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Pauline butcher frank zappa
Pauline butcher frank zappa










pauline butcher frank zappa

“Out in Singapore I had more free time and was able to finally put the book together. “It was the letters that really stirred the memories,” she added.Īlthough facing the usual time pressures of everyday life, the turning point was moving to Asia with her husband Peter, with whom she has a son. It was while revisiting these incredible accounts that the book started to take shape.

pauline butcher frank zappa

“One time I met a young man and asked ‘So, what do you do?’ He said that he was Eric Clapton and played the guitar.”ĭuring this period, from 1968 to 1972, she kept in constant correspondence with her family, sending numerous letters back home to her parents. “Famous rocks stars of the day used to come in and out as they pleased, although I never knew who they were," she said. The residence in question was the Log Cabin. She said: “Frank told me he was writing a book and that I should come out to Hollywood to live in his house as an assistant.” It was after meeting him a few more times that he made an interesting proposal. “I couldn’t understand what he had written so I made up my own words, which he thought were hilarious.”Īt the time she was disappointed at missing out on a university place, although Zappa told her 'education messes people up’. “Frank was over here promoting his Mothers of Invention tour, and as part of my job I was asked to type out the lyrics to his second album, Absolutely Free,” she recalled.

pauline butcher frank zappa

The unlikely friendship started when Pauline Bird was working in London in 1967. Meeting an avant garde performer in London and moving over to live with him in Hollywood is very far from an everyday tale. “It was not until I was advised by a radio producer a few years ago ‘to write something that no one else could write’ that it started to come about.” Mrs Butcher Bird told Get Surrey : “Frank encouraged me to write a book but I was never able to do it. The events in the late 1960s that led to a young, unspoiled English girl going to live in Hollywood, Freak Out! My Life with Frank Zappa has now been adapted into a Radio 4 play by Matthew Broughton. These are the words of Cobham resident Pauline Butcher Bird about a book she has written detailing her friendship with the iconic American rock musician Frank Zappa. It’s a coming of age story about a young girl finding her identity.” “I want people to know it’s not a story about drugs and rock ’n’ roll.












Pauline butcher frank zappa