Getting out and about

TV Scope: Queer as Old Folk , Channel 4, Thursday, July 26th

TV Scope: Queer as Old Folk, Channel 4, Thursday, July 26th

Alan is 73 and about to marry his partner Jimmy. They've been together for 43 years. When they met, gay relationships were still illegal in Britain. Alan tearfully recalls the many gay friends he lost to suicide in the 1950s because of legal and social repression. Alan himself never hid the fact that he was gay.

Clive, on the other hand, now aged 57 (and why Channel 4 thinks it is appropriate to classify a 57-year-old as "old folk" I have no idea) only came out to his wife and son two years ago. Now, he's making up for lost time. Alan and Jimmy have been monogamous since they met. Clive claims to have had sex with almost a thousand men in the past two years.

Roger is in his 60s. He is a retired headmaster and he lives with a former pupil, Ian, who is 25 years old. Ian works as a stripper. While Roger hid his sexuality from the public, his wife knew for many years that he was gay and accepted the fact.

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This programme was part of Channel 4's 40 Years Outseries which commemorates the legalisation of homosexual relationships in Britain in 1967.

In the programme, Clive chats to his teenage son about how he is going off to Southend for a threesome. Not the sort of thing most 17-year-olds hear from Dad but Clive's son is unfazed by it all.

Ian's mother accepts his relationship with the much older Roger and even comes along to one of her son's strip shows.

But it's not all one big party for gay people. Alan points out that many people of all ages are still hiding their sexuality from everybody else. An older gay couple stay away from Alan and Jimmy's wedding because one of the partners is still hiding his sexuality from his wife.

Unsurprisingly, since he doesn't bother with safe sex, Clive gets a sexually transmitted disease. Since it is not HIV he's fairly relaxed about it. So relaxed that although he has to stop having sex for only five days to allow the antibiotics to work, he goes off on the evening of his diagnosis and has sex without telling his partner about the infection. Telling, he explained later, "could have spoilt it".

You could not imagine Alan taking such a cavalier approach to other people's health in a million years. When he was growing up, his mother told him never to let anyone kiss him on the lips because he could get a disease. So the day of his marriage to Jimmy is the first time that he lets him kiss him on the lips. He does remark though, with a wicked twinkle in his eye, that his mother neglected to tell them about other things you can do with your lips. Enough said.