If you like to go out at night but are known to doze off at the bar when it gets late, daytime nightclubs might be for you.
Actress Vicky McClure and her husband Johnny Owen have created a nightclub that is open during the day and closes early so you can get a kebab, catch the last train and be home in time for a Saturday night in front of the TV.
The idea is to be rested enough to take the kids to their clubs the next morning.
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"Instead of dancing all night, you can dance all afternoon," the "Duty" star joked.
In recognition of the party classic "Night Fever" by the Bee Gees, the all-day disco is called "Day Fever" - instead of all night, it lasts all day.
"This is a nightclub that's open in the afternoon for people of a certain age," said filmmaker Johnny, 52.
"I like to meet up with friends, have a few drinks, dance, but I also like to go for a curry afterwards, not wait hours for a taxi and get home early enough to watch the football preview and not have my week ruined," he said.
It opens at two o'clock in the afternoon, and visitors are asked to be polite and advised to dress as if they were going out at night.
"I can play well in the kitchen by myself, but I'd rather play with my friends," said Vicki, winner of the Buffett Award.
"Music is a very important thing for all of us. It's one thing to dance with headphones in your ears, at home or in the car, but when you're on the dance floor, with friends, it creates memories."
Among the DJs at the day clubs are Vicki, Johnny, and their daughter Katie Owen, a radio host.

Tickets for their first daytime disco at Sheffield City Hall sold out in 48 hours last month, with Vicky and her mother Carol headlining the dance floor.
"It started in a classic way, with everyone standing around the dance floor," Vicki said.
"However, my mother and I were the first to start dancing and very soon everyone else joined us so that the dance floor was full."

So far, it has been confirmed that there will be daily parties in London, Nottingham and South Wales, as well as in Sheffield again, and the organizers want to expand disco clubs across the country.
More than half of UK nightclubs closed between 2005 and 2015, a BBC survey found.
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