Girl: Gay Bar (exit stage left)
Marc Almond:
“You want me to stand at the top of the stairs and do what?”
So, to recap, it’s 1986, and the seventeen year old Misssy M and similarly fresh-faced and clinically naive room-mate are being sent unwittingly to a gay club in deepest Glasgow by said room mate’s evil sister. (Read my last post now if you haven’t already or else I’ll come off as being even more stupid than this post already implies).
Armed with directions to “Glasgow’s best club”, excited about promises of “loads of fit blokes” and smelling winningly of Cacharel’s premier seller, Anaiis, Anaiis ( since scientifically proven to be Kryptonite to the homosexual male) we set off.
We were already apprehensive about “going into town”, anyway. Up until this point, we’ve been drinking Cider and Black in the University Union, comforted by the fact that every other person in there was a young idiot, just like us. Town- actual town- is a different matter. Both of us are still underage. Both of us are from the kind of towns where the highlight of the month is the Friday night they turn over the local hotel’s function suite into a “Rugby Club disco”. And, crucially, both of us look about thirteen years old.
Off we head to Bennett’s Night Club excitedly. When I look back now, there were signs that two overly Be-Elnetted lassies with badly applied eyeliner and a Michael Hutchence fixation were going to be disappointed. Notice I said disappointed, not unwelcome. For we were never unwelcome at Bennett’s. After all, we weren’t the only ones there with badly applied eyeliner, too much Elnette hairspray and a Michael Hutchence fixation. We just didn’t have that certain je ne sais quoi…..that certain…that…erm, ….a penis.
So, as we walked up the stairs, we noticed a bizarre amount of Coronation Street stars have been there before us and left framed autographed portraits on the walls. Weird….
“Thanks to all at Bennett’s…lots of love Liz Dawn*”
And there’s photos from quite few Hi -Energy popstrels, like the late Divine, Hazel Dean, and Sinitta (“So Macho” anyone? Jeez, how many more bloody clues do these two kids need? Marc Almond standing at the top of the stairs in leather chaps and nipple clamps shouting, “There’s nothing for you two here!!” whilst quaffing the pint of legend??**)
But up the stairs we went into the club and I tell you, there’s nothing I’d like more than to see a video of us over the next sixty minutes as we get drinks, practically high five each other on not getting ID’d, and slowly suss out that there are no other women there. No other women, and crucially, the blokes DON’T SEEM BOTHERED about that fact.
And what makes me laugh most is that had there at least been a token few lesbians in the club that night then we wouldn’t have twigged for the whole night (The girls must have had Fridays,or something, that’s my guess; it was purely gay men on the Saturday Night that we went). We would have just thought we’d lost whatever little pulling Mojo we had, and been a little miffed. Unless of course we’d pulled and that would be a whole other Sapphic brand can of worms.
But there weren’t any reality-cloaking lesbians there that night. Just two wee lassies with the realisation dawning VERY SLOWLY on us that, whilst Abba is fine to dance to in your living room when no-one else is in, it’s a bloody long time since you’ve heard it play in a nightclub. And seen it so enthusiastically received
And then, just as two little girls are getting a little bit into Taylor Dayne’s “Searchin (Lookin’ for Love)” than is normal for a seventeen year old with Cure records in her collection, one of them spots something that she has never seen before. And a penny is falling with such an enormous vigour, that all the other pennies are leaping off the cliff like lemmings trying to catch up with their fallen friend.
And worst of all, we’re such a couple of gayblivious (yes, I’m using the word again because I invented it two days ago and it’s now my favourite word ever) muppets that we don’t/can’t hide the utter shock we feel at the very sight of moustache on moustache and our jaws drop to the deck. My memory on this is hazy, but we may even have pointed. The shame of it. Don’t judge me; all I’m saying is that shock can do weird things to a person.
At this point, looking back, we now know that a group of blokes have been watching us from the bar, sniggering and probably laying bets on how long it will take before we suss out that we are IN THE WRONG PLACE.
And we’re in such catatonic shock, that we’re probably open mouthed for a good five minutes before this very nice man comes over and says,
“Girls, have a drink on us and we’ll tell you where you’d probably have a better night. Bennets maybe isn’t for you.”
Aaah, the kindness of strangers.
I have NEVER been so embarrassed in my entire life. And for the record, if a silly wee girl with crimped hair and oversized earrings sniggered and pointed at you whilst you were making your move, in Bennett’s Nightclub one Saturday, I am truly sorry and can report that I have since grown up.
A bit.
*Liz Dawn: Along with fellow cast mate, Lynne Perrie (Ivy Tilsley), Liz Dawn (Vera Duckworth), formerly of top rating British Soap, Coronation Street, was well known for her cabaret act a particular draw in gay clubs up and down the country.
** If you don’t know the Marc Almond urban myth then click here, but if you are repelled or offended easily, then DO NOT (and then ask yourselves why you are reading the Misssives.)
Berlin: East Side Story
When I was 18 I lived in West Germany from 1988/1989. Turns out, this was a pivotal year in Germany’s history. You may remember….
In the region of NordRhein- Westfalen, the state sponsored English Assistant Teachers, of which I was one, got taken on a trip to Berlin every year, by way of thanks for their hard work and to provide them with a cultural experience.
In May 1989, we traveled by bus, leaving West Germany, making our way through the German Democratic Republic, the country name that makes me laugh the most, and eventually alighting in a little Western outpost called West Berlin.
In 1988, Berlin was still split into East and West by means of a hulking big concrete wall populated by men in ridiculous outfits, who were eager to shoot those who tried to climb over it.
Official figures say that around 125 East Germans were shot between 1961 and 1989, whilst trying to get over the wall, or walls. There were actually two parallel walls with a strip of land known unofficially, of course, as the “death strip” in between them. The Wall was over 155 kilometres (96 miles) long.
The body of Peter Hechter 1962: One of the few photos to reach the West
confirming the policy of shoot to kill for defectors
Bear in mind, official East German figures would of course be doctored. No one knew how many people were actually killed whilst trying to escape to West Germany at the time of the regime and the shoot to kill policy for defectors was, for a long time, denied by the Communist regime. Yet, the documents are there, now in German archives, confirming the command for shooting those caught defecting. The numbers are higher that those admitted to previously.
In 1989 the west side of the wall looked like this.
The East side of the wall looked like this.
At the end of our week in the city we were to spend a day in East Berlin. This would be the strangest day of my life.
Before our cross-border trip we were given a talk on how to behave in East Berlin. Anyone not attending the meeting would not be allowed to go on the three minute S-Bahn train journey from the west to Freidrichsstrasse in East Berlin.
The meeting, hosted by our West German school teacher chaperone, Frau Lohse, broke down like this.
As western citizens, we would perhaps be unable to digest the reality of life for those who lived in East Germany. We may be tempted to show our feelings about any weirdness we encountered or anything we may have read prior to our visit there.
We may even feel sorry for those who lived there. We may be too curious about their lives. We may naively try and do something that makes a small difference. In no uncertain terms should we follow these urges; East Germany was not to be messed with.
And be sure of this; not all East Germans want to escape.
We were told that the people of East Berlin may not be friendly towards us, but there were reasons for this. Having lived in Cologne, traditionally the most unfriendly city in the whole of Germany (and that’s saying something!), I was at least was glad to hear the Ossies had an excuse for their rude behaviour where the average Kolsche* supermarket assistant did not.
The East Germans would be nervous of being seen talking to visitors from West Berlin. This could be for two reasons. Firstly, the Ossies are acutely aware of always being watched by police, or undercover Stasi (secret police). Contact with Westerners was frowned upon at best. Secondly, many Ossies are suspicious or disdainful of those from the West. Their state feeds them propaganda about the West and it is not complimentary.
We were told, “Do not make them any more uncomfortable by seeking their company or imposing yourselves upon them, if not invited to do so.”
Secondly, do not give any of your money away. At the Friedrichstrasse train station in East Berlin, you may come across people who look like they might need some cash. Do not be tempted to give them any money. On reaching the East, all visitors are required to exchange 30DM for Ost-marks (simply known as Marks, the East German currency). You will find next to nothing to spend these Ost marks on. This is a ruse by the East German government to get their hands on Western money. You will not be able to exchange your leftover Ostmarks for Western Deutschmarks. You WILL have left over East money which you will tempted to get rid of.
Under no circumstances give your money to East Germans. This will get them into serious trouble. Most especially, do not give any Western money to East Germans – even if they ask you for it. It is illegal for an East German to possess western currency. Yes, yes, we know the DDR Government has it. Yes, yes, we know the DDR economy can’t function without it. Their citizens are forbidden it.
It was like being warned not to feed the animals by the zookeepers. We took it all in with a large pinch of salt. How bad could it be?
A final note from our hosts. Do not take photographs of any officials, border guards, The Wall or any government buildings. You may be approached by police, asked to empty your camera of film and surrender it. If this happens to you, do not argue. It isn’t worth it, you’ll be put on a train back to the West immediately.
The meeting ended with a wish for us to enjoy our visit to East Berlin, and a reminder that we are guests in a different country with different rules. Rules which, no matter how we feel about them personally, we must respect.
We would catch the S-Bahn to Friedrichstrasse at 8am the next day.
Next: Berlin. Part Two: Alexanderplatz and All That
* Kolsche: A person from Cologne. Also their local beer.








