DIVA 250
FROM “LESBIAN CHIC” TO #GIRLCRUSH, ROXY BOURDILLON DISSECTS THE MEDIA REPRESENTATION OF LESBIANS AND BI WOMEN THROUGH THE 90S AND 00S, UNTIL NOW…
PHOTOS YOUTUBE, UNIVERSAL, DAFYDD JONES, SHOWTIME, ANDREW EDGECOMBE, STEFFAN HILL/BBC
Ah, the 90s; the era of double denim, the Macarena and £1 mood rings that changed colour to reflect how sweaty your soul was. It was the decade that “lesbian chic” officially became a thing and when the first issue of DIVA came out in April 1994 (pun totally intended), there was something sapphic in the air.
Madonna had just released her discreetly-titled coffee table book, Sex, a raunchfest of softcore sadomasochism and same-sex sensuality. (It’s a real page-turner, but you might want to slip it down the back of the sofa if your nan pops round for a cuppa and a Hobnob.) Singer KD Lang and supermodel Cindy Crawford had posed as a butchfemme couple with a shaving fetish on the cover of Vanity Fair and, here in Blighty, 1994 marked not only the birth of DIVA, but also the first pre-watershed lesbian kiss on TV, when Brookside’s Beth and Margaret locked lips.
But being visible isn’t the same as having power. The very phrase “lesbian chic” suggests a disposable fashion fad; “Hey consumer, why not accessorise your outfit with a Gucci backpack and a trophy dyke?” It’s utility chic with added handholding and just as much comfortable footwear. And although Anna Friel playing soapland’s first lesbian was a landmark moment, she was killed off within a year of coming out, proving that TV’s Bury Your Gays epidemic is nothing new.
While magazine articles hailed the rise of sapphic chic, we still didn’t have equal rights. Instead of same-sex marriage and adoption rights, we had discrimination and hate crime. We were good enough to titillate the public, but not worthy of the same basic liberties most people take for granted. In truth, homophobia was more prevalent than women wearing plaid overalls because Vogue told them lezzaluxe was all the rage.
Fast-forward to the 00s and faux lesbianism was rife. Russian girl band TATU’s sole PR strategy was to dress like schoolgirls and lez it up for the camera, despite the fact that one of the singers was straight. This staged lesbian eroticism was the music industry equivalent of two women necking on to get slack-jawed blokes to pay for their drinks. Britney, Madonna and Christina pulled a similar trick with their three-way snog at the 2003 VMAs, and in 2008 Katy Perry’s sugar-coated suggestiveness made her an overnight sensation when she sang about kissing a girl and – oh, how edgy – liking it.