Pattie Boyd, love triangle: letters from George Harrison and Eric Clapton up for auction

«I had these letters for such a long time, definitely too long.” Pattie Boyd she was the wife and muse of two legendary artists, such as George Harrison And Eric Claptonwhich straddled the Sixties and Seventies they courted her sending her drawings, photos and passionate messages. A correspondence «heartbreaking» to be reread, as the former model revealed to Daily Mail, and that soon it will end up at auction.

Well yes, Pattie is preparing to open a new window on what the British tabloid defines «the greatest love triangle in the history of music». Chronologically, she met Harrison in 1964, when she was just 19 years, during the filming of the film A Hard Day's Nightand two years later she marries him: a couple that seemed perfect, but within about ten yearsit falls apart until separation.

Meanwhile, Clapton – who he was a friend of both of them and frequented their home in Surrey – had begun to send hold letters to Pattie. How slowly gives in to flattery and to wonderful songs like Layla And Wonderful Tonightwhich the British guitarist he dedicates them veiledly: in 1979, therefore, here's the weddingbut again they don't last long and in 1989 divorce brings down the credits.

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Two love stories intensewhich are actually told by poignant exchanges of letters which Pattie – “with Clapton's consent” – has decided to sell. «When George was away, he wrote me fantastic words. He missed me and I missed him,” he underlined on the auction house's website Christie'sshowing a sweet letter fromHotel Plaza in New York which talks about «shopping» and «grilled cheese sandwiches».

Then there are Eric's letters, the first dated 1970. «I am writing to you with the aim of knowing your feelings”, it is read. «I would like to ask you if you still love your husband. These are impertinent questions, but is there still something in your heart for me? And again a few months later: «If you want to take me, I'm yours. If you don't want me, break the spell that binds me. Keep in cage a wild animal it's a shame, taming it is divine».

«For twenty-three years I was first Mrs. Harrison and then Mrs. Clapton”, Pattie, born in 1944, told us in an interview last year. «I was known but, in fact, always in someone's shadow. If we went into a shop, the clerk would open the door for George and then he threw it in my face. I asked myself who I was, for the first time, in depth, also thanks to long psychotherapy sessions».

«Nostalgia or regrets? Neither one nor the other. I like to think about extraordinary luck of having been a girl at that time magical period».


Source: Vanity Fair

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