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  • Marianne Faithfull, a Pop Star Turned Survivor, Is Dead at 78


    Marianne Faithfull, who went from being a fresh-faced, feather-voiced pop star, as well as muse and girlfriend of Mick Jagger, to a homeless heroin addict, only to re-emerge radically altered in her early 30s as a critically acclaimed cabaret performer singing songs of dark honesty, died on Thursday in London. She was 78.

    Her death was confirmed by a spokesperson, who did not cite a cause.

    The roiling dramas in Ms. Faithfull’s life, along with the starry circles she moved in during the Swinging Sixties and the unvarnished power of her later music, turned her into a nearly mythic figure — a symbol of survival and transformation. It’s a role she at first rued but later came to relish.

    “What I’ve been trying to do, and I think I’ve done it rather well, is bring the persona — or what was a false persona in the beginning — and me together,” she told the British newspaper The Independent in 2008.

    But the road to get there was long and perilous. It involved a miscarriage, the temporary loss of her only child in a custody battle, a suicide attempt, several stints in rehab and a 1967 drug arrest — also involving the Rolling Stones — whose salacious and sometimes erroneous details generated reams of heated headlines in Britain.

    Still, when Ms. Faithfull finally found a bold new path for her music, starting in 1979 with the new-wave-influenced album “Broken English,” she earned the kind of broad respect she had never before enjoyed, inspired by the brutal truth of her material and the scarred gravity of her voice.

    “I’ve got the right voice for me,” she told The Independent of her new sound. “It gives an edge to everything.

    “I don’t have to act out,” she continued. “I just have to open my mouth and there it is.”

    Over the years, Ms. Faithfull maintained a parallel if fitful acting career in theater, television and film. She made her stage debut in 1967 in a London production of Chekhov’s “Three Sisters,” co-starring Glenda Jackson. That same year she had a major role in “I’ll Never Forget What’s’isname,” in which she earned the distinction of being the first person to utter the “f” word in a major studio film.

    The next year she had the glamorous title role in “The Girl on a Motorcycle,” opposite Alain Delon. In 1969, she played the doomed Ophelia in a well-regarded film version of “Hamlet,” starring Nicol Williamson. Her lead role as a conflicted 60-year-old prostitute in the 2007 French film “Irina Palm” earned her a nomination for best actress at the European Film Awards.

    In addition to the more than 20 albums she released, Ms. Faithfull contributed lyrics, or inspiration, for some classic Rolling Stones songs. Mr. Jagger based the words to “Sympathy for the Devil” in part on the Russian novel “The Master and Margarita,” by Mikhail Bulgakov, which she had given him. She also uttered the phrase that inspired the key lyrical refrain in “Wild Horses” (“Wild horses couldn’t drag me away”) and co-wrote “Sister Morphine,” which she released as a solo single in 1969, two years before the Stones’ version appeared on the album “Sticky Fingers.” (Though Ms. Faithfull received writer credit on her own recording of the song, she didn’t earn parallel status on the Stones album until 1994, after a long legal battle.)

    Marianne Evelyn Gabriel Faithfull was born in the Hampstead area of London on Dec. 29, 1946, to a family whose rare history presaged her own.

    Her father, Robert Glynn Faithfull, had been a British spy during World War II and later a literature professor at the University of London. Inspired by what Ms. Faithfull often described as an eager appetite for the erotic, her father invented a device meant to liberate female sexuality, which he named the “Frigidity Machine.” Her mother, Eva von Sacher-Masoch, was a Viennese baroness, an ex-ballet dancer and a descendant of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, author of the erotic novel “Venus in Furs,” which spawned the term masochism.

    “It was a colorful upbringing,” Ms. Faithfull told Saga magazine in 2007. “And I dare say I have traits from both my parents.”

    But her parents’ marriage was over by the time Marianne was 6, and she moved with her mother, who had little money of her own, to a modest house in Reading, west of London. Her education at a Roman Catholic convent school was subsidized by charity.

    Instead of going to college, she began venturing into London clubs to explore the exploding underground art and music scene. She also scored the occasional gig singing folk songs in local coffeehouses.

    At a 1964 party for the Rolling Stones, she was approached by their manager, Andrew Loog Oldham, who was drawn by her beauty. “He asked me, ‘Can you sing?’ And I said, ‘Mm-mm, I can,” she said in a 2005 interview on NPR. “About a week later, I got a telegram from Andrew saying, ‘Be at Olympic Studios at 2 o’clock.’”

    There she recorded her first track, “As Tears Go By,” often said to be the first original composition by Mr. Jagger and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones, which until then had mostly performed blues and R&B covers. The recording, with its wan English-horn hook and wistful lyrics, “was a very strange song for two 21-year-old boys to write and a stranger one for an 18-year-old girl to sing,” Ms. Faithfull told The Daily News of New York in 1987.

    Still, the single became a Top 10 hit in Britain in 1964 while also breaking into Billboard’s Top 25 in the United States. In his introduction to a photo-driven book about her, “A Life on Record” (2014), Salman Rushdie described the young Ms. Faithfull, with wry affection, as having “the voice of a slightly zoned-out chorister.”

    She racked up three more Top 10 hits in Britain in 1965, “Come and Stay with Me” (No. 4), “This Little Bird” (No. 6) and “Summer Nights” (No. 10).

    For her album debut, her label, Decca, issued two simultaneous releases. One, simply titled “Marianne Faithfull,” concentrated on her pop songs, while the other, “Come My Way,” consisted mainly of traditional folk pieces and rose to No. 12 on the British charts, three positions higher than its companion.

    At the age of 19, in 1965, Ms. Faithfull married John Dunbar, owner of the hip Indica Gallery, where John Lennon would meet Yoko Ono the next year. Six months after they wed, she gave birth to their son, Nicholas. Not long after, she left her husband to live with Mr. Jagger, and Nicholas was sent to her mother to raise. (The Dunbars didn’t formally divorce until 1970.)

    Ms. Faithfull and Mr. Jagger became one of London’s most glamorous, and photographed, couples; they also became one of its most notorious after the police raided a party in 1967 at Keith Richards’s home, searching for drugs. They found them, along with Ms. Faithfull, with only a fur rug wrapped around her.

    Mr. Jagger and Mr. Richards were charged and received sentences that were later dismissed. Though Ms. Faithfull was not charged, she fumed about the unequal treatment she received in the press. “It destroyed me,” she told Details magazine in 1993. “To be a male drug addict and to act like that is always enhancing and glamorizing. A woman in that situation becomes a slut and a bad mother.”

    Ms. Faithfull tried to have a child with Mr. Jagger in 1968 but suffered a miscarriage. At the end of that year, she appeared on the television special “The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus,” performing the song “Something Better” while looking quite the worse.

    In 1969, while on a plane with Mr. Jagger to Australia, where he was to star in the western film “Ned Kelly,” a distraught Ms. Faithfull took more than 100 pills of the barbiturate Tuinal, sending her into a coma. “It’s very bad form to try and kill yourself when you’re with Mick Jagger,” she dryly told The Telegraph in 2011.

    When she emerged from the coma in an Australian hospital six days later, her first words were reportedly “Wild horses couldn’t drag me away.” But the relationship was over. “I just wanted out of that world,” she told Saga. “It wasn’t that I didn’t love Mick. But I wasn’t cut out for all that.

    “It’s a great honor to be a muse,” she added, but “that’s a very hard job.”

    For two years, Ms. Faithfull lived on the streets of London, where she slipped into heroin addiction. She also lost custody of her son to Mr. Dunbar. “I wanted to disappear completely,” she told The Telegraph.

    A record producer coaxed her into making an album, “Rich Kid Blues,” in 1971, but it was not released until 1985. An admired country-influenced album she recorded in 1975, “Dreamin’ My Dreams,” reached No. 1 in Ireland.

    Around that time she became romantically involved with Ben Brierley of the punk band the Vibrators. They married in 1979. She also began recording demos featuring some of the songs that would end up on “Broken English.” The recordings greatly impressed Chris Blackwell of Island Records, and he signed her.

    While Ms. Faithfull’s drug and alcohol use had lowered her voice by several octaves and caused it to crack in places, the new sound gave her an unforeseen character and depth, suggesting a hip answer to Lotte Lenya or a punk Marlene Dietrich. The material on “Broken English” followed suit, with literate songs about terrorism and a suicidal housewife, as well as the curse-strewn epic “Why D’Ya Do It?” (with words by the poet Heathcote Williams).

    The album not only thrilled critics; it was also her first to make the U.S. charts since 1965. It earned platinum status and a Grammy nomination for best female rock vocal performance.

    Still, Ms. Faithfull’s drug days were not yet behind her. She didn’t clean up until 1985, after which her music took another fascinating turn, revealed on the 1987 album “Strange Weather,” produced by Hal Willner. It repositioned her as an esteemed gothic cabaret artist singing material ranging from show tunes to blues classics to the title track, a new song written by Tom Waits and his wife, Kathleen Brennan. She also included a fresh version of “As Tears Go By” — a far more consequential one than the original, better suited to the lyrics.

    By then, Ms. Faithfull had divorced Mr. Brierley and, in 1988, married a younger man, Giorgio Della Terza. They divorced three years later, after which she began to record prolifically, to critical acclaim. In quick succession, during the mid-1990s, she released a richly orchestrated album produced by Angelo Badalamenti, “A Secret Life”; a spare live collection of mainly Weimar Republic songs, “20th Century Blues”; and a take on Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill’s “The Seven Deadly Sins,” recorded with the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra.

    Starting with “Kissin Time” in 2002, Ms. Faithfull released a series of albums on which she collaborated with a wide range of respected younger admirers, including Beck, Jarvis Cocker, PJ Harvey and Nick Cave. She continued to tour and record in later years; a well-reviewed 2018 album, “Negative Capability,” included yet another version of “As Tears Go By” and made the British Top 50. Her last album, released in 2021, was “She Walks in Beauty,” a collaboration with the multi-instrumentalist Warren Ellis.

    In recent years Ms. Faithfull successfully battled breast cancer and hepatitis C, both of which she wrote about in her 2007 memoir, “Memories, Dreams and Reflections” — a more sanguine effort than her first, “Faithfull,” published 13 years earlier — and, later, Covid-19. In 2011, she was named a Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French government.

    She is survived by her son, Nicholas Dunbar, and three grandchildren.

    Throughout the many roller-coaster twists of her life, Ms. Faithfull remained committed both to addressing them frankly in interviews and to transforming them into art.

    “I don’t know how else to be but raw and honest,” she told British Vogue in 2014. “It may be hard for other people to take. But even if I try to, I can’t stop myself from saying what I think.”

    Ash Wu contributed reporting.



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  • Marianne Faithfull, ‘As Tears Go By’ Singer, Dead at 78


    Marianne Faithfull, a pioneering artist who transcended “it girl” status in the Sixties for a stunning second act as a singer-songwriter with great depth, died Thursday at age 78. 

    “It is with deep sadness that we announce the death of the singer, songwriter and actress Marianne Faithfull,” the singer’s rep said in a statement. “Marianne passed away peacefully in London today, in the company of her loving family.”

    Faithfull became a breakout star in 1964 with her first single, the ballad “As Tears Go By.” The beloved track would be the first song Mick Jagger and Keith Richards had written together. Although she was only 17 and her voice sounded frail and young, she sang the lyrics about feeling left out with a conviction that would guide her later work. She continued to score hits throughout the mid Sixties, before disappearing from the spotlight in a haze of heroin addiction (trials she chronicled in the lyrics to “Sister Morphine,” which the Rolling Stones also recorded).

    She reemerged in 1979 with the jaw-dropping Broken English, an album that drew musically from punk and New Wave and showcased her newfound dark, sometimes vulgar outlook. Its songs, like “The Ballad of Lucy Jordan,” “Guilt,” and a cover of John Lennon’s “Working Class Hero,” perfectly fit the way her voice had deepened during her time away. (Faithfull would earn a Grammy nomination for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance.) Over the next 40 years, she stayed the course, singing about love and relationships against dramatic, musical backdrops. In recent years, she recorded songs by PJ Harvey, Nick Cave, Roger Waters, Leonard Cohen, and Bob Dylan, among others. Her most recent album, Negative Capability, came out in 2018, and Rolling Stone lauded it as a “late-career masterwork.”

    Thrown into fame at a young age, controversy overshadowed much of Faithfull’s early career. She was in a relationship with Jagger from 1966 until 1970 and was pilloried by the press after police raided Keith Richards’ flat for drugs and found her nude, save for a fur bedcover in 1967. Toward the end of the decade, she was homeless and addicted to heroin. After the death of her son, she attempted suicide. She eventually cleaned up in the mid-Eighties, just before redefining herself again with the 1987’s jazzy, cabaret-influenced Strange Weather, which featured a new rendition of “As Tears Go By.”

    In recent years, Faithfull battled a number of health setbacks. In addition to a hepatitis-C diagnosis, she received treatment for breast cancer in 2016, and underwent shoulder-replacement surgery two years later.

    At various points of her career, she revisited “As Tears Go By” several times, and marveled in an 2014 interview with Rolling Stone about how profound the song was. “I still sing it every night,” she said. “I still think it’s a beautiful song. I’m still very grateful that Mick and Keith gave it to me and wrote it for me. I suddenly really understood it myself when I was about 40, when I realized it was another version of [poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s ballad] ‘The Lady of Shalott.’ It hit me during one of my moments of clarity, which I’ve told you seem to happen periodically. That moment of clarity was when I got clean.”

    This story is developing.



    Marianne Faithfull, ‘As Tears Go By’ Singer, Dead at 78

    It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of legendary singer Marianne Faithfull. The iconic musician, best known for her hit song “As Tears Go By,” has died at the age of 78.

    Faithfull’s hauntingly beautiful voice and soulful lyrics captivated audiences around the world, earning her a permanent place in music history. Her talent and artistry will be sorely missed, but her legacy will live on through her timeless music.

    Our thoughts and prayers are with Faithfull’s loved ones during this difficult time. May she rest in peace knowing that she has left an indelible mark on the world of music.

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    #Marianne #Faithfull #Tears #Singer #Dead

  • Marianne Faithfull death: Leading light of the Swinging Sixties dies aged 78


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    Marianne Faithfull, the English rock singer who became one of the leading female artists of the British Invasion during the Swinging Sixties, has died aged 78.

    The news was confirmed by her spokesperson, who said in a statement: “It is with deep sadness that we announce the death of the singer, songwriter and actress Marianne Faithfull.

    “Marianne passed away peacefully in London today, in the company of her loving family. She will be dearly missed.”

    Born in Hampstead, London, to a Viennese mother with links to Austrian nobility and an MI6 agent who abandoned the family when she was six, Faithfull first began performing as a singer in 1964. She was introduced to Mick Jagger at London’s Indica Gallery, co-owned by her first husband, the artist John Dunbar, and began her association with the Rolling Stones when she recorded “As Tears Go By”. Written by Jagger, Keith Richards and Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham – who dismissed Faithfull as “an angel with big tits” but thought he could make her a star – the song made the Top 10 in the UK.

    When her marriage to Dunbar collapsed, she moved in with Brian Jones and Anita Pallenberg and began a relationship with Jagger, becoming a frequent target of the tabloids, not least during the infamous drugs bust at Richards’ Sussex mansion in 1967, when her singing career ground to a halt. “They hurt my feelings, all those busts and harassment,” she told The Independent in a 2008 interview. “I’m not saying I behaved that well, but I didn’t really do anything that terrible either.”

    That same year, she launched an acting career with her debut theatre appearance in a stage adaptation of Chekhov’s Three Sisters at the Royal Court Theatre, opposite Glenda Jackson, and in Michael Winner’s comedy-drama I’ll Never Forget What’sisname opposite Orson Welles and Oliver Reed.

    Faithfull and Jagger on their way to Marlborough Street Court on a charge of possessing cannabis, 1969 (Photo by Michael Webb/Keystone/Getty Images)

    Faithfull and Jagger on their way to Marlborough Street Court on a charge of possessing cannabis, 1969 (Photo by Michael Webb/Keystone/Getty Images) (Getty Images)

    A year later, Faithfull suffered a miscarriage of her and Jagger’s child, and their relationship ended. By the time he left her, she had also lost custody of her son, Nicholas, her son by Dunbar, along with the credit for her bleak 1969 song “Sister Morphine” – ostensibly because the Stones feared she would spend any money it made on drugs (her name was finally reinstated in the Nineties).

    Marianne Faithfull with Anita Pallenberg at Heathrow Airport, 1967

    Marianne Faithfull with Anita Pallenberg at Heathrow Airport, 1967 (Getty Images)

    Hitting rock bottom, Faithfull spent two years living on the streets of Soho while suffering from heroin addiction and anorexia. “It’s very, very strange to think about it,” she told The Guardian in 2007. “It was such a degraded moment, to live on a wall and shoot drugs.” Yet she insisted it was “exactly what I needed at that time… It was complete anonymity. I wanted to disappear – and I did.”

    In a 2009 interview with director Mike Figg for the book Destroy/Rankin, Faithfull elaborated on how being exposed to scrutiny as a woman in the public eye had a lasting impact on her sense of self, to the point that she couldn’t bear to see herself in photographs.

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    Marianne Faithfull with her son, Nicholas, in 1967

    Marianne Faithfull with her son, Nicholas, in 1967 (Getty Images)

    “When you are 18, 19, 20, you’re used to being photographed all the time, in a certain way,” she said. “So, the narcissism becomes almost out of control. And the way that young women are photographed, they become addicted to this feedback of the image. I’m still dealing with it.” She was contemptuous of her status as a “muse” to rock stars, too: “That’s a s*** thing to be,” she scoffed in a Guardian interview. “It’s a terrible job. You don’t get any male muses, do you? Can you think of one? No.”

    After an intervention from friends, she was enrolled in an NHS treatment programme for her heroin addiction. She was a survivor who suffered three miscarriages, breast cancer, hepatitus C and Covid-related pneumonia, and whose famous words uttered as she recovered from a drug-induced coma in 1969 – “wild horses couldn’t drag me away” – inspired the Rolling Stones song. “I see myself as strong, terrifically strong,” she told The Independent. “I mean, I’ve survived, haven’t I?”

    Marianne Faithfull with her first husband, John Dunbar, 1965

    Marianne Faithfull with her first husband, John Dunbar, 1965 (Getty Images)

    The destructive path she’d been on, which those watching had struggled to make sense of, was explained to her years later, when she received further treatment for a sleeping pill addiction at Crossroads, the rehab clinic founded by Eric Clapton. “I was told that I had very likely been clinically depressed for a long, long time, probably since I was 15, or even 14,” she said. “It explained, to me at least, a lot of my behaviour over the years.”

    She made a triumphant return to music in 1979 with Broken English, a critical and commercial hit that earnt her a Grammy nomination for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. “I made a decision to really, completely give my heart to the whole thing, and that’s what happened,” she told The Guardian in 2021.

    “I was quite smart enough to realise that I had a lot to learn… I didn’t go to Oxford, but I went to Olympic Studios and watched The Rolling Stones record, and I watched The Beatles record as well,” she continued. “I watched the best people working and…because of Mick, I guess, I watched people writing, too – a brilliant artist at the top of his game. I watched how he wrote and I learnt a lot, and I will always be grateful.”

    Faithfull poses for a portrait session to promote her movie ‘Irina Palm’ at the 57th Berlin International Film Festival, 2007

    Faithfull poses for a portrait session to promote her movie ‘Irina Palm’ at the 57th Berlin International Film Festival, 2007 (Getty Images)

    The record itself, she felt, was overlooked by many: “When they compiled the 100 best records of the century back in 2000, Broken English was nowhere to be seen,” she told The Independent in 2011. “Which I think was just absurd.” But it marked the second act of her music career, and with it a new boldness that also saw her

    Faithfull also collaborated with a number of fellow musicians in the second act of her career, including Beck, PJ Harvey, Lou Reed, Cat Power, Anohni, Pulp, and Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds.

    In 2021, she brought her teenage passion for the Romantic poets to She Walks in Beauty, her collaboration with Warren Ellis, Cave and Brian Eno. Writers such as Keats, Tennyson and Byron had “been with Marianne her whole life”, Ellis said. “She believes in these texts. That world, she inhabits it, embodies it, and that really comes through.”

    Critics agreed. “Those who dismissed Faithfull as just Jagger’s ‘bird’ back in the Sixties can surely do so no longer,” Helen Brown wrote in her five-star review for The Independent.

    “While her old knight is now chugging out the sub-Status Quo pandemic schlock of “Easy Sleazy”, Faithfull is rising from the ashes of the past, breathing fierce, sharp magic into these old words. She’s a time-conquering dragon queen.”

    She is survived by her son, Nicholas, and her half-brother, Simon Faithfull.



    It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Marianne Faithfull, a leading light of the Swinging Sixties, at the age of 78. The iconic singer, actress, and songwriter was known for her unique voice, powerful lyrics, and undeniable charisma.

    Faithfull rose to fame in the 1960s with hits like “As Tears Go By” and “Come and Stay With Me,” and became a symbol of the era’s cultural revolution. Her music, style, and attitude inspired countless artists and fans around the world.

    Throughout her career, Faithfull continued to push boundaries and explore new musical territories, collaborating with artists from diverse genres and backgrounds. Her powerful voice and fearless attitude made her a true trailblazer in the music industry.

    Marianne Faithfull will be remembered for her incredible talent, her fearless spirit, and her enduring impact on music and popular culture. She will be deeply missed, but her legacy will live on forever. Our thoughts and condolences are with her family, friends, and fans during this difficult time. Rest in peace, Marianne Faithfull.

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  • Marianne Faithfull, singular icon of British pop, dies aged 78 | Marianne Faithfull


    Marianne Faithfull, whose six-decade career marked her out as one of the UK’s most versatile and characterful singer-songwriters, has died aged 78.

    A spokesperson said: “It is with deep sadness that we announce the death of the singer, songwriter and actress Marianne Faithfull.

    “Marianne passed away peacefully in London today, in the company of her loving family. She will be dearly missed.”

    With a discography that spanned classic 60s pop tunes to the prowling synthpop of Broken English and onto collaborations with Nick Cave, Warren Ellis, Lou Reed and more, Faithfull was idolised by fans and fellow musicians alike, and was also celebrated across the worlds of fashion and film.

    Born in 1946 in London, Faithfull was descended from Austrian nobility on her mother’s side – her great-great-uncle Leopold von Sacher-Masoch wrote the erotic novel Venus in Furs – but grew up in relatively ordinary surroundings in a terraced house in Reading.

    After leaving for London in her teens, she met Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham, who asked Mick Jagger and Keith Richards to write her 1964 debut single As Tears Go By, which hit the UK Top 10. She had three other Top 10 singles in 1965, all of which also reached the Top 40 in the US.

    With Alain Delon in the 1968 film Girl on a Motorcycle. Photograph: Moviestore/Rex/Shutterstock

    Faithfull also began acting at that time, appearing on stage in productions of Chekhov’s Three Sisters, alongside Glenda Jackson, and Hamlet, playing Ophelia with Anjelica Huston as her understudy and performing each night’s climactic “madness” scene, she later revealed, high on heroin.

    On screen, she acted alongside Orson Welles, Oliver Reed, Alain Delon and Anna Karina, and played herself in Jean-Luc Godard’s 1966 film Made in the USA.

    Her fame as an icon of “swinging London” was superseded, though, by the infamy that came from her relationship with the Rolling Stones. She had married artist John Dunbar in 1965 and had a son, Nicholas, but soon left Dunbar for Mick Jagger, with whom she had a four-year relationship.

    She was often described as a muse for the band: she once told Jagger “wild horses couldn’t drag me away”, which became the chorus line to Wild Horses, and her drug struggles also proved inspirational for the songs Dear Doctor and You Can’t Always Get What You Want. She said: “I know they used me as a muse for those tough drug songs. I knew I was being used, but it was for a worthy cause.”

    She co-wrote her song Sister Morphine, recorded with Jagger, Richards and Ry Cooder, and later recorded by the Rolling Stones for their album Sticky Fingers, but her writing credit was left off until she won a protracted legal battle.

    Marianne Faithfull and Mick Jagger in 1969. Photograph: Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images

    Her addiction to cocaine and heroin worsened, and her reputation was damaged by being discovered naked, wrapped in a fur rug after having a shower, during a 1967 police search of Keith Richards’ house, alongside Richards, Jagger and six other men (described by one person as an innocent gathering “of pure domesticity”). “It destroyed me,” she later said. “To be a male drug addict and to act like that is always enhancing and glamorising. A woman in that situation becomes a slut and a bad mother.”

    In 1970, Faithfull lost custody of her son, split with Jagger and became homeless, living on the streets of Soho in London as she tried to quit heroin. “I’d been living in a very fake sort of world in the 60s,” she said in 2016. “Suddenly, when I was living on the streets … I realised that human beings were really good. The Chinese restaurant let me wash my clothes there. The man who had the tea stall gave me cups of tea.” She slowly turned her life around, ending an almost decade-long spell away from music with the country album Dreamin’ My Dreams in 1976.

    She cemented her comeback with one of her most acclaimed albums, 1979’s Grammy-nominated Broken English, embracing synth-pop and post-punk with an affectingly raw, deepened voice. She quit drugs for good in 1985, and regularly released music throughout the rest of her career. Her collaborators over the years included Nick Cave, Damon Albarn, Emmylou Harris, Beck and Metallica. She released 21 studio albums in total.

    Faithfull married and divorced two additional times, to Ben Brierly of punk band the Vibrators, and actor Giorgio Della Terza. “I’ve had a wonderful life with all my lovers, and husbands,” she said in 2011, excepting Della Terza: “He was American, and he was a nightmare.”

    There were other acting roles, too, notably playing God in two episodes of the sitcom Absolutely Fabulous; the devil in a 2004 production of The Black Rider, a musical by Tom Waits and William Burroughs; and empress Maria Theresa in Sofia Coppola’s film Marie Antoinette.

    Marianne Faithfull performs at the Bataclan concert hall in Paris, November 2016. Photograph: François Guillot/AFP/Getty Images

    In her later years, she lived in Paris, and reacted to the terror attack at the city’s Bataclan concert venue, which killed 90 people in 2015, with a song called They Come at Night written on the day of the attacks.

    Faithfull had numerous health issues. In 2007, she announced she had the liver illness hepatitis C, having been diagnosed 12 years previously. She had successful surgery following a breast cancer diagnosis in 2006, and weathered numerous joint ailments in her later years, including arthritis. In the early 70s, she also suffered from anorexia during her heroin addiction. In 2020, she contracted Covid-19 and was hospitalised for 22 days.

    She is survived by her son, Nicholas Dunbar.



    It is with heavy hearts that we bid farewell to Marianne Faithfull, a singular icon of British pop music. The legendary singer, songwriter, and actress passed away at the age of 78, leaving behind a legacy that will forever be etched in the annals of music history.

    Marianne Faithfull rose to fame in the 1960s with her hauntingly beautiful voice and captivating stage presence. Her hits such as “As Tears Go By” and “Broken English” showcased her immense talent and versatility as an artist. She was known for her distinctive voice, raw lyrics, and fearless approach to her music, which set her apart from her peers.

    Throughout her career, Marianne Faithfull faced many challenges and obstacles, including battles with addiction and health issues. However, she always persevered and continued to create music that resonated with audiences around the world. Her ability to connect with listeners on a deep emotional level was unparalleled, making her a beloved figure in the music industry.

    Marianne Faithfull’s influence on the British pop scene cannot be overstated. She paved the way for countless artists with her fearless attitude, unapologetic style, and innovative approach to music. Her legacy will live on through her timeless songs, powerful performances, and unrelenting spirit.

    As we mourn the loss of Marianne Faithfull, let us remember her as a trailblazer, a visionary, and a true original. She will forever be remembered as one of the greatest icons of British pop music, and her music will continue to inspire generations to come. Rest in peace, Marianne Faithfull. You will be dearly missed.

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  • Singer and actress Marianne Faithfull dies aged 78


    Singer and actress Marianne Faithfull has died at the age of 78, a spokesperson has said.

    Faithfull’s hits included As Tears Go By, which was written by The Rolling Stones’ Sir Mick Jagger and Keith Richards.

    In addition to her music career, Faithfull also acted in films including The Girl on a Motorcycle, as well as theatre productions.

    McCartney concert/Faithfull
    Singer Marianne Faithfull performs during ‘Here There and Everywhere – a Concert for Linda McCartney’ at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

    “Marianne passed away peacefully in London today, in the company of her loving family.

    “She will be dearly missed.”

    Faithfull began her singing career in 1964, after being discovered by Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham.

    She released her self-titled debut album in 1965, which featured her UK number nine hit single, along with number four hit Come And Stay With Me, at the same time as follow-up LP Come My Way, largely made up of folk covers.

    From 1966 to 1970, Faithfull was in a highly-publicised relationship with Sir Mick following his split from model and actress Chrissie Shrimpton.

    Her first hit, As Tears Go By, was written by Sir Mick and Richards, and was followed up with a series of successful singles, including Come And Stay with Me, This Little Bird and Summer Nights.

    She was famously found wearing nothing except a rug at an infamous drugs bust at Rolling Stones guitarist Richards’ country house, Redlands, in 1967.

    Following her split with Sir Mick, Faithfull spent two years on the streets of Soho while addicted to heroin before living in a squat.

    Mick Jagger and Marianne Faithfull
    Mick Jagger and Marianne Faithfull, 22, in London when they were due to appear at Marlborough Street Court. They are accused of possessing the drug cannabis at Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, London (PA)

    Faithfull re-invented herself in 1987 as a jazz and blues singer, with the critically acclaimed Strange Weather, and in the same decade went into rehab.

    Recently she has enjoyed a resurgence and is said to be admired by the likes of Kate Moss and Courtney Love.

    The daughter of a British military officer and an Austro-Hungarian Jewish baroness, Faithfull recently appeared in Sofia Coppola’s film Marie Antoinette.

    She made guest star appearances as God in the TV sitcom Absolutely Fabulous.

    Early films included I’ll Never Forget What’s ‘Is Name, alongside Orson Welles, and Girl On A Motorcycle.



    It is with heavy hearts that we share the news of singer and actress Marianne Faithfull’s passing at the age of 78. Faithfull was a true icon in the music industry, known for her distinctive voice and powerful performances.

    Throughout her career, Faithfull released numerous albums and singles that showcased her incredible talent and versatility as a singer. She also had a successful acting career, appearing in films such as “Girl on a Motorcycle” and “Irina Palm.”

    Faithfull’s impact on the music and entertainment world will never be forgotten, and she will always be remembered for her contributions to art and culture. Our thoughts and condolences go out to her family, friends, and fans during this difficult time. Rest in peace, Marianne Faithfull.

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  • Marianne Faithfull has died aged 78 as tributes pour in | Celebrity News | Showbiz & TV


    Marianne Faithfull has died at the age of 78, her spokesperson has said. The singer and actress reportedly was surrounded by her family at her London home when she died.

    A statement announcing the death said: “It is with deep sadness that we announce the death of the singer, songwriter and actress Marianne Faithfull.

    “Marianne passed away peacefully in London today, in the company of her loving family. She will be dearly missed.”

    The star was best known for her 60s hit As Tears Go By. In addition to her music career, Faithfull also acted in films including The Girl on a Motorcycle, as well as theatre productions.

    She was also famously the girlfriend of Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger in the 1960s. At the time, they were known as the “It” couple of British music.

    They met when Marianne was just 17, but it wasn’t until 1966, when she was 20, that she and Jagger began dating.

    However, their love story was tainted by unfaithfulness and substance abuse, with Faithfull’s affair with “Paddy” Rossmore resulting in the end of their relationship – after four years of being on and off.

    This is a breaking showbiz story, the /showbiz team will be updating this story with the latest information as soon as we receive it. For further updates, please refresh the page

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    It is with great sadness that we report the passing of legendary singer and actress Marianne Faithfull at the age of 78. The news of her death has sparked an outpouring of tributes from fans and fellow celebrities who have been touched by her incredible talent and spirit.

    Faithfull rose to fame in the 1960s as a leading figure in the British music scene, known for hits such as “As Tears Go By” and her iconic rendition of “The Ballad of Lucy Jordan.” She later transitioned into acting, starring in films such as “Girl on a Motorcycle” and “Hamlet.”

    Throughout her career, Faithfull was known for her distinctive voice, provocative lyrics, and fearless approach to her art. She was a pioneer for women in the music industry and a true icon of rock and roll.

    Tributes have been pouring in from fans and fellow artists, with many remembering Faithfull’s incredible talent, strength, and resilience. She will be greatly missed but her legacy will live on through her music and performances.

    Our thoughts are with Marianne Faithfull’s family and loved ones during this difficult time. May she rest in peace.

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  • Rnn and the Mermaid: A Tale of Old Ireland by Marianne McShane Paperback Book

    Rnn and the Mermaid: A Tale of Old Ireland by Marianne McShane Paperback Book



    Rnn and the Mermaid: A Tale of Old Ireland by Marianne McShane Paperback Book

    Price : 11.61

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    Rnn and the Mermaid: A Tale of Old Ireland by Marianne McShane Paperback Book

    Dive into the magical world of old Ireland with Rnn and the Mermaid, a captivating tale by author Marianne McShane. This enchanting story follows the adventures of Rnn, a brave young fisherman who encounters a mysterious and beautiful mermaid while out at sea.

    As Rnn and the mermaid form an unlikely friendship, they must navigate the challenges of their different worlds and the disapproval of those around them. But with the power of love and determination, they just might find a way to bridge the gap between land and sea.

    Filled with Celtic folklore, lush descriptions of the Irish landscape, and a timeless message of acceptance and understanding, Rnn and the Mermaid is a must-read for fans of fantasy and folklore. Pick up a copy of this captivating paperback book today and immerse yourself in a world of magic and wonder.
    #Rnn #Mermaid #Tale #Ireland #Marianne #McShane #Paperback #Book,rnn

  • Rnn & The Mermaid by Marianne Mcshane , Marianne Mcshane, Brand New, Free shi…

    Rnn & The Mermaid by Marianne Mcshane , Marianne Mcshane, Brand New, Free shi…



    Rnn & The Mermaid by Marianne Mcshane , Marianne Mcshane, Brand New, Free shi…

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    pping!

    Introducing the latest release from renowned author Marianne Mcshane: Rnn & The Mermaid. Dive into a captivating tale of adventure, love, and mystery as Rnn, a young fisherman, encounters a beautiful mermaid who changes his life forever.

    With Mcshane’s signature storytelling and vivid imagination, readers will be swept away into a world of enchantment and wonder. Join Rnn on his journey as he navigates the depths of the ocean and discovers the true meaning of love and sacrifice.

    And the best part? For a limited time, enjoy free shipping on all orders of Rnn & The Mermaid. Don’t miss out on this incredible opportunity to own a piece of literary magic from Marianne Mcshane. Order your copy today!
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  • Marianne Williamson launches bid for DNC chair

    Marianne Williamson launches bid for DNC chair


    Marianne Williamson, an author and former Democratic presidential candidate, announced Thursday that she is launching a campaign to become the next chair of the Democratic National Committee.

    “I am announcing I’m running for DNC chair,” Williamson said in a video announcing her candidacy, “because I feel that I can bring a level of expertise to the process of lifting up this possibility of victory over the next two and four years in a way that will not occur if we are only looking traditional means of politicking in order to make that happen.”

    Williamson added that she’s been talking to Democratic voters about what they’d like to see from their party.

    “I’ve traveled extensively throughout this country, and I’ve seen how much pain there is out there,” she said. “I’ve been up close and personal with people who didn’t have health care, who couldn’t survive on just one job, who were so depressed about so many of the conditions in their lives that were, in fact, at least indirectly due to bad public policy, and too many of them didn’t feel like the Democratic Party had their back.”

    Williamson is the latest candidate, and the first woman, to jump into the race to succeed outgoing DNC Chair Jaime Harrison.

    She joins a wide field of candidates who previously announced their bids for chair, including former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, Minnesota Democratic Party Chair Ken Martin, Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler, New York state Sen. James Skoufis and former Maryland Senate candidate Robert Houton.

    So far, most of the candidates say that they would seek to begin a new term as DNC chair by learning what went wrong for their party in 2024 and conducting what is often called a postmortem” analysis of the election.

    Williamson agreed with that strategy in her video, saying, “We need to know what it was that made people feel that their wallets were more important than their pain. We need to understand what it is that has made people emotionally and psychologically disconnect from a sense that the Democratic Party was part of a great legacy in American history.”

    There have been no public forums yet where the candidates have met and taken questions from members of their party, but those meetings are slated to start in the new year. The official election for the next DNC chair will be held on Feb. 1.

    In her video, Williamson added that her goal as chair of the DNC would include connecting the problems in voters’ lives to public policy solutions.

    “I want to help people connect with the political issues that are going on in their lives in a very real and personal way. And I want to help people understand that by connecting to the Democratic Party, they can truly make a difference,” she said.



    Marianne Williamson, best-selling author and spiritual leader, has announced her bid for the chair of the Democratic National Committee (DNC). Williamson, known for her messages of love and unity, believes that her unique perspective can help bring the party together and lead it to victory in future elections.

    In a statement released on her website, Williamson said, “I believe that the Democratic Party needs a leader who can inspire and unite the American people. We need to move beyond the divisive politics of the past and focus on creating a better future for all. As DNC chair, I will work tirelessly to ensure that our party stands for love, compassion, and justice.”

    Williamson’s bid for DNC chair has already generated excitement among progressives and spiritual seekers alike. Many believe that her message of love and unity is exactly what the party needs to heal and move forward.

    As the race for DNC chair heats up, it will be interesting to see how Williamson’s message resonates with party members and voters. Stay tuned for updates on her campaign and the future of the Democratic Party.

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    Marianne Williamson, DNC chair, Marianne Williamson bid, Marianne Williamson campaign, Marianne Williamson news, Marianne Williamson updates

    #Marianne #Williamson #launches #bid #DNC #chair

  • Marianne Williamson Announces Campaign to Lead the Democratic National Committee

    Marianne Williamson Announces Campaign to Lead the Democratic National Committee


    Any hopes that two-time failed presidential candidate Marianne Williamson had left politics and returned to her roots as a spiritual guru were dashed Thursday. That’s when the vocal supporter of alleged sexual assailant and anti-vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. announced via her Substack (of course) that she is launching a campaign to head up the Democratic National Committee and to “reinvent the party” in her image.

    Marianne Williamson sprang into the spotlight in the late 1980s as an advisor to the stars, characterized in a 1991 Vanity Fair feature as “a liberal, Jewish ex-lounge singer from Texas” who brought A Course in Miracles—a book allegedly dictated to its author by Jesus Christ—into the mainstream. Now 72, she’s since moved from the spiritual realm into the political, throwing her hat into the Democratic presidential ring in 2020, and again in 2024.

    Williamson’s non-traditional stances on the 2019 campaign trail feel almost quaint compared to RFK, Jr.’s during the most recent election cycle, but such is the frog-in-pot life of America in 2024. Still, her announcement that, if elected, she’d launch a Department of Peace, or that hurricanes could be controlled by collective meditation, or that “James Cameron deserves a Nobel Peace Price” for Avatar still managed to raise even the most jaded political watchers’ brows, as did allegations of a toxic and abusive environment for campaign staffers in 2020. (Williamson, for her part, has denied those allegations, calling them a “distraction technique.”)

    But though the heavily-memed former candidate appeared to eventually realize that her path to the White House began and ended with her vision board, the spiritualist wants to remain in the game. In her subscription newsletter, “TRANSFORM with Marianne Williamson,” the teacher (who just yesterday used her platform to announce “only love is real”) posted an open letter to DNC members saying that “The MAGA phenomenon now challenges the very way that politics are done in America, and the traditional tool kit of party organizing will not be enough to meet the moment.”

    Williamson, who just last month tweeted “Good choice!” in response to Donald Trump’s announcement that Kennedy would be named the country’s Secretary of Health and Human Services, writes that “President Trump has ushered in an age of political theatre – a collective adrenaline rush that has enabled him to not only move masses of people into his camp but also masses of people away from ours.”

    While Williamson does not mention the top contenders to replace DNC Chair Jaime Harrison, who led the party since 2021 and isn’t expected to seek another term, her criticism of the Dem’s current strategies seems a shot at traditional candidates such as Minnesota Democratic Party Chair Ken Martin, former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, former Homeland Security official Nate Snyder, Sen. James Skoufis, and Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler. “Data analysis, fundraising, field organizing, and beefed-up technology – while all are important – will not be enough to prepare the way for Democratic victory in 2024 and beyond,” Williamson writes, proposing “A party that listens more, and makes people feel that their thoughts and feelings are as important as their wallets.”

    The DNC is slated to hold its election for positions, including its chair, on February 1, with four candidate forums planned throughout January. Williamson is the only woman, thus far, to announce her candidacy for the role.

    In a video that accompanied her letter, Williamson said, “Donald Trump is a 21st-century political phenomenon, and we need to become one, too … We need to know what it was that made people feel that their wallets were more important than their pain. We need to understand what it is that has made people emotionally and psychologically disconnect from a sense that the Democratic Party was part of a great legacy in American history.”



    Marianne Williamson, best-selling author and spiritual teacher, has announced her campaign to lead the Democratic National Committee (DNC). Williamson, known for her advocacy of love and compassion in politics, believes that her leadership can bring a new vision to the party.

    In a statement released today, Williamson stated, “Our party is at a crossroads, and we need a leader who can inspire unity and bring a sense of purpose to our movement. I believe that my message of love and healing can help heal the divisions within our party and bring us closer to our values of justice and equality.”

    Williamson’s campaign will focus on grassroots organizing, building a diverse coalition of supporters, and advocating for progressive policies that address the needs of all Americans. She has already gained support from a number of prominent figures in the party, including Senator Bernie Sanders and Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

    As the DNC prepares for a new chapter in its history, Marianne Williamson’s candidacy offers a fresh perspective and a commitment to building a more inclusive and compassionate Democratic Party. Stay tuned for updates on her campaign and how you can get involved in supporting her vision for the party.

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    10. Progressive Politics.

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