Les McKeown’s Legendary Bay City Rollers
headline new
12-concert cross-Canada tour
I remember I was chatting with 1980s pop star Samantha Fox the day after Les McKeown,frontman for 1970s heartthrobs the Bay City
Rollers, admitted
on the British TV show Rehab in February 2009 that he is bisexual.
"I’ve been a bit of a George Michael, meeting people,
often strangers, for sex," McKeown
said. "Not in public toilets – I’m not big on the unhygienic side of
things. These days you’d meet online and figure out a place where to meet –
your place or mine."
But Fox – whose fabulous lesbian partner of 14 years, Myra
Stratton, is also her manager – was as stunned about McKeown as I was.
"Les and I had become great friends on [an Australian]
tour," Samantha explained. "When I was 10 in 1977 the BCR were huge
and I used to wear white trousers and tartan bottoms! My friends and I had our
own BCR song" – here Samantha sings it to me – "and I sang it to Les
at the airport! I could see on that tour that he was a broken man. Now I
understand [why]. I wish he had spoken to me because I could have helped him.
Because it was [also] very difficult for me [coming out]. I could never live
that lie that long because it destroys you. And people know. That’s what
happened to me. Even when I went out with guys, like Paul Stanley of Kiss, I
knew."
Freddie Mercury died of AIDS-related bronchial pneumonia on November 24, 1991
When Queen frontman Freddie Mercury died of AIDS-related bronchial pneumonia on November 24, 1991, he decided in his last hours to publicly disclose his condition, no longer caring what the world thought – and keen to shape his own obituary, unlike Rock Hudson six years earlier. That gesture undoubtedly helped educate many rock fans about HIV and AIDS in an era when gay men were still dropping dead like flies all over the damn place.
No doubt it made one of my old friends – a well-known Canadian rock journalist from the era who prefers to remain nameless for this story – think about his own mortality. In fact, my colleague was befriended by Mercury when Queen taped two live concerts at the old Montreal Forum on November 24 and 25, 1981, for the famous 35MM live film Queen Rock Montreal.
“He wanted to sleep with me,” Mr. Rock Critic told me, pointing out the band had rented out the entire floor of a Montreal hotel. “He chased me down the hallways! Lets just say I ran the 100-metre dash in record time!”
There is another fun Montreal connection with Queen, featuring yet another old friend of mine, legendary CHOM deejay Tootall whom I like to say has the sexiest voice on Montreal radio. Anyway, Toots broke Queen’s #1 worldwide hit Crazy Little Thing Called Love right here in Montreal on CHOM back in 1980.
TooTall of Montreal's CHOM FM
“What happened was CHOM deejay and man about town Doug Pringle was in London and sent me a tape of Crazy Little Thing Called Love which was apparently on the British forthcoming release of The Game but he said they weren’t sure if they would release it in North America since it sounded so un-Queen like,” Toots told me. “So he sent me the song and I kept on playing it. The station’s music director – who shall remain nameless – didn’t like it and gave me grief. Of course when the album did come the song was on it and it became a big hit – the Number One song of 1980.”
I also recently asked Judas Priest frontman Rob Halford what it was like to rise to showbiz fame in the 1970s at the height of the homophobic “disco sucks” movement.
Samantha Fox and Freddie Mercury atop Barkers Photo: Courtesy Samantha Fox
“I saw Freddie, it must have been in the early 1980s, and I was going to Mykonos with friends from London via Athens,” Halford recalled. “We got to the hotel [in Athens] and did what we all did then – the clubs, the parties. At one club Freddie was holding court at the other end of the bar. We were two ships passing in the night. He waved, I waved. The place was packed and we never got the chance to connect. The next day we all went to Mykonos and I was on a beach when his yacht sailed by.”
A few years ago I also had a heart-to-heart with openly-lesbian 1980s pop siren and British pin-up Samantha Fox about the showbiz closet. When we discussed Freddie Mercury, she recalled rubbing elbows with British pop royalty in a nightclub above London’s iconic Barkers department store on Kensington High Street 25 years ago this past summer.
“It was an outrageous party! The place was filled with naked women painted green,” Fox said. “And everybody was there: Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet, Pet Shop Boys, Frankie Goes To Hollywood, even Gary Glitter. And Queen was playing. I had just one [hit] song [at the time], but Freddie Mercury pulled me up on stage and said, ‘Do you know Johnny B. Goode?’ And I said, ‘Yeah!’ So we sang it together!”
May 2012 update: To mark the band’s 40th anniversary,
the Queen officially-approved Queen
Extravaganza contest begat a concert tour by official Queen tribute
band the Queen Extravaganza, which headlined Montreal's Bell Centre on May 27,
2012, which I attended. It was a truly excellent tribute, and Montreal native Marc
Martel of the Juno Award-winning band Downhere was the (no pun intended) Freddie Mercury deadringer who won the Queen Extravaganza contest. Check out Martel’s winning audition here:
June 2015 update: British pop star Mika has long reminded of Freddie, and he channeled Freddie on his new 2015 album No Place in Heaven. One recent weekend in Montreal, Mika and I talked about his beautiful ballad Last Party, the emotional centerpiece of his new album and an ode to Mercury.
"The last time I saw you," I told Mika, "you imitated Freddie backstage from Queen's We Will Rock You: Live in Montreal 1981 DVD . . ."
"Yes! I remember — that interview is something straight
out of Absolutely Fabulous," Mika replied, laughing. "The song Last Party started
with this idea that I had, when Freddie Mercury found out that he had AIDS, he
closed himself up in a nightclub and had a crazy party for three days, with
drugs and everything. It was the worst possible thing to do after discovering
that kind of news, but that’s what he did. That’s why that song is called Last
Party, and it’s one of the saddest songs I’ve ever heard."