After Dark (magazine)

Last updated
After Dark
After Dark 1972-03.jpg
Actor Nicholas Cortland on the
March 1972 cover
CategoriesPerforming arts trades
FrequencyMonthly
First issueMay 1968
Final issueJanuary 1983
Company Dance Magazine, Inc.
Danad Publishing Company, Inc.
CountryUnited States
Based inNew York City
LanguageEnglish
ISSN 0002-0702

After Dark was an entertainment magazine that covered theatre, cinema, stage plays, ballet, performance art, and various artists, including singers, actors and actresses, and dancers. First published in May 1968, the magazine succeeded Ballroom Dance Magazine. [1] [2]

Contents

In the late 1970s Patrick Pacheco assumed the editorship from William Como and strove for a time to make the magazine a more serious critical monthly with a greater emphasis on quality writing, abandoning color printing inside and reducing photos to a few inches square. This was a reaction to William Como's "eye-candy" thrust, but sales were low and in 1981 Louis Miele replaced Pacheco at the helm and returned the magazine to the full-color format with plenty of skin on show.

It seemed however that the day was done for After Dark, perhaps because several newer magazines were doing a better and more explicitly targeted job of appealing to the magazine's original readership, and as such Miele's incarnation of After Dark folded after only a couple of years, this time permanently.

The first issue does not say "Volume 1, no. 1", it says "Volume 10, no. 1". This numbering continues through volume 13, no. 8, Dec. 1970, which is followed by volume 3, no. 9, Jan. 1971. (Volume 3 is thus actually the fourth volume.) [3]

Background

After Dark, founded by its first editor, William Como and Rudolph Orthwine (both of Dance Magazine ), covered a wide range of entertainment- or lifestyle-related topics. In addition to numerous articles on dance, topics ranged from a review of the stage production of the musical Hair in the December 1968 issue [4] and an article on Shirley Bassey in the January 1972 issue, [5] to a cover photograph and feature article on Donna Summer in the April 1977 issue. [6]

Other cover photos included Bette Midler (January 1973), Robert Redford (December 1973), Barbra Streisand (April 1975), Lauren Hutton (December 1976), Mae West (May 1977), Peter Allen (February 1978), Dolly Parton (April 1978), Jon Voight (April 1979), Christopher Reeve (October 1980), Lily Tomlin (February 1981), and Diana Ross (May 1981). Best sold issue was the February 1976 Issue with Zarko Halmic, Bonita George and Bo van den Assum on the cover.

The May 1979 issue contained a profile of actor Philip Anglim, who originated the role on Broadway of John Merrick in The Elephant Man , a play by Bernard Pomerance. [7] Two other profiles in that issue were of James Mason, the actor who was nominated for an Academy Award for his role as the husband of Judy Garland in the film A Star Is Born [8] and Marilyn Hassett, who portrayed Jill Kinmont in The Other Side of the Mountain , a film about skier Kinmont's accident that left her paralyzed. [9] In 1981 Lee Swanson and Louis Miele became co-publishers with their first issue being in May 1981 with Diana Ross on the cover. Swanson & Miele published the magazine from the Flatiron Building in New York before moving it to Los Angeles. Swanson died of AIDS in 1984 at the age of 53. Ownership of the magazine was left to business manager Paul Lafayette of Stamford, Connecticut. [10] Issues regularly contained features on fashion; at times articles were about men's fashion exclusively. The "Cityscapes" section contained brief articles about then-current items of note in various cities or other geographical areas worldwide.

Advertising

For its advertising space promotion in the February 1977 issue of the magazine, After Dark touted,

Reach the Audience with Money to Spare. You'll find them in After Dark! They're affluent, successful and single. With no strings to tie them down. And the time and money to live it up, any chance they get. [11]

Their profile of their readers stated that 85.2% of their readers were single, were a median age of 33.7, and had a median income of US$20,882(equivalent to $104,995 in 2023). They were "upscale", with 75.8% holding managerial or professional positions, well-groomed—76.4% used cologne—and spent US$804(equivalent to $4,043 in 2023) a year on clothing. Their readers were "Travel Minded": taking a median 3.5 vacations per year with 56.6% owning valid passports; and "Bon Vivant": 81.6% regularly drinking vodka, 81.3% scotch, 70.3% gin, 63.5% champagne. [11] [12]

The magazine contained substantial advertising for gay restaurants, accommodations, nightclubs, bathhouses, guides, books, pornographic movies, and other products. Some of the advertising was not overtly gay; however, much of the advertising was for establishments or products that were well-known to gay men, or contained symbols often used to identify gay-oriented material, such as the Greek letter lambda . There was also an abundance of advertising for men's boutiques and clothing companies, especially those—such as International Male, for example—that offered skimpy men's underwear or swimwear.

Advertising for other products or services for gay men was explicit; for example, the ads for Hand in Hand Video, a gay pornography studio; The David Kopay Story , regarding former professional football player David Kopay's homosexuality; [13] and an ad for books by noted gay author Paul Monette, The Gold Diggers (containing the tag line, "Glittering, Glamorous, Gay"), and Lovers: The Story of Two Men, by Michael Denneny, described in the ad as "A poignantly true love story, with photographs". [14]

The May 1979 issue included an ad for an organization simply identified as "GSF" titled, "No Man Should Be Without A Man!", which stated, "If you would like to meet warm, sincere gay men (and women) who are interesting in forming...relationships then it's time you find out about GSF." [15] The issue also included an ad in its "After Dark Classified" ads for a "Gay Astrologer". [16]

Other advertising was obviously intended for adult readers as well, presumably those with open minds. The February 1977 issue contained a half-page ad for the Harry Reems Legal Defense Fund. The ad appealed for funds for Reems' defense in two separate lawsuits for his participation in the pornographic films Deep Throat and The Devil in Miss Jones . [17]

Gay interest

Arnold Schwarzenegger, "Musclebound for Glory", After Dark, February 1977 Arnold schwarzenegger After Dark nude.jpg
Arnold Schwarzenegger, "Musclebound for Glory", After Dark, February 1977

Daniel Harris describes the founding of After Dark as

One of the strangest reincarnations in journalistic history. Catering to musically inclined blue-haired old ladies and golfers in Hush Puppies, Ballroom Dance Magazine was a recreational journal for the geriatric set. It was out of the ashes of a periodical devoted to such topics as waltzes, rumbas, and turkey trots that After Dark, an audacious mass-market experiment in gay eroticism, arose like a phoenix in all of its subversive splendor. [18]

Although not described as a "gay magazine", After Dark regularly covered topics of interest to the gay community. Cal Culver, better known as the gay porn star Casey Donovan, appeared on the cover of the December 1972 issue. [19] The February 1975 issue included a photographic portfolio of the gay porn star Peter Berlin. [20] At its height, the magazine had more than 300,000 readers, "composed almost exclusively of gay men," according to Daniel Harris. [21]

The May 1979 issue included a feature article on the G.G. Barnum's Room, a New York City alternative nightclub catering to a gay and transvestite clientele. The feature article included information about the evolution / genesis of the club and the makeup of its then-current customers. The feature also contained a tandem piece on rollerskating disco, "Boogie on Wheels". [22]

The magazine publishers acknowledged the magazine's appeal to the gay community, noting that the magazine "had gotten a following in the homosexual community seven or eight years before any of the current homosexual magazines came on the market." [23]

Donald Embinder, a former advertising salesman for After Dark, went on to found Blueboy , an upscale adult magazine which has been called the gay answer to such straight titles as Playboy and Penthouse . [24]

Erotic content

The magazine, intentionally or not, provided a level of homoeroticism by regularly using images of nude or partially nude men for its cover and article illustrations. Although some illustrations of partially clad or nude women were included at times, males comprised the majority of the subjects. Some of the illustrations related directly to the subject of the article, but others seemed to be used just for their nudity or partial nudity.

A feature article in the February 1977 issue, "Musclebound for Glory", contained photos of bodybuilders, thus relating the illustrations directly to the topic of the article. Arnold Schwarzenegger was the cover model for that issue and several photographs of him were used as illustrations in the article. In two photographs, he appears in the nude; one photograph shows part of his penis. The feature is an in-depth look at bodybuilding as "one of the most fascinating (and least explored) subcultures in America." [25] Illustrated with pictures of barely clothed bodybuilders, the article, intentionally or not, evokes homoeroticism.

One photograph in that issue that seems to use gratuitous nudity is one of actor Paul Charles, performing the role of "Mark" on Broadway in the musical A Chorus Line . The illustration is one of several for an article about current events on Broadway, and consists of a narrative text as well as photographs of performers with brief summaries of their productions in the captions of the photos. [26] Charles is photographed nude with a fur coat strategically draped over one shoulder that just covers his groin.

Celebrities on the cover

  1. 1 2 3 Burrell, Devine, and Ralph appeared on the January 1982 cover together.

Related Research Articles

<i>National Lampoon</i> (magazine) American humor magazine

National Lampoon was an American humor magazine that ran from 1970 to 1998. The magazine started out as a spinoff from The Harvard Lampoon.

<i>Playgirl</i> American womens magazine

Playgirl is an American magazine that has historically featured pictorials of nude and semi-nude men alongside general interest, lifestyle, and celebrity journalism, as well as original fiction. For most of its history, the magazine printed monthly and was marketed mainly to women, though it quickly developed a significant gay male readership.

<i>Screw</i> (magazine) American pornographic magazine

Screw is a pornographic online magazine published in the United States aimed at heterosexual men; it was originally published as a weekly tabloid newspaper.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ron Goulart</span> American historian (1933–2022)

Ronald Joseph Goulart (; was an American popular culture historian and mystery, fantasy and science fiction author.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pornographic magazine</span> Magazines that contain content of an explicitly sexual nature

Pornographic magazines or erotic magazines, sometimes known as adult magazines or sex magazines, are magazines that contain content of an explicitly sexual nature. Publications of this kind may contain images of attractive naked subjects, as is the case in softcore pornography, and, in the usual case of hardcore pornography, depictions of masturbation, oral, manual, vaginal, or anal sex.

Robert M. Peak was an American commercial illustrator. He is best known for his developments in the design of the modern film poster.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barbi Benton</span> American retired model, actress and singer

Barbi Benton is an American retired model, actress, television personality, and singer. She appeared in Playboy magazine, as a regular on the comedy series Hee Haw, and recorded several moderately successful albums in the 1970s. After the birth of her first child in 1986, Benton retired from show business.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Storm Thorgerson</span> English graphic designer

Storm Elvin Thorgerson was an English art director and music video director. He is best known for closely working with the group Pink Floyd through most of their career, and also created album or other art for Led Zeppelin, Wishbone Ash, Phish, Black Sabbath, Def Leppard, Al Stewart, Scorpions, 10cc, UFO, Peter Gabriel, the Alan Parsons Project, Genesis, Yes, Kansas, Dream Theater, Muse, Audioslave, the Mars Volta, The Cranberries, Helloween, Ween, Shpongle and Catherine Wheel.

<i>Kilobaud Microcomputing</i> Defunct American computer magazine

Kilobaud Microcomputing was a magazine dedicated to the computer homebrew hobbyists from 1977 to 1983. It was one of the three influential computer magazines of the 1970s, along with BYTE and Creative Computing. It focused mostly on the kit-build market, rather than the pre-assembled home computers that emerged, and as the kit market declined in the early 1980s, Kilobaud lost relevance and closed in 1983. After this, company continued publishing other magazines dedicated to particular platforms rather than the kit market.

<i>Playmen</i> Italisn softcore pornographic magazine

Playmen was an Italian adult entertainment magazine. It was founded in 1967 by a mother of three, Adelina Tattilo, achieving fame as Italy's version of Playboy magazine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paedophile Information Exchange</span> British pro-paedophilia activist group

The Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE) was a British pro-paedophile activist group, founded in October 1974 and officially disbanded in 1984. The group campaigned for the abolition of the age of consent. It was described by the BBC in 2007 as "an international organisation of people who trade obscene material".

David Anthony Kraft was an American comic book writer, publisher, and critic. He was primarily known for his long-running journal of interviews and criticism, Comics Interview, as well as for work for Marvel Comics in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alex Niño</span> Filipino comics artist (born 1940)

Alex Niño is a Filipino comics artist best known for his work for the American publishers DC Comics, Marvel Comics, and Warren Publishing, and in Heavy Metal magazine.

Dwight Hooker was an American photographer and architect. He was best known as a photographer for Playboy magazine and has been described as one of the masters of "the sensual and the erotic", along with photographers Helmut Newton and J. Frederick Smith. One of his photographs became the basis of Lenna, the standard test image for image processing algorithms and related scientific publications.

Norman Seeff is a photographer and filmmaker. Since moving to the United States in 1969, his work has been focused on the exploration of human creativity and the inner dynamics of the creative process.

<i>Playboy Special Edition</i> Unique, infrequent, or semi-regular spin-offs of the magazine

Playboy Special Editions are a spin-off series of Playboy magazine containing glamour and softcore nude photographs. The initially infrequent and later semi-regular editions ran from 1963 through 2000 then re-branded from 2000 through 2012 final issues. A one-off special edition was published in February 2015 featuring images of models in different locations within California from the controversial photographer Terry Richardson.

References

  1. Back issue retail site Archived August 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine —intended as a reference for dates and images only. Some of the issue dates are incorrect; however, the listing correctly identifies Vol. 13 No. 01 as being published in May 1980. An online search in www.bookfinder.com returns September 1982 as the most recent issue available, and lists the May 1976 issue as the Tenth Anniversary Issue.
  2. LC Online Catalog (2009). "After Dark". Library of Congress. Archived from the original on 2012-07-13. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
  3. Direct examination of the periodical.
  4. "Photos from After Dark Magazine – December 1968". Hair Photo Index. 5 March 2002. Archived from the original on 18 January 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
  5. Norma McLain Stoop (January 1972). "'They Can't Put the Two Together' ...and Bassey is Both". After Dark. Archived from the original on 2009-10-28. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
  6. Patrick Pacheco (April 1977). "Donna Summer: The Sensuous Diva of Sex Rock". Archived from the original on 2009-04-06. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
  7. John Gruen (May 1979). "Philip Anglim: The Elephant Man Girds His Loins". After Dark. Danad Publishing Company, Inc. pp. 62–65.
  8. Mewborn, Brant. "James Mason: Odd Man In". After Dark, May 1979, pp. 70–73
  9. Stoop, Norma McLain. "Inside The Bell Jar—Marilyn Hassett:The Upbeat Side of a Tragic Type". After Dark, May 1979, pp. 74–76
  10. family member and inheritor of Swanson estate
  11. 1 2 After Dark, February 1977, p. 97
  12. Currency conversion obtained from American Institute for Economic Research (AIER)
  13. After Dark, February 1977, p. 83.
  14. After Dark, May 1979, p. 16.
  15. After Dark, May 1979, p. 89.
  16. After Dark, May 1979, p. 96.
  17. After Dark, February 1977, p. 89.
  18. Harris, Daniel (1997). The Rise and Fall of Gay Culture. New York: Hyperion. p. 64.
  19. Cal Culver Archived February 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine cover image at retail site
  20. Forbes, Dennis (text and photos), "Creating Peter Berlin", After Dark, Danad Publishing Company, Inc., New York, February 1975, pp. 44–51.
  21. Harris 1997 , p. 65 devotes several pages to the trajectory of the magazine.
  22. Pacheco, Patrick, "Raucous and Roller Disco: More than Dancing / Boogie on Wheels", After Dark, May 1979, p. 54–61.
  23. Philip H. Dougherty (1982-07-02). "Advertising; After Dark Returning With Mid-August Issue". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-03-26.
  24. Rutledge, Leigh W. (1992). The Gay Decades: From Stonewall To The Present . Plume. p.  81. ISBN   0-452-26810-9.
  25. Pacheco, Patrick, "Musclebound for Glory", After Dark, February 1977, p. 34–41.
  26. Mewborn, Brant, "What's in the News: Broadway Buzz", After Dark, February 1977, p. 8–11.