"JUICY' at The
SUGAR HOUSE
Bonfire Night, Wednesday 5 November 2003,
10 pm until 2am
Reviewed by
Boldly to go …
It is always refreshing to go somewhere different and meet new faces.
So on Bonfire Night (so often a vulgar celebration) we were delighted
to enjoy our Roman Candles and flaunt our sparklers early so as to brave
the midweek streets down towards The Sugar House for the first gay night
of the new academic year. The toilette accomplished, the sartorial arrangements
finally complete, the breath duly bated, the camera in a slightly tremulous
hand, and off we tripped.
Hedonism Mmmm.
We were not disappointed. Over two hundred souls were there, Apollonian
and androgynous, male and female, callipygian and lissom, young and
less so, all in the pursuit of pleasure. This is a theme close to our
hearts. I may write a novel on the subject. The muses were certainly
weaving a strong spell.
The music, rightly, catered for wide tastes, and many responded to
it by dancing and other sexual movements. Others
were inspired by other stimuli, and much glottal and oral exploration
was evident. The whole ambience was such that even Bosie, who is always
so coy in public, felt moved to indulge in a cheeky kiss. For such initiatives
he usually needs much gin, but this strangely active aberration was
welcome and totally appropriate. There is no wonder the camera batteries
expired so quickly.
Civility and service
We were grateful for the side room (of course it has a bar!)
as a respite now and then from the onslaughts of the dance. But
no wine? I was shocked into drinking cider, which made for reminiscence
about my own student days. Another novel, Bosie fears.
But the bar
staff were more polite than many in this City, and we were both delighted
by the affability of the students we chattered with. How proper to find
that Good English is still spoken in the provinces. Some of them may
even do well.
Much gown, little town
I said we were not disappointed with our soirée. But, as with
all good literature (you are reading the best source of news, entertainment,
fact and fiction in Lancashire), there is a sting in the tail. That
is right. We were disappointed that more people from this City and its
environs were not there to avail themselves of the enlivening and heady
opportunities of the occasion, in spite of easily-available membership
at the door. For ready money, of course.
More interaction needed
That, as I have said elsewhere, is their misfortune. As a student
I was always keen to meet people from the town, and after going down
naturally returned to the glades and groves of acadæmia for inspiration.
Here, there is goodwill on both sides, but to miss an opportunity where
the two parts of the one community meet is, like losing both parents,
a tragedy. Both parts lose so many opportunities. This is a situation
one should never encounter.
Suffice it to say that we, nevertheless, were diverted and entertained
by the evening's activities. The Sugar House (such a bijou
name) should do it more often. We two shall certainly come
again.