Aug. 26, 2007

A Rock Muse Remembers

A Wife To Both George Harrison And Eric Clapton, Pattie Boyd Was An Inspiration To Both

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    Pattie Boyd, the former wife of George Harrison and Eric Clapton, reminisces about her tumultuous past and the songs she inspired. Anthony Mason reports.

  • Pattie Boyd was married to Beatle George Harrison and , later, to another rock legend, Eric Clapton.

    Pattie Boyd was married to Beatle George Harrison and , later, to another rock legend, Eric Clapton.  (GETTY)

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(CBS)  Pattie Boyd was a swinging '60s model when "something in the way she moved" attracted a Beatle, who wrote a song about her. So did a guitar god who became obsessed with her. She is the real "Layla" from Eric Clapton's song, and was the muse in the middle of rock's most famous love triangle.

"The whole episode is incredibly painful," she told CBS News correspondent Anthony Mason.

Photos: Fab Four Finds
Now, for the first time, the ex-wife of two music icons is talking. In her new book, "Wonderful Tonight" — that Clapton song was written about her, too — Boyd is finally adding her own lyrics to her story.

The daughter of a British Air Force pilot, Boyd was a 20-year-old model in 1964 when her agent told her to report to London's Paddington Station to play a bit part in the Beatles film "A Hard Day's Night." It was a role that changed her life forever.

Boyd, who played a schoolgirl on a train, said just one word in the movie: "Prisoners." That was it. But she caught the eye of George Harrison, who made sure he sat beside her at lunch.

"And I thought he was really pretty gorgeous," she said.

Out of loyalty to a boyfriend, she told Harrison she already had a date.

"My one girlfriend said, 'Are you completely mad? Dump the boyfriend immediately," she said. "So I did."

Harrison and Boyd became one of mod London's most glamorous couples. He was the shy Beatle, and she appeared on the cover of British Vogue. When they married in 1966, Boyd writes: "I was so happy I thought I might burst."

It was Boyd who introduced Harrison to meditation, which led the Beatles to India in 1968. She recently found her pictures of the trip.

"And that was, I think probably the last time that George was terribly peaceful and happy and calm," Boyd said.

But "after India," Boyd writes, "our lives and our relationship seemed to fall apart." With the sudden death of their manager, Brian Epstein, the Beatles had to become businessmen.

"And there was an awful lot of tension within the band and I think what was happening is that George was bringing that home," she said. "It definitely put stress on our relationship."

Harrison meanwhile had become close friends with another musician. Eric Clapton began showing up at the Harrison home frequently. Boyd could sense right away that Clapton was attracted to her and Harrison had started to become openly flirtatious with other women. Boyd thought it was something she just had to put up with. His spirituality was also making him increasingly remote.

Photos: Eric Clapton
"He'd have a bag around his neck with beads in it and keep chanting 'Hare Krishna.' And it's very difficult," she said. "I don't know if you've tried it, to talk to somebody while they're chanting."

But Clapton showed her the attention Harrison wouldn't. He wooed her obsessively one day, inviting her to his band's London apartment to play her a song.

"It was the most incredible song," she said. "He played 'Layla.'"

A song about a man obsessed with an unavailable woman. There was no mistaking "Layla" was Boyd.

"It's a pretty enticing song, you know? It's deeply seductive," she said. "I mean, you know, it's the most incredible song. And he sings it so — it's so heartfelt. It bowled me over."

Later that evening, at a party, it all came out when Harrison discovered Boyd and Clapton talking.

"And Eric said, 'I have to tell you something. I'm in love with your wife.' And I thought, 'Oh no!' I just wanted the ground to open up," Boyd said. "This is not a situation I was happy to be in. Anyway, George was furious and said, 'Well, go off with him if you want.' And I said, 'No, I'm coming home with you.'"

Boyd would stay in the marriage for three more years. The final straw was the discovery that Harrison was having an affair with a close friend.

In the first draft of her manuscript, Boyd discretely chose not to mention the name of the woman, whom she described as "the wife of one of our closest friends." But as she was finalizing the book, she called Ringo Starr to ask his advice and consent because, she now acknowledges, the woman Harrison slept with was Maureen Starr, Ringo's wife.

"She was the last person I would have expected to stab me in the back," Boyd writes, "But she did." The marriage was over.

"I thought that there was no room for me, in this ludicrous situation we'd all found ourselves in," she said. "Everyone behaving badly. You know, truly it was a mess!"

So in 1974, she left George and moved in with Eric. Remarkably, when they were married three years later, George attended the wedding party. And Clapton wrote another hit song about his new wife, "Wonderful Tonight."

But the marriage was anything but wonderful. Clapton began drinking heavily — two bottles of brandy a day. Living with him was "ghastly," Boyd said. Then Boyd, who'd tried unsuccessfully to have children, learned Clapton was about to have a baby by another woman.

He told her over dinner. "I just felt as if I'd been stabbed in the heart," she said.

Clapton even asked Boyd to help raise the boy, Connor, who would later die in a tragic fall. But it was a concession Boyd couldn't bring herself to make.

"I felt if I were to accept it, I would be destroying myself," she said. "And I would therefore have to leave."

So at 43, she was suddenly alone and only realized how lost she was when she contacted an old friend.

"And I said, 'Oh Amanda, hi. It's Pattie. I used to be Pattie Boyd.' And she said, 'You still are,'" Boyd said. "Oh, I was still, I suppose, connected with the idea of, 'Well, if I'm not Mrs. Eric, who the hell am I?' I'd lost my identity."

In time, she found it again through her love of photography. Pattie had always taken snapshots. Now she began taking pictures more seriously. And the model who'd started her career in front of the camera became an accomplished professional behind it. Later this week, an exhibition of her work will open at the Morrison Hotel Gallery in New York.

She made peace with Harrison years ago. When he died in 2001, "I felt completely bereft," she writes. "I couldn't bear the thought of a world without (him.)"

And a now-sober Clapton remains a friend. She still loves "Layla."

"It doesn't hurt," she said. "I'm beyond that. But I know it was for me. I like that."

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Add a Comment See all 12 Comments
by TheGoldenGirlsRock September 5, 2009 10:36 AM EDT
For all of you that whining that she is disrespecting Rock and Roll, without this woman songs like 'Layla' and 'Wonderful' tonight would not exist. So you can stop complaining because she gave happiness to two great rock and roll legends who happened to both be pricks.
Reply to this comment
by mikeaday2 August 28, 2007 8:52 PM EDT
Pattie Boyd was great then and is great now. Thanks to CBS for broadcasting the feature. It was a pleasure to see Ms Boyd and enjoy the wonderful music. Most people do not have music written about themselves as Ms Boyd.
MWA

Reply to this comment
by cmp271 August 27, 2007 7:22 PM EDT
We seem to forget the women in the live of the Beatles and others such as Clapton deserve to tell their side of the storey too. After all they lived with them and would know a few more things about them.

She makes George sound like a nice guy up to a point. I can''t imagine him with Maureen. I can''t imagine how Ringo must have felt when he knew about it. No wonder Paul kept Linda right next to him all the time, he is decent. It also explains why no one liked Yoko, she was homely and who would want to mess with that-bleah!!! Swinging England???

Hard to believe the Queen wanted to meet some of these former drug addicts and such examples of "high society" but they all have awards now.

Good going to Brian May for his Doctorates Degree in Astonomy. (check out the photos)
Reply to this comment
by vertol-2009 August 27, 2007 1:24 AM EDT
Sorry but she looks awful. A beautiful girl in her youth, what happened. My mom is 75 and still looks beautiful.
Reply to this comment
by bobgee_1999 August 26, 2007 8:06 PM EDT
Wow, it''s nice to know people---Boyd, harrison and Clapton---had no class in those days, either.
Reply to this comment
by keithle1 August 26, 2007 8:06 PM EDT
No talent. Just a pretty face.

The ones with the talent are George & Eric.

Long live rock ''n roll.
Reply to this comment
by berven2 August 26, 2007 6:10 PM EDT
Good luck Ms.Boyd in all things you do.
I''ve always like this lady.
Reply to this comment
by thisandthat1 August 26, 2007 6:02 PM EDT
She has always sounded pretty shallow to me and this interview only reinforces that feeling. I wonder if she understands the concept of loyalty? A peace and love bimbo with no character.
Reply to this comment
by barbaraf4 August 26, 2007 5:27 PM EDT
At the time she & Harrison were dating and getting married, I remember it being said that people who knew Pattie well, called her "Battie" because she was not very bright.

And now she is writing a book. Who would have imagined?
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by miles_hi August 26, 2007 4:20 PM EDT
hey patti looks asian are you sure thats the right picture?
Reply to this comment
by nif21 August 26, 2007 2:49 PM EDT
Get off it with the shame on CBS. The truth is the truth and Pattie Boyd has a right to tell her story. Sounds sexist to me to protect Harrison and Clapton when both of them practically ruined her life!

I always loved Pattie Boyd, she had a lot to do with the fashion we girls wore to school in those days and how we wore out hair. She is still lovely, and I wish her a good life.
Reply to this comment
by herbsworld August 26, 2007 2:09 PM EDT
Since when has my beloved moment of Sunday morning Zen become a T.V. tabloid program?
I''ll tell you when.
When you chose to run this awful piece without naming it properly.
It should have been named "As the stomach turns".
CBS Sunday Morning should be skeptical of anyone (especially ex-wives/girlfriends) who air the dirty laundry of the deceased, as they are not here to defend their reputations.
The first tip-off should''ve been the source, in tandem with the widely known fact that peoples of British descent are famously tight-lipped when it comes to matters of a personal nature.
The potential monetary gains of a scandalous tell all should be the second.
When a story such as this is told the blame is rarely assigned to the story teller.
You have done great dis-service to the memory and reputation of this man by airing this piece of tabloid trash.
Shame on you, CBS.
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