” 

On Thursday, Winter Party Festival hosted their annual community-building event, LOCALIZE, at Twist where several partners and sponsors were welcomed, including Avita Pharmacy and Prevention 305. FKA Twink, a drag queen and Miss Wynwood Pride 2024, served as the host of the opening ceremony. 

This year, the festival raised over $1.5 million to further efforts in queer advocacy. Over the course of the week-long Winter Party events, over 5,000 people attended. More than 320 volunteers served during the week. 

The Friday of the festival, the Winter Party Festival VIP Cocktail Reception was held at The Standard hotel in Miami Beach. German performer CeCe Glitzer served as host. “It’s always good to see the community, as we need this space to stand together and be as loud and proud as we can together. We need to uplift, support and be there for each other,” she said.  

DJ Dangerous Rose, a Black trans artist who mixed Winter Party’s opening event Midnight Service. Read more in her exclusive feature with the Task Force. (Source: Wilson Models)

  Miami Beach Commissioner Alex Fernandez, the only gay member of the Commission, was joined at the VIP Cocktail Reception by Vice Mayor Tanya K. Bhatt  and Commissioner Laura Dominguez, both allies of the LGBTQ community. They shared their gratitude for the Task Force and Winter Party Festival’s ongoing support of local efforts for queer rights. “I care about each and every one of you, and it’s so important that we celebrate and love each other. We attend Winter Party and all of the events,” Dominiguez said.  “As Vice Mayor Bhatt mentioned, watch who you vote for. The three of us are the only commissioners for the City of Miami Beach who consistently put forth legislation for the LBGTQ community. Thank you for inviting us to your annual party.” 

Kierra Johnson, President of the National LGBTQ Task Force, shared remarks for the event. She began by singing Sam Cooke’s ‘A Change is Gonna Come,’ referencing Cooke’s lyrics of struggle and sacrifice for liberation.  

“I share that piece of the song because…its pertinent to the moment we’re in,” Johnson said. “This happened before, in the 30s and 40s, it happened in the 50s and 60s and it’s happening right now.” 

Task Force President Kierra Johnson (center) at the VIP Cocktail Reception. (Source: Lee Le)

Johnson continued: “I know we are afraid, and I know it’s hard to know what to do, but the worst thing is to numb out and not pay attention to what’s happening in the news. We cannot ask a question of what’s required of us and be ignorant. We owe it to ourselves, to our communities, to our movements, to our country, to our ancestors, to every freedom fighter in the world. It’s been hard already and it’s going to get harder. The question is, what are you willing to do for freedom?” 

The VIP Cocktail Reception also honored Lisa Mercado, who Bath and other WPF leaders called an “unsung hero.” She joined the festival committee in 2006 as director of women’s programming and producer of the Festival’s LGBT Family Picnic. Mercado became the only woman to chair Winter Party Festival and eventually joined the Task Force staff for a decade.   

Micheal Bath and Lisa Mercado embrace each other as Bath recognizes Mercado as a Winter Party Festival honoree. (Source: Lee Le)

The crown jewel of Winter Party Festival, Sunday’s Beach Party welcomed over 4,000 attendees. DJs Erik Vilar and DJ Micky Friedmann spun as day turned tonight, as partygoers were able to enjoy food from the popular South Beach eatery Bodega and interact with sponsors of the festival such as Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps, Mistr, and JellyMed. VIPs enjoyed an open bar, while nine major donors purchased the exclusive Cabana Club package that offereda private, elevated space overlooking the dance floor and offer a spectacular view of the Atlantic Ocean on the other side. 

A couple who met a Winter Party Festival returned to Miami Beach to take the next step in their relationship together. (Source: Le Lee)

 Other Winter Party highlights included the Under One Sun Pool Party produced by Urge with support from Q Care +, nighttime dance parties co-produced with Masterbeat, Hilton Wolman Events, Midnight Service, and The Eagle Wilton Manors. Other events include the Elevate T-Dance and ACTION: Finale! produced by Work Entertainment. 

As the 2025 Winter Party Festival concludes, volunteers and workers of the festival are looking forward to their return to Miami Beach for another year of waltzing into new wins for queer and trans liberation and the future of the community. The 2026 edition of the festival will take place from February 25 to March 3. 

Amber Dodd

Web and Content Manager

she/her

Washington, DC

Amber D. Dodd (she/her) is an award-winning editor, curator, and journalist whose specialty lies in contextualizing Black America.  A bi-coastal, international writer, Amber’s work also spans throughout other advocacy-based storytelling such as the Murdered and Missing Indigenous Persons (MMIP) campaign for Indigenous tribes in the Pacific Northwest. She was a contributing author of Unbias the…