A reveler waits for a champagne toast to kick off "New Orleans Pride" festivities at Napoleon's Itch Bar in New Orleans, Saturday, June 18, 2016. Photo: (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

A reveler waits for a champagne toast to kick off "New Orleans Pride" festivities at Napoleon's Itch Bar in New Orleans, Saturday, June 18, 2016. Photo: (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

CHICAGO (AP) — The music was thumping and crowds were dancing at gay pride events around the U.S., with some revelers saying the partying was proof that people won’t give in to fear after last weekend’s attack at a gay nightclub in Florida.

Festivals and parades went ahead Saturday under increased security in cities such as Chicago, Columbus, Ohio; and Providence, Rhode Island, a week after a gunman fired on a crowd at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. The attack left 49 people dead.

At Chicago Pride Fest, security staff meticulously checked bags, unzipping each and every pocket, and extra police patrolled on foot in a highly visible presence.

The annual two-day street festival in the Boystown neighborhood draws thousands of revelers and serves as a warmup to Chicago’s even bigger Pride Parade the following weekend.

Attorney Kavita Puri said that after Orlando, the Chicago event took on even more importance.

“I wouldn’t call it defiance,” she said. “I wouldn’t call it perseverance. I would call it just living your life and not being scared to live your life.”

By noon, a D.J. had already cranked the music to ear-splitting volume, energizing a crowd that included young clubbers, families pushing kids in strollers, and retirees. The only outward sign of the Orlando attack was a makeshift memorial of flowers, rainbow flags and candles clustered on a street corner a few blocks away.

The attack was on Cheryl Hora’s mind. The school bus driver from suburban Rolling Meadows, Illinois, said her son, a drag performer, had done a show at Pulse in October and has a close friend who lost a cousin in the attack. Her son was performing Saturday at the Chicago festival, and Hora — wearing a button with the words “I love my gay son” — said it was important for her to turn up and cheer him on.

“We’re just down here to support him,” she said. “We thoroughly believe in what he’s doing and thoroughly believe in his happiness.”