MilliOnAir Magazine July 2018 | Page 49

49

D

 

Today diversity is the buzzword everyone is talking about, reshaping not only the world of fashion but, increasingly, the workplace. 

 

Great gains against bigotry and prejudice have been made in recent years but there have been signs recently of a backlash, which is being felt around the world by the LGBTQ community, minorities and those with disabilities.

 

Two of the leaders of the drive for diversity in the UK are Linda Riley, who runs the European Diversity awards and educates in schools across the UK, and her friend Denise Welch, the actress, presenter and author. Denise is an ambassador for MIND and was named “Ally of the Year” by Diva, Britain's most popular magazine for lesbian and bi-sexual woman and their friends. 

 

The two struck up what might be seen as an unlikely friendship two years ago and, to celebrate MilliOnAir's Diversity issue, they got together for a photo shoot in which they return to the Berlin of the 1920s – and the woman who was the first to ‘strike a pose’. 

 

Here they talk to Steven Smith about their friendship and how they see their roles in promoting and protecting diversity today. 

Linda’s story 

It is two o’clock on a sunny Tuesday and Linda has just arrived at the location for our shoot, an art-themed apartment off the Tottenham Court road. Dressed in a white shirt, black suit and masculine black shoes, Linda has a reputation as a formidable woman who not only knows what she wants, but gets what she wants.

 

Having met Linda several times, the phrase “don’t judge a book by its cover” springs to mind. She may be sporting a traditionally masculine look, but she has a sensitive, almost girlish aura about her.

 

She tells me that people see what they want to see and many presume that if you appear as a stereotyped butch lesbian then you must be as hard as nails. She’s working class too, which she says makes some people assume that she’s not very bright when in fact she’s highly intelligent.

 

Exploding the assumptions that people so often make is one of the reasons she wanted to do the photo shoot: she is keen for people to look beneath the covers.

MilliOnAir

ecades ago, Marlene Dietrich, Tallulah Bankhead and Frida Kahlo blazed a trail with gender neutrality, taking what’s perceived as a masculine style, redefining it and making it their own, despite the outrage that often greeted them.