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Wonderful Tonight: George Harrison, Eric Clapton, and Me
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Wonderful Tonight: George Harrison, Eric Clapton, and Me description
A Q&A with Pattie Boyd, Author of Wonderful Tonight

Why are you writing the book now?

I have been asked for the last 15 years to write a book, and it is only now that I feel the time is right. My confidence in myself was restored after two successful exhibitions of my photography, and it occurred to me that I was finally ready to take a look at the unique experiences of my life and to share them--including all the ups and downs.

Tell us about the first time you met George Harrison.

Working as a model, I occasionally went for castings, mainly for television commercials. I went for an interview with one of the directors I had worked with in the past, and he cast me in his first movie, A Hard Day’s Night, to play the part of a schoolgirl. When I first saw George on the set, I thought he was the best-looking man I’d ever seen. I was so surprised when he asked me out on a date at the end of my first day of filming.

Tell us about the first time you heard George Harrison's song, "Something."

George said he had written a song for me, and he played it on the guitar at home without the words. Then when I heard the song after it had been recorded I couldn’t believe how utterly beautiful it was. It was released on a single in October 1969, and I felt so thrilled and flattered.

Tell us about the first time you heard Eric Clapton's "Layla."

Eric invited me to his band's flat one day and played a rough recording of "Layla" on a cassette recorder. I was sitting on a sofa and he on the floor as it played, and he kept looking up at me for a reaction. I was stunned; the intensity, passion and tenderness came across so strongly--I knew, as he said, it was written for me.


Wonderful Tonight: George Harrison, Eric Clapton, and Me Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥ The Other Side of the Story
Pattie Boyd was married to George Harrison and later to Eric Clapton, and she describes what life was like during those turbulent years. The first 60 pages of the book describes her childhood in Kenya, and then later in England.

She was a struggling young model when she met George Harrison on the set of the film "Hard Day's Night." It was love at first sight. But George's propensity for drinking and drugs and religious chanting sank the marriage.

But that was nothing compared to the years she spent with Eric Clapton, who could seemingly drink all day and all night. He was no slouch when it came to drugs, either.

Pattie's identity was swallowed up by her huge rock god husbands, and it is only once she got away from them that she really started to appreciate and love herself.

The book is replete with rock culture excesses and one gets the feeling that it took a long time for Boyd to see that it is a vacuous existence. Her biggest regret seems to be that she didn't try harder to work things out with George. In her words, she and Eric were passionate playmates, but she and George were soul mates.

This is a good book to read once you've read Eric Clapton's biography because it fills in the gaps by presenting how she felt about his philandering and his cheating and his drinking.

I should say that Pattie Boyd has led a very interesting life. But the parts of the book that cover her life before her marriages and her life after the marriages is not all that interesting. She seems to be a talented cook and a fair photographer, but she doesn't strike me as a particularly compelling personality.

For this reason, i felt led to give the book four stars rather than the five stars I gave Eric Clapton's book. But still, it's good to read both.
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