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"In my 30s I was doing it, in my 40s I was organising it, and now, in my 60s, unfortunately, I'm only going to talk about it." Famous words, from a famous woman. Cynthia Payne first hit the headlines in 1978 when the police raided her home in a pleasant tree-lined avenue in suburban Streatham, to find a sex party in full swing. Queues of middle aged and elderly men waiting to exchange their 'luncheon vouchers' for food, drink, friendly chat, striptease shows, and a trip upstairs with the girl of their choice. Vicars, MPs, and lawyers were among those who considered her to be the best hostess in London.
Novelist Paul Baily wrote the story of her life "An English Madam", and she became a television and media personality. Two films were made about her life: "Personal Services", which starred Julie Walters and "Wish You Were Here", which made the young Emily Lloyd an overnight star. The true story is told in a video documentary produced by David Wilkinson: "Cynthia Payne's House of Cyn" (Guerilla Films, 1996. Bar Code GFL 102), which was acclaimed at the Cannes International Television Festival in 1996. Convinced that she was doing no wrong since she no longer ran a brothel, she continued to give an occasional swing party, and it was an 'end of filming' party for "Personal Services" which the police chose to raid in 1986. The resulting court case in January 1987 stole the headlines and kept the nation amused for three weeks with its stories of sex, slaves, transvestites and undercover policemen in disguise. Cynthia won a resounding victory and was found not guilty on ten charges of controlling prostitutes. Two more books followed:
'Entertaining at Home' by Cynthia Payne - a coffee table book packed with
stories and hints about how to give fun parties and how to deal with the
police, and 'Sexplicitly Yours - The Trial of Cynthia Payne', by Gloria
Walker with Lynn Daly. Cynthia completed a three week season at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 1992 where she played to packed houses. Incensed by the second trial, Cynthia was determined to change Britain's archaic sex laws, and stood for parliament as a candidate for the Payne and Pleasure Party in the Kensington by-election in July 1988 and in her own area of Streatham and in the general election in 1992. She did not get in, but the world's media took notice of what she had to say, and she had her revenge in 1996 when she was called for jury service and was elected foreman.
She was invited to speak at an International Conference on the Cultural, Legal and Social Issues of Prostitution, sponsored by the University of California Center for Sex Research in Los Angeles. In April 1998 she was invited to give a talk in Monte Carlo in the presence of Crown Prince Albert of Monaco. Ask Cynthia a question
in the new Cynthia
Payne forum! |
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