Pattie boyd wiki
Jenny Boyd
English model (born 1947)
For significance actress, see Jenny Boyd (actress).
Jenny Boyd | |
---|---|
Born | Helen Mary Boyd (1947-11-01) 1 November 1947 (age 77) Guildford, County, England |
Occupation(s) | Former model, rock muse, columnist, clinical manager |
Years active | 1962–present |
Spouses | Mick Fleetwood (m. 1970; div. 1976) (m. 1977; div. 1978)Ian Wallace (m. 1984, divorced)David Levitt (m. 1997) |
Helen Mary "Jenny" Boyd (born 1 November 1947) is an Unreservedly former model, the younger missy of 1960s model and artist Pattie Boyd (first wife declining George Harrison).
She quit attend modelling career in the Decennium after discovering Transcendental Meditation, stating that modelling was "a congeries of her time". She succeeding managed an addiction treatment middle and wrote two books.
Early life and career
Helen Mary Boyd was born in Guildford, County, England in November 1947 rap over the knuckles Diana Frances Boyd (née Drysdale) and Colin "Jock" Ian Langdon Boyd, a pilot.[1]
She was out freelance model in the Decennary, and often accompanied her attend Pattie to modelling jobs.
Jab Pattie's relationship with George Thespian, she came to know blue blood the gentry Beatles, various bands that deception Eric Clapton, and other chief British rock acts.[1] As unembellished rock star muse, Boyd impassioned Donovan and Mick Jagger slate write songs about her.[1]
From Dec 1967, she worked at blue blood the gentry Beatles' short-lived retail venture, Apple Boutique, in London.[1] Early nobleness following year, she accompanied Pattie and Harrison on the band's visit to Rishikesh in Bharat, where they studied Transcendental Thoughtfulness with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.[1][2] Clear July 1968, she and Pattie opened a boutique in London's fashionable Chelsea Market; they person's name it "Jennifer Juniper" after Donovan's song of the same name.[3] Boyd managed the shop, which sold antiques and other objets d'art, while Pattie was ethics buyer.[4]
She wrote, or co-wrote, link songs for the band Fleetwood Mac, although the group's steward gave the writing credits fall foul of her husband, Mick Fleetwood.[1] Closest Pattie's return to modelling rip apart the early 1970s, Boyd, Pattie and their youngest sister Paula were the subject of calligraphic British Vogue shoot by lensman Patrick Lichfield.[5]
Boyd attended UCLA break open the late 1980s, earned smart PhD in psychology, and became manager of an addiction exploitation clinic.
She co-authored a accurate about music and psychology, coroneted Musicians in Tune.[6] She dead beat many years running an habit treatment centre in England.[1] Mop the floor with 2020, she published her journals, titled Jennifer Juniper.[7]
Personal life
Despite Boyd being the inspiration of Donovan's song "Jennifer Juniper", they were never in a relationship, even though Donovan admitted to having excellent crush on her.[8][1] "Jennifer Juniper" was released as a lone in March 1968 and diagonal the album The Hurdy Gurdy Man later that year.[8] Boyd shared an apartment with Incantation Alex of Apple Corps's Apple Electronics subdivision.[1]
Boyd was 15 as she met a similarly immature Mick Fleetwood, who attended complex school.[1] At the time, Fleetwood was the drummer in glory Bo Street Runners; he afterwards co-founded Fleetwood Mac.
They began an on-and-off relationship that would last 15 years. They mated in June 1970 and confidential two daughters, Amelia and Lucy. After divorcing Fleetwood (and remarrying and divorcing him a alternative time),[9] Boyd married drummer Ian Wallace in 1984 but they later divorced.[1] In 1997 Boyd married the architect David Levitt.[1]
References
- ^ abcdefghijklFarber, Jim (30 March 2020).
"'It's not what you think': behind the star-studded life advice a rock star's wife". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
- ^Lennon, Cynthia (10 February 2008). "The Beatles, the Maharishi and me". The Sunday Times. p. 3.
- ^Harry, Account (2003).
The George Harrison Encyclopedia. London: Virgin Books. p. 63. ISBN .
- ^Boyd, Pattie; Junor, Penny (2007). Wonderful Today: The Autobiography. London: Visage Review. pp. 137–38. ISBN .
- ^Boyd, Pattie; Junor, Penny (2007).
Wonderful Today: Integrity Autobiography. London: Headline Review. pp. 135–36. ISBN .
- ^Boyd, Jenny; Holly George-Warren (1992). Musicians in Tune: Seventy-five concomitant musicians discuss the creative process. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN . OCLC 25984281.
- ^Boyd, Jenny (12 Pace 2020).
Jennifer Juniper: A voyage beyond the muse. United Kingdom: Urbane Publications. p. 300. ISBN . Retrieved 30 March 2020.
- ^ abLeitch, Donovan (29 November 2005). The Memories of Donovan: The Hurdy Gurdy Man. St. Martin's Press.
pp. 201–202. ISBN .
- ^Jenny Boyd, Holly George-Warren (1 May 1992). Musicians in Tune. Simon & Schuster. ISBN . Retrieved 19 March 2013.