Marianne Faithfull
Former
convent girl Marianne Faithfull (born December 29 1946) released her
debut single, the Mick Jagger/Keith Richard penned As Tears Go By,
on August 13 1964, after meeting The Rolling
Stones' manager Andrew
Loog Oldham at a party in London. The song hit Number nine on
the UK charts.
In September of that year, Marianne made her live
debut at the Adelphi Cinema in Slough. The following month she
appeared on the TV show Juke Box Jury, and commented on one
record, "I'd like it at a party if I was stoned".
Her next single, a cover of the Bob Dylan song Blowin'
In The Wind was released in November, but she collapsed and was
confined to bed, pulling out of a 26-date British tour with Gerry
& The Pacemakers, Gene Pitney and
The Kinks.
American singer Jackie DeShannon took her place
on the tour, although Marianne was well enough to fly to the US in
December for TV and radio appearances.
February 1965 found Marianne embarking on a
30-date, twice-nightly UK package tour headlined by Roy
Orbison, while
her next release, Come And Stay With Me, reached Number 4 in
the UK charts. As her singles began to also chart in the
USA, she undertook a tour of America with Gene Pitney
(with whom she
was rumoured at the time to be having a romance). Faithfull married
her boyfriend John Dunbar in May, while her next single (This
Little Bird) was at Number 4 in Britain. She also became a
resident guest host on the new BBC2 TV series Gadzooks! It's The In
Crowd.
Two albums were released simultaneously in the UK
- The folk package Come My Way (which charted at Number 12) and Marianne
Faithfull (containing her first two hit singles) which charted at
Number 15. Collapsing again in August, during a concert at Morecambe,
Lancashire, she cancelled all forthcoming engagements, including a US
tour set for the end of the month. Meanwhile, the singles Summer
Nights and Yesterday hit the charts, although Marianne's
version of The Beatles' song was beaten to the charts by a version by
veteran crooner Matt Monro.
Her
next album, Go Away From My World, seemed aptly titled, as
Marianne separated from Dunbar and became Mick Jagger's constant
companion, remaining with the Stones' vocalist for nearly four years.
In February 1967 she was with Jagger at Keith
Richards' Redlands estate when police raided the premises. Unlike
Jagger and Richards, she was not charged with drug possession,
although legend has it that when police conducted the raid they found
Mick Jagger eating a Mars bar out of Faithfull's vagina . Completely
false, of course, but apparently brought up at Jagger's trial by the
prosecuting counsel. The 60s, hey?
Faithfull also began her acting career in 1967,
appearing in Chekhov's The Three Sisters at London's Royal
Court Theatre. By years end, she had also appeared in the film I'll
Never Forget Whatsisname with Oliver Reed and Orson Welles. In
1968 she co-starred with Alain Delon in Girl On A Motorcycle (known
in the US as Naked Under Leather) which was savaged by critics.
She also participated in the filming of The Rolling
Stones' Rock
& Roll Circus and miscarried Mick Jagger's baby.
Eight months later, while on the Australian set
of the film Ned Kelly in which she was to co-star with Jagger,
Marianne was discovered in a coma, suffering from a self-inflicted
drug overdose. She was dropped from the movie and sent to hospital for
treatment of her heroin addiction. Marianne
failed to make an impression when she returned to recording in 1975
after a six year gap with a version of Waylon Jennings' Dreaming My
Dreams.
Marianne re-emerged in 1980 with a truly
startling album, Broken English. This agonisingly honest work
spawned a hit single in the form of The Ballad of Lucy Jordan,
and some fiery furore (and bannings) for Why D'ya Do It? The
critics drooled over the album's collection of songs, which covered
everything from sex to the Baader-Meinhoff terrorist group, and
included a version of John Lennon's Working Class Hero - sung
more than adequately for an upper-class ex-convent girl.
Marianne told the press that she was over the
heroin addiction that led to her departure from the music world and
added that the royalties from Sister Morphine, the song she
wrote for the
Stones' album Sticky Fingers had been what
sustained her through the past ten years. "Don't tell me",
she said, "that drugs don't pay".
Throughout the 80s and 90s, Marianne married and
divorced a few times and lived in the US (until she was deported) and
Dublin, Eire. She continued to record and perform sporadically, and in
1999 appeared on an all-star bill at London's Royal Albert Hall in Here,
There and Everywhere - A Concert For Linda (remembering Linda
McCartney).
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