About Our Float
For the thirteenth consecutive year, Shriners Children’s will participate in the 135th Rose Parade, presented by Honda. Nine representatives will ride on the float, entitled Believe in Tomorrow. The float expresses how Shriners Children’s helps our patients have the confidence and hope to believe in tomorrow and be what they aspire to be in the future.
How to Watch the Parade
For over 100 years, Shriners Children’s has provided highly skilled, transformational care to children with complex medical conditions and injuries. Families facing these challenges often worry that their child will not have a typical childhood and may be unable to fulfill their hopes and dreams. Our float theme, Believe in Tomorrow, speaks to the hope that Shriners Children’s gives to families. With our experienced medical teams and compassionate, family-centered care, our patients can believe in a bright, joyful future – a happy and healthy tomorrow.
Many Shriners Children’s patients have medical needs that require care throughout their childhoods. With trademark interdisciplinary, wrap-around care, Shriners Children’s clinical teams provide a foundation of support for families throughout this often long journey. Whether fitting a child for a prosthesis and providing the therapeutic support to get them walking again, or empowering a child to return to school or home after a significant burn injury, patients are given the hope and healing to believe in tomorrow. In addition, Shriners Children’s recognizes that many patients require care into adulthood and works to provide tools and resources to help teenage patients and their families step from our pediatric system into the adult healthcare world.
Our float is set in a beautiful, colorful garden that is alive with music in the air. A young girl is depicted playing the cello – a dream she thought would be impossible as she is missing part of one arm. The pediatric orthotic and prosthetic team at Shriners Children’s designed a custom prosthetic device for her arm so she can joyfully play her beloved instrument. Shriners Children’s mascot Fezzy smiles at our young patient, as he joins in the melody on his violin in this garden of hope.
Riding the float is Danna, a 17-year-old violinist and Shriners Children’s patient. Danna was born with a congenital malformation called Poland syndrome and did not have functioning fingers in her right hand. Life-changing toe-to-hand surgeries at Shriners Children’s gave Danna the function to pursue her passion for music. Danna will proudly display her cherished violin along the parade route. Rounding out the float riders are International Patient Ambassadors Gianna and Juan Diego, two resilient and inspirational patients who also received transformative care from Shriners Children’s. They are joined by James E. “Ed” Stolze Jr., the CEO of Shriners Children’s and head of the Shriners International fraternity, Shriners International’s First Lady JoLynn Dickins, and honored guests.
Shriners Children’s treats children from across the globe and from over 130 countries. Music is the universal language, crossing all cultures and providing comfort and joy to children receiving care for a difficult medical condition or injury. Music therapy is routinely incorporated in the care plan at Shriners Children’s as part of the healing process. Music can offer comfort during a procedure, help reduce anxiety and provide a way to communicate beyond any language barrier.
Shriners Children’s helps our patients have the confidence and hope to believe in tomorrow and be what they aspire to be in the future. For many children, that means being able to return to activities they love such as playing the instruments they have such a passion for. Shriners Children’s prosthetic and orthotic specialists design custom devices for patients like our young cellist and International Patient Ambassador Juan Diego, whose custom splints enabled him to return to his passion for playing the drums again after a devastating burn injury. Celebrating a World of Music: The Universal Language reflects a central component of a Shriners Children’s patient’s journey, as they are embraced in the care that gives them the hope to Believe in Tomorrow.






