Ursula Petula Barzey

Gay Scandals & Queer London

On a recent education and training session, we met in Piccadilly Circus near the Shaftesbury Memorial and the statue of Eros. Fellow Blue Badge Tourist Guide Martin Harvey who led the session started off by talking about “meetings”, apparently we were in the ideal meeting place! The only challenge for us initially, was that he was talking in another language – “Polori”. Once translated, we understood it was the gay version of Cockney Rhyming slang which facilitated secret communications. So we started on the route from Piccadilly through Soho to Chinatown.

Many venues provided opportunities of an “encounter”, e.g. the elaborate Criterion Dinning Rooms, where gliding down the sweeping staircase with Baroness Bothways was an impressive sight, or the option of the Bargain Basement! If successful, one could hire a room at the former Regent Palace Hotel by the hour, with or without a bathroom. Other venues included the Savoy Baths, Jermyn Street, used by closet gay actors, to private homes.

Statue of Eros

The statue of Eros in London’s Piccadilly Circus. Photo: © Flickr/ Rogerio Bromfman.

Restrictive legislation referring to gay people dates back to 1533, the death penalty was abolished in 1861, replaced by prison sentences and hard labour. Now thankfully the United Kingdom has reformed, unlike some other countries. Medical attitudes have also reformed, as amazingly at one time, the British Medical Association classified homosexuality was a contagious disease!

Martin engaged us with all sorts of scandals and quotes crossing all classes from rent boys working at the post office, the clergy, to the aristocracy. Passing quotes kept us well amused, e.g. Noel Coward commented while walking by the Rialto cinema showing “The sea shall not have them”, starring Michael Redgrave & Dirk Bogarde, “I don’t see why not – everyone else has.”

The Dennis Neilson murder story – he murdered around 12 gay men in London between 1978 and 1983 —  had us all silent in horror as we looked at the Golden Lion pub one of the locations where he picked up his victims. Not one for the faint hearted! 

Apart from photocopies of newspaper articles and his notes, at the end of the walk Martin also very kindly gave us a souvenir, a CD of 19 hilarious songs performed at the Trocadero/Salted Almond Club, e.g. I’m a Mummy (an Old Egyptian Queen) and The King’s a Queen at Heart.

Ursula Petula Barzey

Ursula Petula Barzey is a Digital Marketing Consultant who enjoys all that London has to offer to its residents as well as visitors from all across the globe.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

Top 10 Facts About The Beatles In London

The Beatles are the best-selling band in history and – with 17 No1s – hold the record for the group with the most No1 singles in UK chart history. The Fab Four shot to fame in 1963, the year they left their native Liverpool in the north of England for the nation’s capital London, which was to play a major part in the band’s career over the following seven years until their break-up in 1970. Below are 10 facts about the Beatles in London, facts that can be brought vividly to life through a London Beatles Tour with a Blue Badge Tourist Guide.

Read more

Walthamstow: An Art-Friendly Part Of London

Step outside central London and you might find the suburbs are brighter than you think. Come out of the underground station at Walthamstow Central, walk around a little and you will find there is plenty to see: bric-a-brac shops dotted around, a long street market and great museums like the Vestry House in the Walthamstow Village area. My top tips for three must-sees in this area are the William Morris Gallery, God’s Own Junkyard and the Street Art.

Read more