Fiesta was a British softcore adult magazine published monthly by Galaxy Publications Limited.[1] It was a sister publication of Knave magazine, launched two years later.[2]
Categories | Pornographic magazine |
---|---|
Frequency | Monthly |
Format | 8.5" x 11" |
First issue | 1966 |
Final issue | 2020 |
Company | Galaxy Publications Limited |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
ISSN | 0265-1270 |
OCLC | 877750950 |
Launched in 1966 by the British photographer Russell Gay,[3] Fiesta quickly became Britain's top-selling adult magazine. Dubbed "the magazine for men which women love to read", the monthly magazine's readers were responsible, in the early 1970s, for creating a feature that has been adopted in magazines worldwide: Readers' Wives.[4] Central to this theme was the monthly "Readers' Wives Striptease" section, which shows a set of photos of a supposed wife or girlfriend of a reader being photographed by Fiesta undressing (often, but not always out of everyday clothing) to full nudity.[5] The Readers' Wives section was the subject of a song by John Cooper Clarke on his album Disguise in Love.
As well as its Readers' Wives and photographic girl sets, Fiesta was built around a core of readers' letters from men and women. In addition there were male-interest features, cartoons and reviews, sexy puzzles and a regular erotic horoscope, together with Firkin, an underground-comics style cartoon strip drawn by Hunt Emerson and written by Tym Manley.[6]
Mary Millington modelled for the magazine in 1974, prior to her exclusive signing to work for David Sullivan's magazines.[7]
Nicholas Whittaker, journalist and author of Platform Souls, Blue Period and Sweet Talk, worked for the company from 1980 to 1982, when he left to go and work for Paul Raymond Publications, where he played a major role in establishing the new Razzle magazine. His experiences at Fiesta and Razzle are the subject of his book Blue Period.[8]
Sales of Fiesta were 238,000 in 1991 but had dropped to 162,000 in 1996, mirroring the decline in the market for softcore magazines at that time.[9] Nevertheless, in the mid-2000s it was still the country's top selling adult magazine.[10] Fiesta ceased production in 2020, after 54 years of publication.[11]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Galaxy Publications Limited". www.galaxy.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2017-09-02.
- ^ "Fiesta". fiesta.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2019-01-15.
- ^ "King, Queen, Knave… | Mary Millington". www.marymillington.co.uk. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
- ^ Pratt, J. (1986). "Pornography and Everyday Life". Theory, Culture & Society. 3: 65–78. doi:10.1177/0263276486003001006. S2CID 144061458.
- ^ Fiesta, Volume 43, Issue 9. Page 70. ISSN 0265-1270
- ^ Fiesta, Volume 43, Issue 9. ISSN 0265-1270
- ^ Simon Sheridan (24 January 2015). "King, Queen, Knave…". Mary Millington: The Official Website of Britain's Legendary Sex Goddess.
- ^ Blue Period, Whittaker, Nicholas, Gollancz, London, 1997
- ^ Smith, Clarissa (2005). "A Perfectly British Business: Stagnation, Continuities, and Change on the Top Shelf". In Sigel, Lisa Z. (ed.). International Exposure: Perspectives on Modern European Pornography, 1800-2000. Rutgers University Press. p. 149. ISBN 9780813535197.
- ^ Smith (2005), p. 164.
- ^ "Fiesta". www.philsp.com. Retrieved 2022-06-22. see final issue, Volume 54, No. 4. Note: this page combines entries for this magazine with the unrelated 1956-era magazine.
Further reading
edit- Attwood, F. (2002) 'A very British carnival: Women, sex and transgression in Fiesta magazine', in European Journal of Cultural Studies, 5 (1) 91–105.