Sara Dylan
Sara Dylan | |
---|---|
Born |
Wilmington, Delaware, United States | October 25, 1939
Occupation | Actress, fashion model |
Spouse(s) |
Hans Lownds Bob Dylan (m. November 1965 – June 1977) |
Children |
Maria Dylan Himmelman Jesse Dylan Anna Dylan Samuel Dylan Jakob Dylan |
Sara Dylan (born October 25, 1939 as Shirley Marlin Noznisky), was the first wife of singer-songwriter Bob Dylan and the mother of four of his children, including musician Jakob Dylan. She was married to Bob Dylan from November 1965 until June 1977.[1] She played the role of Clara in the movie Renaldo and Clara, directed by Dylan,[2] and the film was described by a Dylan biographer as "in part a tribute to his wife".[3]
Early life
Shirley Marlin Noznisky was born in Wilmington, Delaware, on October 25, 1939, to Jewish parents Isaac and Bessie Noznisky; her father was born in Poland around 1894 and became a US citizen in 1912. Isaac set up a scrap metal business at South Claymont Street, Wilmington. He was shot dead by a drunken fellow East European immigrant on November 18, 1956.[1] Sara Noznisky had one brother Julius, sixteen years her senior.
In 1959, Sara moved to New York City and quickly married magazine photographer Hans Lownds, Sara was his third wife. Lownds persuaded her to change her name to Sara because his first wife named Shirley had left him and he did not want to be reminded of that.
Sara and Hans lived in a large five-story house on 60th Street in Manhattan, between Second and Third Avenues. Sara had a modelling career and appeared in Harper's Bazaar as the 'lovely luscious Sara Lownds'—and then became pregnant. Their daughter Maria was born October 21, 1961. Within a year of the birth, the marriage began to fail. Sara started going out on her own, driving around town in an MG sports car Hans had given her, and gravitated to the youthful scene in Greenwich Village. According to Peter Lownds, Lownds's son from a previous marriage, this is where she met Bob. "Bob was the reason (she left Hans)," says Lownds. "He was famous and she was very beautiful." Sara also had a friend, Sally Buchler, who went on to marry Dylan's manager Albert Grossman. Bob and Sara were guests at the wedding in November 1964.[4]
After Hans and Sara separated, Sara went to work as a secretary for the film production division of the Time Life company, where filmmakers such as Richard Leacock and D. A. Pennebaker were impressed with her resourcefulness. "She was supposed to be a secretary," said Pennebaker, "but she ran the place." Sara introduced Bob Dylan and Albert Grossman to Pennebaker, the director who would make the film Dont Look Back about Dylan's UK tour in April 1965.[5]
Marriage to Bob Dylan
Lownds and Dylan became romantically involved sometime in late 1964;[6] soon afterwards, they moved into separate rooms in New York's Hotel Chelsea to be near one another. Dylan biographer Robert Shelton, who knew Bob and Sara in the mid-1960s, writes that Sara "had a Romany spirit, seeming to be wise beyond her years, knowledgeable about magic, folklore and traditional wisdom."[7]
Author David Hajdu described her as "well read, a good conversationalist and better listener, resourceful, a fast study, and good hearted. She impressed some people as shy and quiet, others as supremely confident; either way, she appeared to do only what she felt needed to be done."[5]
In September 1965, Dylan commenced his first "electric" tour of the United States, backed by the Hawks.[8] During a break in the tour, Dylan married Sara—now pregnant with Jesse Dylan—on November 22, 1965. According to Dylan biographer Howard Sounes, the wedding took place under an oak tree outside a judge's office on Long Island, and the only other participants were Albert Grossman and a maid of honor for Sara.[9] Some of Dylan's friends (including Ramblin' Jack Elliott) claim that, in conversation immediately after the event, Dylan denied that he was married.[9] Journalist Nora Ephron first made the news public in the New York Post in February 1966 with the headline "Hush! Bob Dylan is wed."[10]
Bob and Sara had four children: Jesse, Anna, Samuel and Jakob. Dylan also adopted Maria, Sara's daughter from her first marriage.[1] During these years of domestic stability, they lived in Woodstock in upstate New York.[11]
In 1973, Bob and Sara Dylan sold their Woodstock home and purchased a modest property on the Point Dume peninsula, north of Malibu, California. They commenced constructing a large home on this site, and the subsequent re-modelling of the house occupied the next two years.[12] Sounes writes that during this period, tensions began to appear in their marriage.[12] The Dylans still retained a house in Manhattan. In April 1974, Dylan began to take art classes with artist Norman Raeben in New York. Dylan would later say in an interview that the art lessons caused problems in his marriage: "I went home after that first day and my wife never did understand me ever since that day. That's when our marriage started breaking up. She never knew what I was talking about, what I was thinking about, and I couldn't possibly explain it." [13]
Notwithstanding these tensions, Sara accompanied Bob Dylan on much of the first stage of the Rolling Thunder Revue, from October to December 1975. The Revue formed the backdrop to the shooting of the film Renaldo and Clara. Sara appeared in many scenes in this semi-improvised movie, playing Clara to Dylan's Renaldo.[3] Joan Baez, a former lover of Dylan, was also a featured performer on the Revue and appeared in the film as The Woman In White.[2] In one scene, Baez asks Dylan, "What would've happened if we ever got married, Bob?" Dylan replies, "I married the woman I love." Sounes suggests that the film may have been in part Dylan's tribute to his wife, since his film production company, Lombard Street Films, was named after the street in Wilmington where Sara was born.[3]
Later life
During the divorce proceedings, Sara was represented by attorney Marvin Mitchelson. Mitchelson has estimated that the settlement agreed was worth about $36 million to Sara and included "half the royalties from the songs written during their marriage."[14][15] Michael Gray has written: "A condition of the settlement was that Sara would remain silent about her life with Dylan. She has done so."[1] By some reports Dylan and Sara remained friends after the acrimony of the divorce subsided, and Clinton Heylin writes that the photo of Dylan on a hillside in Jerusalem, which appeared on the inner sleeve of the 1983 album Infidels, was taken by Sara.[16]
Discussing his parents' marriage, Jakob Dylan said in 2005: "My father said it himself in an interview many years ago: 'Husband and wife failed, but mother and father didn't.' My ethics are high because my parents did a great job."[1]
As subject of songs
Sara Dylan is said to have inspired several songs by Dylan, and two have been directly linked to her. "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands," the only song on the fourth side of the 1966 album Blonde on Blonde, was described by critic Robert Shelton as "virtually a wedding song for the former Sara Shirley N. Lownds."[10]
In "Sara," from the 1976 album Desire, Dylan calls her a "radiant jewel, mystical wife." Shelton writes that with this song, "Dylan seems to be making an unabashed confessional to his wife. A plea for forgiveness and understanding."[17] Noting the autobiographical reference in the song to "drinkin' white rum in a Portugal bar" Shelton connects this line with a trip Dylan made to Portugal with Sara in 1965.[18] In "Sara," Dylan seems to acknowledge his wife as the inspiration for "Sad Eyed Lady":
- I can still hear the sound of the Methodist bells
- I had taken the cure and had just gotten through
- staying up for days in the Chelsea Hotel
- writing "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands" for you
Jacques Levy, who co-wrote many songs on Desire, has recalled how Dylan and Sara were estranged when he recorded this song in July 1975. Sara happened to visit the studio that evening and Dylan "sang 'Sara' to his wife as she watched from the other side of the glass... It was extraordinary. You could have heard a pin drop. She was absolutely stunned by it," said Levy.[19]
The songs on Dylan's 1975 album Blood on the Tracks have been described by several of Dylan's biographers and critics as arising from the tension as his marriage to Sara collapsed.[20] The album was recorded soon after the couple's initial separation. Dylan biographers Robert Shelton and Clinton Heylin have cautioned against interpreting the album as naked autobiography, arguing that Blood On The Tracks works on many levels—musical, spiritual, poetic—as well as a personal confession.[21][22] Dylan himself denied at the time of the album's release that Blood on the Tracks was autobiographical, but Jakob Dylan has said, "When I'm listening to 'Subterranean Homesick Blues' I'm grooving along just like you. But when I'm listening to Blood On The Tracks, that's about my parents."[1]
Heylin has quoted Steven Soles saying that, in 1977, Dylan came over unannounced to his apartment and played him ten or twelve songs that were "very dark, very intense" dealing with his bitterness over the divorce. Soles adds that none of these songs was ever recorded.[23]
In addition to Blonde on Blonde, Blood on the Tracks, and Desire, some critics have suggested Sara Dylan is the inspiration for other works. Both Clinton Heylin and Andy Gill have connected Sara to "Love Minus Zero/No Limit" recorded in January 1965.[24][25] Gill writes that this song expresses admiration for Sara's "Zen-like equanimity: unlike most of the women he met, she wasn't out to impress him or interrogate him about his lyrics." Heylin credits Sara Dylan as the inspiration for "She Belongs to Me," also recorded in January 1965 for the album Bringing It All Back Home.[26]
In pop culture
A fictional version of the marriage of Dylan and Sara is featured in the Bob Dylan biopic I'm Not There, where Heath Ledger plays a Dylan-like performer and Charlotte Gainsbourg plays Claire, a character based on a combination of Sara Dylan and Suze Rotolo.[27][28]
See also
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Gray 2006, pp. 198–201
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Renaldo and Clara". IMDb.com. Retrieved March 16, 2014.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Sounes 2001, pp. 299–300
- ↑ Sounes 2001, pp. 162–164
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Gill & Odegard 2004, p. 5
- ↑ Gill & Odegard 2004, p. 3
- ↑ Shelton 2011, pp. 227–228
- ↑ Sounes 2001, p. 191
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Sounes 2001, p. 193
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Shelton 2011, p. 227
- ↑ Sounes 2001, p. 220
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Sounes 2001, p. 277
- ↑ Sounes 2001, p. 279
- ↑ Sounes 2001, pp. 307–308
- ↑ Caesar, Ed (September 23, 2005). "Bob Dylan: Stories of the songs". independent.co.uk. Retrieved March 15, 2014.
- ↑ Heylin 2000, p. 710
- ↑ Shelton 2011, p. 319
- ↑ Shelton 2011, p. 207
- ↑ Sounes 2001, p. 290
- ↑ Sounes 2001, pp. 281–285
- ↑ Shelton 2011, pp. 300–303
- ↑ Heylin 2000, pp. 370–375
- ↑ Heylin 2000, p. 454
- ↑ Gill 1998, p. 72
- ↑ Heylin 2009, pp. 224–226
- ↑ Heylin 2009, pp. 226–227
- ↑ Ebert, Roger (21 November 2007). "I'm Not There". rogerebert.com. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
- ↑ Sullian, Robert (2007-10-07). "This Is Not A Bob Dylan Movie". New York Times. Retrieved March 16, 2014.
References
- Gill, Andy (1998). Classic Bob Dylan: My Back Pages. Carlton. ISBN 1-85868-599-0.
- Gill & Odegard (2004). A Simple Twist Of Fate: Bob Dylan and the Making of Blood on the Tracks. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-81413-7.
- Gray, Michael (2006). The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia. Continuum International. ISBN 0-8264-6933-7.
- Heylin, Clinton (2000). Bob Dylan: Behind the Shades Revisited. Perennial Currents. ISBN 0-06-052569-X.
- Heylin, Clinton (2009). Revolution In The Air: The Songs of Bob Dylan, Volume One: 1957–73. Constable. ISBN 1-84901-051-X.
- Shelton, Robert (2011). No Direction Home: The Life and Music of Bob Dylan, Revised and updated edition (hardback ed.). Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-1-84938-911-2.
- Sounes, Howard (2001). Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan. Grove Press. ISBN 0-8021-1686-8.
External links
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