Queen of Madrid
Madrid has its own Queen, with a kingdom named Gran Via, which is an
avenue covering various aspects of Spain’s capital, from spectacular
architecture to prostitution. The Queen resides on a tiny square called
Red de San Luis, just where Gran Via goes from uphill to downhill.
Every day towards noon, when her beauty sleep is over, the Queen
appears. Local preparations have been completed well in advance. Men in
gaudy green uniforms, with “Limpieza” written on their backs, have
thoroughly swept the square and emptied all garbage cans. The window
cleaner at McDonald’s has been hard-working as he knows the Queen often
takes a rest by leaning against their facade. The police is present to
secure the Queen’s safety.
Click-clack, click-clack, she’s coming! In an outfit accentuating
her ample curves, the Queen strides into the square, with no royal
smile though. Blond hair gathered in a short horsetail, a light suntan,
nails and lips freshly painted. She’s so shapely and erect that fitness
and health food must be part of her daily routine. Her sense of dress
is remarkable; today a mix of discreet and provocative: supertight
khaki jeans zipped on the legs, a tiny vest in the same thin material
over a dark brown T-shirt nearly bursting at breast level, a miniature
shoulder bag and sandals with slim stilettos adding 10 cm to her height.
No clapping and cheering, that’s part of the game, and the
relationship between the Queen and the locals is a game built on mutual
respect. After all, by imparting royal prestige to Red de San Luis, she
stimulates the overall activity: hotels and hostels are occupied,
shopkeepers are kept constantly busy, the Metro pours out new admirers
and red busses have their last stop here. Curious pedestrians from
Puerta del Sol, the heart of the city, and from the department store El
Corte Ingles, pick the street that ends right here, Calle Montera, when
heading for Gran Via.
Daily Round
No
queen is without princesses, in this case young girls of East European
origin flocking on the square and also down the Montera street. They
behave like school girls, running after and trying to hit each other
with their handbags, giggling hysterically. Although they have no idea
of how to dress, several already appear familiar with drugs. The police
seem unable to do much, but did transport a young “puta” with full
sirens one day, which she seemed to enjoy. Clumsy school girls could of
course be what the Spanish sex market is crying out for.
The princesses annoy the Queen who probably shares their background.
Clearly, the Queen is more mature, around 30, and thus likes to keep a
distance to those princesses. However, she’s dependent on them as
informers. Each morning, the Queen calls a short meeting to let a few
princesses update her about the latest market developments and possible
new dangers. Sticking together is perhaps necessary to match competing
groups of prostitutes from Africa and South America.
Considered as a territory, Gran Via is very manageable. The Queen
stays in touch with every corner of her kingdom, simply by walking up
and down the avenue that stretches from east to west in three sections,
opened for traffic a century ago. The edifices of the east section were
erected first, those of the western section completed decades later. An
intended architectural uniformity failed to materialize, although the
facades on this eastern stretch do radiate harmony despite varying
designs of columns and balconies. Architecture makes no impression on
the Queen, for her focus is down at street level, dominated by banks
and six endless rows of roaring cars.
The Telefonica skyscraper, a close neighbor of the Queen’s San Luis,
marks the beginning of the middle section. Entertainment and shopping
take over now, causing a more excited atmosphere. Cinemas, a theater,
fashion boutiques and large cafes like Nebraska, Zahara and Galache all
have plenty of customers. If you order only a beer in one of these
cafes, the waiter angrily shouts at you, “What else!” At 23.30 they
begin a work-slow action to get customers out, which at times has
exactly the reverse effect.
Beggars and the homeless stay on, the latter making themselves
coffins of cardboard boxes, merely to sleep in though. They should pull
themselves together, the Queen undoubtedly thinks. Look at her, she can
pay her own tickets in the many cinemas at Plaza del Callao, where Gran
Via starts its last stretch with a slight bend northwards. Two more
skyscrapers, from the Franco era, welcome the Queen to Gran Via’s
finishing point, Plaza de Espana. Under shady plane trees, she says
hello to two other lone riders, Don Quijote and Sancho Panza, before
returning to her flagstones.
Fellow Queens
There
are other queens around. You often see them two and two late at night
or early in the morning, leaving the Chueca district just opposite San
Luis, on the northern side of Gran Via. They are huge queens with
balloon breasts and deep voices, one sporting green hair. Children who
never met a drag queen before, could easily get scared. The ladies are
on their way home after performing and partying in gay Chueca.
The Queen from San Luis should definitely pay a visit to Chueca, by
crossing Gran Via and walk down Calle Hortaleza. She may wish to stay
out of the darkrooms and saunas, but could work out in the local
fitness center whose panorama windows exhibit the customers’ physical
charms and efforts. There is more to Chueca than that: bars and
restaurants for every taste, squares covered with cafe chairs and
wrapped up in lazy music. The gays would love her and some drag artists
might use her perfectionism as the theme of their next show.
Chueca’s pleasant tone attracts gays and heteros alike. Gay couples
get so self-confident that they walk out in Madrid hand in hand
afterwards, kissing and hugging in the streets. They are brave, not
contenting themselves with equal rights on a piece of paper but eager
to put them into practice, thereby paving the way for the less
courageous. Hopefully, they avoid the three immigrant guys who sat at a
pavement cafe studying what they called gay ways of walking, doubling
up with laughter.
These prospects do not necessarily amuse the Queen. Over on her own
square, a cafe owner let four hip-hoppers clear tables and chairs away
one evening to make room for their street dance, not professional but
daring and amply rewarded with Euro coins. The Queen, standing in the
background, showed no sign of being amused. Such an attitude does not
affect her royal status; confirms it, if anything. After all, what
makes her the undisputed Queen, is the way she puts up with her
not-so-glorious function. She handles it with admirable style.