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As you know from our discussion of 'gay culture', two posts ago, appearance and attraction are important whenever one puts even a toe outside the front door. As a result, my years in London required an hour and a half workout in the gym five, or six days a week.
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| A&F Fierce men's fragrance |
Suitably attired, a less than one minute walk took me to the Underground (Metro, for my US mates); hence choice of apartment - no point looking good only to get wet and dishevelled walking to the tube. Then just a nine minute ride to the heart of the West End. Soho here we come. First stop, as a long night lies ahead, is Balans restaurant on Old Compton Street, the heart of the 'gay village'. A staple of Soho, Balans rather became my default eating place for a couple of years, during which time I would take breakfast (or, more honestly, brunch....steak and eggs) and dinner there perhaps two or three days a week. Almost always damned good food, Bohemian atmosphere and a portion of eye candy served with almost every waiter.
Many of the staff made a fortune in tips, particularly at Christmas, Pride and just about every holiday when drunk gay guys were prone to showing appreciation for good service, a fine physique and an alluring, impish smile....I hooked up with a Balans waiter once, nice guy but totally mad (we didn't really DO dating, as understood in the straight world - which I will explain in a PART 2, end of the week)! Food was preceded by a large Sapphire and tonic and, if dining with a mate, accompanied by a bottle of wine; otherwise, more gin. On occasion I might also hit Balans in the late afternoon, if I bumped into a mate in town, when food was washed down with selections from the cocktail menu; which meant a trashy night always lay ahead! For Saturday night dinners, the solid intake often took the form of seared scallops followed by the sesame tuna steak or the red curry, then it was off to meet mates at the first watering hole.
Old Comtpon Street was a kaleidoscopic lense into a Bohemian (NOT just gay), transient community drawn together by shared lifestyles or philosophy on life. I passed so many hours away just sitting at the window of Costa Coffee looking out, or at one of the street side tables savouring the liberated, eclectic sights and sounds that would delight, amuse and often elicit a quiet "awwww", as my eyes followed a young gay couple walking down the centre of the narrow road, hand in hand; one imagined the "I'm his" and "He's mine" T-shirts they should have been wearing.
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| Balans, small frontage but goes back a long way! |
The walk from Balans to the Village bar took all of 30 seconds. Village was the preferred bar of some of my best friends on the gay scene and was always the RV location. The different decor in its various bars afforded an insight into the character and custom of that particular entertainment space.
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| Entrance to one of Village's four bars |
I loved the hours on the bar scene with dear friends, chatting, laughing, perusing and judging the human scenery but, as closing time approached, it was hugs and kisses for my mates as the clubs were calling....and I'll take you to the clubs in the next post, at the end of this week.
In closing, and in answer to the question posed of me, how was the night out different from those being enjoyed by straight guys and girls elsewhere in London? Well, first point to note is that the above was only the start to the night out....and, as I didn't try to pick up in bars, perhaps the elements of greatest difference will be related in the PART 2 to this topic. That said, were there differences between the gay bar scene and a night on the straight scene....well, to thoroughly misuse the words of Elizabeth Barrett Browning in her Sonnet 43, 'let me count the ways' (sorry!).
Firstly one should acknowledge, up front, that the fine forms my friends and I were perusing (and my mates perhaps seeking to pick up) were male....an obvious but important difference that speaks to the role of 'gay bars' and the 'gay scene' and impacted upon the character and feel of such venues; more than simply in seeing some customers hugging and kissing around the bar. Following on from that, the go-go boy dancers in the Village was a clear departure from the character of straight venues, as was the (usually total) absence of women. A minor point is that the attire, and its importance, may have been different from that sported by my straight friends. The culture of hugs and kisses on greeting and taking one's leave of friends (kisses sometimes on the cheek but also on the lips - as one gay friend put it, "I am not greeting a Frenchman, I'm greeting a fellow homosexual!") was different from the culture of straight mates meeting for a night's drinking, as was the prevalence of such as "dear", "darling", "gay boy" etc in normal conversation....eg, a waiter in Balans, pleasing to the eye and on first name terms, might commence with, "Here again, dear, you scene queen, you. What may I tickle your fancy with tonight, hun?". The music is another area of divergence, with the disco sounds, boy bands, Kylie, Cher etc of Village and then the harder sounds of House genres in Rupert Street being different from what was probably being played over the sound systems of the majority of straight London bars that night. Just a few of the obvious differences from most straight bars and underscoring the relevance and role of the gay bars for us....where our different culture or social norms were safely accommodated.
A huge thanks to you for popping in and joining me on the first part of our night out; I am sending you e-hugs or manly embraces, as appropriate. I do hope that, in answer to the question posed of me over FB messenger, the post has afforded my straight mates some sense of how a Saturday night would kick off on the scene and how it differed from Saturday nights in straight venues. I'd love it if you would return for the club portion of the night out in a few days time; from which one would hope to be returning home with company by early to mid morning Sunday - but more of that next week.
Have an absolutely fabulous weekend. Enjoy.







Loved going to Balans, promise you'll take us back some time?? (Although I'm afraid I can't promise to restrain Phil on the dance floor. His moves, like a fine wine, have matured with age ;-) )
ReplyDeleteNext trip to the Northern Hemisphere, shall have to lock that in....but you'll have to break it to Phil that the Shadow Lounge closed down a couple of weeks ago. Huge surprise as, if the place survived Phil on the dance floor I assumed it could survive anything.
ReplyDeleteActually, it was a huge surprise. That place seemed as if it would be a staple for the long term.....but not sure if it closed due to fall off in custom or, as with many other gay venues in London, to realise the location's worth for developers.
Thanks for looking in on the Blog, Anna.
My friend and reader of the Blog, Paul, sent email comment and asked it to be repeated in the Blog....
ReplyDeletePost this comment if you will:
Dave-- this needs to be expanded into a short electronic guide book!!!
More material on this please!
paul