Still
A Byword For A Fun Evening
by Bunty Clynch
Unfortunately the man who
made the evening possible was in LA and could not
make a guest appearance. One wonders what he
would have thought of the unbridled passion his
fans expressed. He told the Big Issue in an
interview last week: "Im in exile. (In
the UK) Im box-office poison as far as I
can gather."But the
fact is that everybody - well, almost
everybody - has got a Smiths or Morrissey memory.
A look at Smiths / Morrissey web sites on the
Internet puts paid to any theory that his days as
an icon are over. Most people are just too
embarrassed to admit that the dark days of their
adolescence were spent singing alone to lyrics
like, "Oh mother, I can feel the soil
falling over my head. Another (sic)
climb into an empty bed, oh well, enough
said."
But one thing is for sure, the
queers and straights at the ICA evening, "I
Dream of Morrissey", last Friday will, like
me, be dusting off their old tapes for a
post-ironic new look at Moz. It described itself
as "the first ever gay and lesbian Stephen (sic again) Patrick
Morrissey convention". Amy Lamé, the media
dyke extrordinaire, was the
driving force behind the evening. She runs a gay
club, Duckie, in South London and is the
protagonist who subjected us to a lesbian beauty
pageant a few weeks ago. Lamé looks and dresses
like the humanoid characters from Gary
Larsons The Far Side cartoons -
her wildly curvaceous body clothes in a
polka-dotted sundress, and accessorised with
flashy mules, little girls hair accessories
and upswept Fifties glasses. Later she adds a
Morrissey tour T-shirt to the ensemble.
Lamés recurring dreams
of the melancholy Smiths lead singer and
songwriter, whom she describes as a "fey
wilting flower of a man", prompted her to
arrange the evening. "I often dream of
Morrissey the same way others dream of
Madonna," she says. "It was my own
perverted fantasy, I suppose. Mozza never
underestimated the intelligence of his fans, and
he had a huge gay following, so I thought, why
not?"
This is where the fans take
over. The ICA was well prepared for the onslaught
of 400 queer Morrissey fans. Gladioli were
shipped in, as were NHS black-rimmed specs
(without lenses), hearing aids and two
hairdressers equipped with enough hairspray to
coif a few hundred quiffs. Gay clubbers are not
known for their melancholy tendencies. They are
generally expected to pop a few pills, become
ecstatic, and get down to a pumping techno beat;
the poofs displaying luminous naked torsos under
the disco lights, and the dykes bopping in their
bras.
Last Fridays display of
queerdom was a far cry from all preconceived
ideas. Imagine walking into a vaulted dance
floor, red and green strobe lights flashing, a
karaoke stage at one end, and DJs The
Readers Wifes (sic) ensconced on the raised platform above
the crowd at the other end. they, in their badly
done make-up and tangled wigs, are spinning the
Morrissey tunes. Now imagine a few hundred
revellers caught robotically in the strobe
flashes - metre-long gladioli swing through the
air, NHS-specced fans pivot on their heels
clutching the cuffs of their denim jackets while
they feebly beat their chests, punch the air and
throw their arms out as if they are nailed to a
cross.
Richard Howell is sitting alone
by the miserablist poetry table, where hundreds
of individually cut-out words are waiting to be
turned into a masterpiece. He toys with
"interesting pregnant disc-jockey has
regret" but then decided upon
famous queen
knew hatred
he was our international somebody
purity
suffered.
He looks satisfied. "My
first and last girlfriend bought me The Smiths
album Strangeways, Here We Come" when
I was 17, and I never looked back."
Hes sure that Morrissey is gay, but is
quite happy for him to remain on the fence.
"Hes an enigma," he says.
Back on the dance floor, a
gaggle of girlies swig from cans of Red Stripe
and shuffle to "This Charming Man".
"He got us through our early teens,"
says Helena Reckitt between shuffles, her NHS
specs bobbing. A few steps away a large sexy bed
has been constructed where fans are encouraged to
writhe around and dream of Morrissey. There is a
shrine to the great man above the bed. Lamé
looks on in a motherly fashion as young quiffed
Mancunian Andrew Cope scrawls "Shirtlifters
of the World Unite" in fluorescent ink on
the white sheets. He is wearing a belt with a
"Moz" brass buckle. "When I was a
kid, I wasnt allowed to be into The Smiths.
I finally admitted it four years ago, when I was
20. It was then that I realised how much I
fancied him." On the other side of the bed,
Rob Schofield looks on with a smirk:
"Morrissey has a very black northern humour
that you either love or hate, and I love
it."
Schofield is one of the many
straight people at the evening and hes
there simply because he likes Morrissey and knew
a gay convention would be better than a nerdy
purists bash. Daniel Reid, another of the
many Mancuanian fans, loiters around the bar
after being awarded the prize for the best
Morrissey lookalike. His girlfriend is on the
dance floor. He looks so much like Morrissey that
fans take his picture and whisper as they walk
past, and hes loving every minute of it.
"Its the music, of course," he
says, "but its more than that. I
admire his tenacity, his character. Hes a
misfit in the industry. Morrissey once said,
People who wade through happiness all their
life dont know what pain is."
There he points out the key to
the whole event. The people who like Morrissey
have a peculiarity to their personality, and the
crowd at the ICA positively revelled in their
peculiarities.
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