Blitz Kids (New Romantics)
{{Short description|Group that launched the New Romantic subculture}}
{{for|the English rock group formed in 2006|Blitz Kids (band)}}
{{for|the 2025 book about children in the Second World War|Blitz Kids (book)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}}
The Blitz Kids were a group of people who frequented the Tuesday club-night at Blitz in Covent Garden, London in 1979–1980, and are credited with launching the New Romantic subcultural movement.{{cite news| url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2009/oct/04/spandau-ballet-new-romantics | work=The Observer | first=David | last=Johnson | title=Spandau Ballet, the Blitz kids and the birth of the New Romantics | date=4 October 2009}}
History
Steve Strange and Rusty Egan co-hosted these exclusive nights without giving them a name, according to Strange's autobiography, and publicised them solely by word of mouth. An emphasis on style was ensured by enforcing a strict dress code at the door. Crucially, the Blitz lay between two art colleges (St Martin's School and Central School) and it became a testbed for student fashion designers during the 1980s.{{cite web|url=http://shapersofthe80s.com/blitz-kids/ |title=BLITZ KIDS |date=20 September 2009 |publisher=Shapersofthe80s.com |access-date=28 July 2014}}
These included Stephen Jones, David Holah, Stevie Stewart, Darla Jane Gilroy, Michele Clapton, Kim Bowen, Fiona Dealey, Stephen Linard,{{cite news| url=https://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/fashion/stephen-linard-blitz-kid-fashion-designer-boy-george-david-bowie-b1144794.html | work=Evening Standard | first=David | last=Johnson | title=The Life of Stephen Linard | date=12 March 2024 | access-date=24 October 2024}} among others. The Blitz began making headlines thanks to its patrons' styles of clothes and make-up for both sexes,{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sucCAAAAMBAJ&q=%22the+blitz+kids%22&pg=PA30 |title=New York Magazine – Google Books |date=26 July 1982 |access-date=28 July 2014}} subsequently documented by Gary Kemp in his 2009 first-person book, I Know This Much, and by Graham Smith and Chris Sullivan in their 2011 book We Can Be Heroes: London Clubland 1976-1984.{{Cite book | last=Smith | first=&Sullivan | year=2011 | title=We Can Be Heroes: London Clubland 1976-1984 | place=London | publisher=Unbound | isbn=978-1-908717-04-7}}
Other core attendees included Boy George, Marilyn, Alice Temple, Perri Lister, Princess Julia, Philip Sallon and Martin Degville (later to be the frontman of Tony James' Sigue Sigue Sputnik), Siobhan Fahey (later a member of Bananarama),{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2010/may/15/blitz-boy-george-steve-strange-visage | newspaper=The Guardian Staff of the cult Scala Cinema contributed to the mood. | first=Priya | last=Elan| title=It's Blitz: Birth of the New Romantics | date=15 November 2010| access-date=10 March 2019}} Biddie and Eve{{cite web | url=https://shapersofthe80s.com/2011/01/16/2011-%e2%9e%a4-the-unknown-mr-big-behind-london%e2%80%99s-landmark-nightspot-makes-his-return-to-the-blitz/| title=The unknown Mr Big behind London's landmark nightspot | publisher=Shapersofthe80s | date=16 January 2011| access-date=6 April 2019}} (long-standing cabaret act at the Blitz as wine bar), Perry Haines (who became co-editor of the earliest issues of i-D magazine) and Chris Sullivan (who founded and ran the Wag club in Soho for 19 years).
The team of Strange as greeter and Egan as DJ came together at Billy's nightclub in Soho in autumn 1978, when the post-punk generation found themselves bored with the whole nihilist punk genre, as Smith and Sullivan record. Strange and Egan introduced regular Roxy Music and David Bowie nights at Billy's and, in an effort to find something new and colourful, the denizens took to wearing bizarre home-made costumes and clothing and emphatic make-up, presenting a highly androgynous appearance.{{cite web | url=https://shapersofthe80s.com/2013/04/24/%e2%9e%a4-visage-out-of-the-80s-frying-pan-into-the-21st-century-fire| title=Visage: out of the 80s frying pan into the 21st-century fire | publisher=Shapersofthe80s | date=16 January 2011| access-date=6 April 2019}}
After three months, disagreements with the owner prompted them to move on from Billy's – which had effectively formalised the once-a-week club-night. Helen Robinson, who ran the shop PX as the flagship for New Romantic ready-to-wear in Covent Garden, employed Strange as an assistant and it was she who encouraged him and Egan to transfer their energies in 1979 to the more elitist Blitz wine bar in Great Queen Street.{{cite news| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2009/oct/04/spandau-ballet-new-romantics | work=The Observer | first=David | last=Johnson | title=Spandau Ballet, the Blitz Kids and the birth of the New Romantics | date=4 October 2009}}{{cite web | url=https://shapersofthe80s.com/blitz-kids/1980-just-dont-call-us-new-romantics/ | title=1980, Just don't call us New Romantics | publisher=Shapersofthe80s.com | date=29 September 2009 | accessdate=7 December 2022}} Over the next 20 months their fashion-led Tuesday club-night was gradually acknowledged in the media as home to the New Romantic movement and prompted the "Blitz Kids" epithet in mainstream newspapers, led by the Daily Mirror on 3 March 1980.[https://shapersofthe80s.com/2015/11/09/%e2%9e%a4-princess-julia-relives-the-day-when-1980-went-boom/ "Blitz Kids let their hair up"]. Daily Mirror, republished at Shapersofthe80s, 3 March 1980.
In mid-1980, David Bowie visited the club and asked Strange and three other Blitz regulars to appear in the video for his single Ashes to Ashes, which helped to propel the New Romantic movement into the mainstream.{{cite web | url=https://shapersofthe80s.com/blitz-kids/1980-bowie-recruits-blitz-kids-for-his-ashes-video/ | title=1980, Bowie recruits Blitz Kids for his Ashes video | publisher=Shapersofthe80s.com | date=1 July 2020 | accessdate=27 January 2024}}
Subcultural outcomes
The Blitz club provided roots for several new pop groups, notably Visage with Steve Strange on vocals and Blitz DJ Rusty Egan on drums, then Spandau Ballet who played live gigs there in 1979 and 1980.{{cite news| url=https://shapersofthe80s.com/revolution/1980-steve-stranges-call-to-join-the-party/ | newspaper=Evening Standard| first=On_The | last=Line | title= Strange Days, p23 | date=24 January 1980}} Later, Blitz cloakroom attendant George O'Dowd became internationally famous in his own right as Boy George fronting Culture Club. Marilyn became a singer, but with limited chart success.
Boy George celebrated the Blitz Kids scene in his 2002 musical Taboo, in which he played the part of Leigh Bowery, who hosted London's fortnightly club-night called Taboo in 1985-87, long after the Blitz closed.
In January 2011, Steve Strange and Rusty Egan threw a one-off reunion partyStrange and Egan return to the Blitz, “Shapersofthe80s.com, 2006” [http://shapersofthe80s.com/2011/01/08/2011-%E2%9E%A4-strange-and-egan-return-to-the-blitz-to-kick-off-the-20-tweens/ accessed 30 May 2015]{{cite web|url=http://www.electricityclub.co.uk/the-blitz-club/ |title=Return To THE BLITZ CLUB 2011 |work=The Electricity Club |date=21 February 2011 |access-date=11 January 2019}} on the site of the original Blitz Club, with performances from Roman Kemp's band Paradise Point and electro punk artist Quilla Constance, plus DJ sets from Egan himself. Egan simultaneously launched an official Blitz Club website[https://web.archive.org/web/20150428043436/http://www.theblitzclub.com/about.php "theblitzclub.com:80/about"]. Internet Archive, Wayback Machine, retrieved 07-04-18. incorporating a record label, which published three remixes in as many years.
In 2017 The National Portrait Gallery acquired portraits of Blitz Kids Stephen Linard, David Holah, John Maybury and Cerith Wyn Evans by photographer David Gwinnutt, which were displayed in the exhibition Before We Were Men {{cite web|last1=Gwinnutt|first1=David|title=Before We Were Men|url=https://www.npg.org.uk/whatson/display/2017/david-gwinnutt|website=Nag.org.uk|access-date=28 December 2017}}
In March 2021, Bruce Ashley's documentary Blitzed: The 80's Blitz Kids' Story, was shown on Sky Arts.{{Cite magazine|url=https://www.radiotimes.com/tv-programme/ndq674/blitzed-the-80s-blitz-kids-story/|title=Blitzed: The 80s Blitz Kids' Story|magazine=Radio Times|access-date=22 October 2021}}{{Cite web|url=http://www.electricityclub.co.uk/tag/the-blitz-club/|title=The Blitz Club Archives|website=Electricityclub.co.uk|access-date=22 October 2021}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.sky.com/watch/title/programme/186a44fc-09a1-4c13-b040-ff8c318286e1/blitzed-the-80s-blitz-kids-story-186a44fc-09a1-4c13-b040-ff8c318286e1|title=Blitzed: The 80s Blitz Kids' Story|website=Sky.com|access-date=22 October 2021}} Boy George, Rusty Egan and Marilyn all appeared in the film discussing their time at the club and about the early 1980s-era, whilst La Roux was interviewed about the cultural effects of the New Romantic movement on younger performers like herself.Blitzed: The 80's Blitz Kids (directed by Bruce Ashley) on Sky Arts, 9pm 13 March 2021/11pm 19 March 2021
List of prominent Blitz Kids
- Rusty Egan (Visage member and DJ/co-founder of the Blitz Club)
- Steve Strange (Visage member and co-founder of the Blitz Club){{cite web|last1=Elan|first1=Priya|title=It's Blitz: Birth of the New Romantics|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2010/may/15/blitz-boy-george-steve-strange-visage|website=the Guardian|publisher=The Guardian, 15 May 2010|access-date=17 December 2016|date=15 May 2010}}{{cite book|last1=Hawkins|first1=Stan|title=The British pop dandy : masculinity, popular music and culture|date=2009|publisher=Ashgate|location=Farnham, Surrey, England|isbn=978-0-7546-5858-0|page=60}}
- Michele Clapton (costume designer){{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/the-blitz-kids-how-the-new-romantics-made-london-swing-again-8294639.html|last1=Elms|first1=Robert|title=The Blitz kids: How the New Romantics made London swing again|date=10 November 2012|website=The Independent|access-date=13 March 2024}}
- Michael Clark (dancer)
- Martin Degville (Sigue Sigue Sputnik)
- Robert Elms (writer for The Face and NME, now a radio presenter)
- Siobhan Fahey (Bananarama)
- Kate Garner (Haysi Fantayzee)
- Boy George (Culture Club member and cloakroom assistant at the Blitz Club)
- Tony Hadley (Spandau Ballet){{cite web|last1=Elms|first1=Robert|title=The Blitz kids: How the New Romantics made London swing again|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/the-blitz-kids-how-the-new-romantics-made-london-swing-again-8294639.html|website=The Independent|date=10 November 2012|access-date=17 December 2016}}
- Jeremy Healy (Haysi Fantayzee)
- Tony James (Sigue Sigue Sputnik)
- Stephen Jones (milliner){{cite news | url=http://fashion.telegraph.co.uk/article/TMG3502777/And-now-for-Stephen-Joness-crowning-glory.html | newspaper=The Daily Telegraph | first=Roya | last=Nikkhah | title=The Queen's Diamond Jubilee | date=22 November 2008 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723055130/http://fashion.telegraph.co.uk/article/TMG3502777/And-now-for-Stephen-Joness-crowning-glory.html | archive-date=23 July 2011 }}
- Princess Julia (DJ)
- John Keeble (Spandau Ballet)
- Gary Kemp (Spandau Ballet)
- Martin Kemp (Spandau Ballet)
- Perri Lister (Hot Gossip)
- Marilyn (singer)
- Steve Norman (Spandau Ballet)
- Gene October (Chelsea)
- Sade (singer)
- Philip Sallon (socialite){{Cite web|url=https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2011/04/05/gay-socialite-philip-sallon-attacked-in-central-london/|title=Gay socialite Philip Sallon attacked in central London|website=Pinknews.co.uk|date=5 April 2011|access-date=22 October 2021}}
- Tallulah (DJ){{Cite web|url=http://www.david-hudson.co.uk/archive/tallulah.html|title=David Hudson's homepage|website=David-hudson.co.uk|access-date=22 October 2021}}
- Bev Sage (Techno Twins)
- Steve Fairnie (Techno Twins)
- Alice Temple (singer/model){{cite web |url=http://www.theblitzkids.com/site_archive/the_blitz_kids/alicetemple.html |title=Alice Temple |publisher=Theblitzkids.com |access-date=25 August 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727011840/http://www.theblitzkids.com/site_archive/the_blitz_kids/alicetemple.html |archive-date=27 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}
- Midge Ure (Visage member and singer with Ultravox – starting with their 4th album)
Literature
- {{Cite book| last=Kemp | first=Gary | year=2009 | title=I Know This Much: From Soho to Spandau | place=London | publisher=Fourth Estate | isbn=978-0-00-732330-2 }}
- {{Cite book| last1=Smith | first1=Graham | last2=Sullivan | first2=Chris | year=2011 | title=We Can Be Heroes: London Clubland 1976-1984 | place=London | publisher=Unbound | isbn=978-1-908717-04-7}}
- {{Cite book| last=Strange | first=Steve | year=2002 | title=Blitzed! | place=London | publisher=Orion Books | isbn=0-75284-7201}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20100304113934/http://www.theblitzkids.com/ History and pictures of the Blitz Kids]
Category:Youth culture in the United Kingdom