Monika Dannemann

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Monika Dannemann (June 24, 1946April 5, 1996) was a German figure skater and painter and is known well as the last girlfriend of American guitarist Jimi Hendrix.

Contents

[edit] Hendrix and his death

Dannemann was first introduced to Hendrix after being invited to one of his concerts. After that meeting, a relationship blossomed which was one of multiple relationships Hendrix was known to be involved in to varying degrees over his career. She would later claim that Hendrix had asked her to marry her and would have done so had he not died. Dannemann is known for being the last person to have seen Jimi Hendrix alive. On the morning of September 18, 1970, he was found dead in the basement apartment of the Samarkand Hotel, 22 Lansdowne Crescent, London, where Dannemann and Hendrix spent the night together. Hendrix died in bed after taking a reported nine Vesperax sleeping pills and choking on his own vomit.

Police and ambulance reports from the time reveal that Hendrix was dead when they arrived on the scene, the apartment's front door was wide open, and the apartment itself empty. Dannemann claimed Hendrix was alive when he was placed in the back of the ambulance, however her comments about that morning were often contradictory and confused, varying from interview to interview. The case was re-examined by UK police and Dannemann was never blamed for Hendrix's death, although she was held under a cloud of suspicion by others close to Hendrix.

[edit] Suggestions of blame

In the book, The Final Days of Jimi Hendrix, author Tony Brown theorizes that Dannemann was directly or indirectly involved in the death of Jimi Hendrix. David Henderson, author of the biography Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky: The Life of Jimi Hendrix, claims that Dannemann waited several hours before she called an ambulance, and that the ambulance driver noticed a scarf tied tightly around Hendrix's neck when he arrived.

Another of Hendrix's girlfriends, Kathy Etchingham, continued with more suggestions that blame should be put on Dannemann.

[edit] After Hendrix

After Hendrix's death, Dannemann became romantically involved with German rock guitarist Uli Jon Roth, formerly of the Scorpions, with whom she collaborated on several songs (notably "We'll Burn the Sky") and album cover designs and artwork. Roth also wrote the foreword to Dannemann's 1995 book about her experiences living and working with Hendrix, entitled The Inner World of Jimi Hendrix. The front cover featured a photo of Hendrix taken by Dannemann on the afternoon of his death.

In 1996, Kathy Etchingham brought a libel case against Dannemann, accusing her of having been criminally complicit in the case of Hendrix's death. Two days after Dannemann lost the case, she was found dead in a fume-filled Mercedes-Benz near her cottage in Seaford, East Sussex. Her death was ruled a suicide, though Uli Jon Roth suggested that foul play may have been involved, as Dannemann had received numerous death threats following Hendrix's death.

[edit] Book

[edit] External links

In other languages