Thursday, September 06, 2007

Club Louise and Sombrero's - London 1976/77

One facet of early punk life in London (1976-77) was that there were no punk clubs, with the gap filled for some by lesbian and gay clubs - probably the only place where the first punks could go without being hassled. Most famous was Club Louise in Soho, where the teenage style terrorists of the so-called Bromley Contingent hung out - including Siouxise Sioux - as well as members of The Sex Pistols, The Clash and The Slits. The place is described in Bertie Marshall's entertaining and acerbic memoir of the period Berlin Bromley (2006):

S.S. [Siouxsie Sioux] mentioned this exclusive little club in Soho that you had to be a member to get in and was populated by les­bians and the odd male lesbian watcher and a couple of well-known actors. We all went, led by S.S. through the streets of Soho to 61 Poland Street to a red painted door with gold plates. S.S. rang the bell and through a little peephole a voice said in lisping tones, "Are you members!" What, I wonder, did we look like through that little window; some night­mare WaIt Disney might have had! We got in. Sitting at a low desk in the entrance way was a very old lady with a pile of grey hair atop her head and long grey dress and grey fur coar- grey lady? Bits of diamonds here and there, she looked a thousand-years-old. "Ah, you must all become members, my dears," her accent was French. Three pounds bought us a little red and white member­ship card.

Michael the doorman was an American fag and Madame Louise's toy-boy. This was her club. We were all under twenty-one and looked it, but somehow they didn't care, we must have passed some test. Perhaps Louise wanted to attract a younger clientele? The small foyer led into a bar room, a large mirror ran along the back wall, very dim lighting so you could hardly see your reflection, long black leatherette sofa seating, small tables with red cloths on them, black chairs, red carpets.

It was empty except for a waiter we named 'Ballerina John', an Irish queen with really awful acne and long red hair that he kept flicking over one eye. John had been thrown out of dance school because of some sexual indis­cretion in the toilets. Ballerina John came over and took our orders-five vodka and oranges. And because of the licensing laws, it was required that we were served food-food was a few slices of anaemic-looking Spam and shrivelled gherkins on a paper plate.

S.S. had found this place on one of her jaunts with pre­tend-girlfriend Myra. Most of us kept looking at ourselves in the gloriously long and flattering mirrors. From our table we could see a spiral staircase going down. "I love these mirrors," S.S. purred. "What's down there?" I asked. "A dance floor," S.S. said, retouching her nose with her powder puff…

What did I wear to Louise's the first time? Old men's pyjama jacket with a silver grey tie over black ski pants and black plastic sandals and white fingerless gloves. S.S. in one of her fifties Swanky Modes dresses, (Swanky Modes was a shop in Camden run by two sis­ters, designers of vaguely fetish women's wear). S.S. was wearing a b/w polka dot 'Betty Boo' dress; she would do impersonations of the cartoon character now and then. We'd catch ourselves in the mirror, suck in our cheeks and pout like mad. Sipping our vodkas, we could hear strains of music, Diana Ross and the Supremes ... S.S. decided that we should all trot downstairs... a small dance floor sur­rounded by low tables with red cloths and mirrors around the walls. We sat at a table under the stairs.

There was a smoked-glass DJ booth, where a young dyke played Bowie then Marlene Dietrich ... around the room sat a couple of butch dykes with feathered haircuts and three-piece men's suits. S.S. pulled me onto the dance floor to Bryan Ferry's 'Let's Stick Together'. I followed her in a demented jive, swinging each other around and around, yelping and cooing. We'd suddenly stop mid-jive and turn and look at ourselves in the mirrors, as though fixing and freezing our features forever at sixteen. With the help of make-up and the dark lights of the club we looked perfect and glamor­ous… Louise's closed at 3 a.m., which meant getting the night bus home, a cab was too expensive.

Marshall also mentions that the Roxy in Neal Street, Covent Garden - the first punk club as such - has previously been 'Chagarama's, the trannie bar', and recalls that as punk exploded and Louise's became too popular, some of the scene decamped elsewhere:

We discovered another club. Sombrero's was on Ken­sington High Street and a very GAY Disco, owned by a pair of Spanish queens, it had a raised dance floor of multicoloured Perspex that resembled a boxing ring and had waiter service. A lot of Oriental and Middle Eastern queens went there, it was very faggy indeed, gold chains and sprayed hair, little leather clutch bags, rich older queens and their younger pickings. It was home in the early 1970s to the glam rock scene, Mr and Mrs Bowie.

One time Johnny Rotten was hero of the week down at Sombtero's, he intervened in a knife attack against one of the door staff, stopped the queen getting it in the gut, by kicking the assailant in the nuts! Rudy, a rotund and chirpy Spaniard was the DJ, he played 70s disco. My favourite story that he told, was one night Marianne Faithfull came down and went to his DJ booth on the look-out for free drinks; of course Rudy obliged. She repaid him by singing a drunken version of 'Little Bird'.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

I used to frequent the Sombrero club in the early 1970's. The clubs name was actually 'Yours or Mine'. It was truly was the best gay club in London at that time. The underlit dance floor was very unusual and it added to the fun. The description of the club by the author does not fit my memory - but he is talking about 1976 - aftr my time. I think the manager Amedeo was still there and also Jaunito the waiter both were Italian. I have just started a Tribute to the Sombrero group on Facebook. If anyone has any memories please post them on the site.

Anonymous said...

i well remember sombrero in early 70s camp girls done up like 40s hollywood divas one of whom was a shoplifter someone who had partial sex change and worked as a male escort a well known actor of a tv serial used club it was 50p to get in 35p for a glass of plonk camp latin waiters with purses under arm and they had supper licence you got ham potato salad it was fab innocent fun all clubs sml then paul london

Anonymous said...

I think one of the divas was maureen cleaver had a fab time also whichity corner north end road and the nashville tues and sundays west ken and a club next to barrons court libary in the fox tuesdays

Anonymous said...

I too have veery fond memories of the club .I worked there handing out the very "appetising"supper (for licensing reasons ) I loved Rudis DJ booth decorated with flowers etc on arch,over the DJ booth .The waitors were fabulous .I was a female working with the boys and they couldn't have been sweeter too me ,Lino paticularly,I still have my fairwell gift ,my lizard broochend

mako said...

I recall being thrown out of Sombrero with two very early Trannies one worked at Biba where we all used to hang out in the dark and Queen playing pool next door at the White Hart. Does anyone remember that Mrs Bowie also used to frequent Masquerade in Earls Court Rd - I think it became the Pink Pig after a while? Also anyone recall a queen called Bobby who acidentally set light to his room in a wing of the Colehern Pub?

Anonymous said...

Yours of mine, The Sombrero.Fab place! My boyish looking g/f got slung out one night for being a palone (the club was iffy about women sometimes). I used to hang around with a 40's dressed girl, Linda from Clapham who used to hoist from shops. Seem to remember some early tv/t.s girls Biba? Berlin? Philip Salom frequented the place. Used to go to the Masquerade too. It was an old launderette from memory and still looked like one. Also Catacombs!

Jerome k Jerome said...

I used to go to Yours and Mine most weekends in early 70's.One Christmas I bought the American "hat check boy" a superb box of Irish Linen Handkerchiefs from then on we were front of the queue every time!The dance floor was very small.Kensington High Street would be deserted apart from the queue outside Y and M.

Rome said...

Anonymous said of the Sombrero:
"I was a female working with the boys and they couldn't have been sweeter too me ,Lino paticularly,I still have my fairwell gift ,my lizard brooch"
I wonder where Lino is now. I know he returned to Madrid and I lost touch. Any knowledge anyone.
In those days (very early 70s) one of the stalwarts of the club with champagne for all was Kit Lambert, who is now not so far away in the Brompton Cemetery.

Anonymous said...

Used to go to Sombrero a lot from 1970+ the dance floor was circular with seating booths around it and alovely sweeping staircase down so you could make and 'entrance' NOBODY ate the ham salad, silly if you did it was to do with the drinking laws...had to be food too so the Spanish/Italian queen would show you the limp lettuce and sweaty ham on a cardboard plate and the you ordered to booze...it was a bit too fluffy for my taste but at least you could get a drink

Anonymous said...

I used to go with my gay friend in the early 70s, the dance floor was like in Saturday Night Fever years before the film. To drink after 11pm you had to eat a salad for some reason. It as fab there, so many in vogue people used to go there to be purposely ignored by everyone there. Music was innovative. I miss
those days.