Lunch magazine ran from 1971 to 1973, starting out as a newsletter put out by Campaign for Homosexual Equality members in London and expanding to become a well designed 'magazine for the new homosexual man and woman' reflecting the range of gay activist opinion at that time. As part of its great LGBTQ+ Archives, Bishopsgate Institute has scanned the entire print run and made it available online.
It's a fascinating read, with news, debates and interviews (including David Hockney, Holly Woodlawn and George Melly)
Lunch, June 1973 - cover star Holly from Warhol's factory ('Holly came from Miami, F.L.A.. Hitch-hiked her way across the U.S.A.') |
I had a quick trawl through to look at what it tells us about nightlife in a transitional period when publicly advertised gay discos were taking place but the commercial gay club scene had not yet really taken off. Fulham Town Hall in west London was a venue for disco nights and balls organised by CHE and the Gay Liberation Front and where, as reported in Lunch, people were sometimes subject to violent attacks
'Grand Masked Ball' - CHE event at Fulham Town Hall (Lunch, December 1971) |
'Full Moon Disco' in aid of Campaign for Homosexual Equality at Fulham Town Hall (Lunch, April 1972) |
GLF Notting Hill Group night at Fulham Town Hall wtih 'Disco-Lights-Freak Outs' (Lunch, July 1972) |
'A Fancy Dress Rave... Drag or Casual' at Porchester Hall (Lunch, December 1972) |
David Hockney interview from Lunch, September 1972 'he looks like a wise blond owl' - Hockney mentions going to a couple of Gay Liberation Front meetings but finding them a bit boring. |
The Champion in Notting Hill used to.be gay, almost completely I think, in the mid Seventies
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