Visiting a nightclub in the middle of the day is a new concept in Britain for those who still have the urge to dance but no longer want to endure a sleepless night to do so
A crowd eagerly waits for the doors of a London nightclub to open on a Saturday in February. But it's not the small hours -- it's midafternoon and the party will end at 8:00 pm.
Visiting a nightclub in the middle of the day is a new concept in Britain for those who still have an urge to dance but no longer want to endure a sleepless night to do so.
"I'm 52 years of age and it's not a great look for a man of my vintage to be in a nightclub at two o'clock in the morning anymore," Jonny Owen, organiser of the Day Fever event in central London, told AFP.
Owen and his wife, actor Vicky McClure, organised their first daytime disco in the north-central English city of Sheffield in December before bringing it to the "HERE at Outernet" venue in the UK capital.
The idea is quickly becoming popular, with the next seven dates sold out, running to May and taking place in cities including Nottingham, Glasgow and Newcastle.