Eric Clapton and Pattie Boyd - Dating, Gossip, News, Photos list. Help us build our profile of Eric Clapton and Pattie Boyd!
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(March 27, 1979 - June 1988) (divorced)
In March 1970, George and [Pattie] moved into a new house. (...) One morning shortly after moving in, a letter arrived for [Pattie] with the words `express` and `urgent` written on the envelope. (...) In small, immaculate writing, with no capital letters, [Pattie] read: `dearest l,`as you have probably gathered, my own home affairs are a galloping farce, which is rapidly degenerating day by intolerable day . . . it seems like an eternity since i last saw or spoke to you!please do this, whatever it may say, my mind will be at rest . . .all my love, e.`
That evening the phone rang. It was Eric. `Did you get my letter?` he asked.
By this time [summer 1970] Paula had gone. She had been with Eric in Miami when he was recording Layla and knew instantly it was about [Pattie]. She had always had a suspicion he was with her only because she was the next best thing to [Pattie] and [Pattie] was unobtainable. Hearing Layla confirmed it.
She explains: "We met secretly at a flat in South Kensington. Eric Clapton had asked me to come because he wanted me to listen to a new number he had written.
He switched on the tape machine, turned up the volume and played me the most powerful, moving song I had ever heard. It was Layla, about a man who falls hopelessly in love with a woman who loves him but is unavailable.
He played it to me two or three times, all the while watching my face intently for my reaction. My first thought was: `Oh God, everyone`s going to know this is about me.`
I was married to Eric`s close friend, George Harrison, but Eric had been making his desire for me clear for months. I felt uncomfortable that he was pushing me in a direction in which I wasn`t certain I wanted to go.
But with the realization that I had inspired such passion and creativity, the song got the better of me. I could resist no longer.
That evening I was going to the theatre to see Oh! Calcutta! with a friend and then on to a party at the home of pop impresario Robert Stigwood. George didn`t want to go to the show or the party.
After the interval at Oh!Calcutta! I came back to find Eric in the next seat, having persuaded a stranger to swap places with him. Afterwards we went to Robert`s house separately but we were soon together. It was a great party and I felt elated by what had happened earlier in the day but also deeply guilty.
During the early hours, George appeared. He was morose and his mood was not improved by walking into a party that had been going on for several hours and where most of the guests were high on drugs.
He kept asking `Where`s Pattie?` but no one seemed to know. He was about to leave when he spotted me in the garden with Eric. It was just getting light, and very misty. George came over and demanded: `What`s going on?` To my horror, Eric said: `I have to tell you, man, that I`m in love with your wife.`
I wanted to die. George was furious. He turned to me and said: `Well, are you going with him or coming with me?`"
Pattie and George`s marriage wasn`t in good ways, so she decided to be with Eric Clapton.