(It's getting to the point)
So it was one of those days when I should have bought a lottery
ticket, things were going swimingly all day.
(you are mine, I am yours, you are what you are)
Yesterday my mother had pointed out that Judy Collins was playing
in Belleville at the Empire Theater. The only song I can play
on the Guitar is Suite: Judy Blue Eyes.
Well that's not actually true, my involvement with guitar is transitory. I bought one when I moved to LA in 1979, and a few songbooks, played for 2 years then never touched it. I gave that guitar to my sons. In 2005 I picked it up again on a friends borrowed guitar, played for about a year, learned a few new songs, then never touched it again. Picked it up again in 2007 with a new guitar, you get the picture. But one day 6 mos before the event described herein I looked at the chords to my favorite song of all time, the one I fell in love with from Woodstock (The movie. I was 12.) reinforced by the sound of 3 people in my High School doing an impromptu and flawless rendition of it one day in 1975. The chords looked scary but I tried it anyway. And it sorta worked. So I kept playing it over and over again, for 6 months solid non-stop.
That she was in town at this time was kinda freaky. I thought she was dead or something, that she was touring was news. That she was in this backwater burg even more so.
I decided she was going to sign my guitar. I set out on the
errands I had to so and ended up picking up
my daughter Caitlin at around 9:20 or so. We were supposed to get hot
chocolate and groceries.
Now at this point you need to consider the fact that Judy
Collins was my mums favorite singer, pretty much ever,
and one of Cait's favorite songs of all time is her
"Both sides now". My mothers father was a miner and he actually
did say they'd live in France. So that song in that so rare
voice has a very special meaning in this family.
So, I pick Cait up and as we're walking to the car I
say "Judy Collins is playing at the Empire, we're gonna
hang out at the back stage entrance and get her to sign
my guitar. Cait exploded and began running to the car,
as did I.
We drive around a bit till I actually find the backstage
entrance to the Empire.
There was a white limo waiting there. The back door opens.
I get out of my car and start walking toward the door.
Cait is following me. Judy Collins walks the 3 feet from
the Theatre back door to the limo. We see her hair and part
of her nose. I yell out "Judy!" and she looks at me.
Her eyes are not normal and frozen in that instant staring
at those unbelievably blue and alien looking eyes time
just stops. She quickly turns away and gets in her car
kinda smiling, reassured she still has deranged admirers.
(I've got an answer...)
The guy by the door says "You can't talk to her" and I said
that's ok and just look at her in the back of the car. She
tried not to look at me about as hard as I tried not to stare
at a woman I've been secretly in love with since I was 12. The
prototypical hippie chick and she's all mine for a femtosecond
on a dark and rainy night in a Belleville back alley. Crosby,
Stills and Nash are nowhere around. They're busy I guess; I'm not.
Cait was 6' away, too nervous, I called her closer gleefully
and pointed saying "it's her, it's her" and Cait kinda giggled
and waved to her in the limo while Ms. Collins tried to look
noplussed but I saw the look of recognition in each others
faces are they realized they were as looking in a mirror. The
resemblance is uncanny and everybody there got that.
(I'm going to fly away...)
The car slowly pulled away and we just stood there two
fingers up in a peace sign in a shaggy full length
sheepskin coat in the rain as if to say "I remember
woodstock, peace, light and love"
And then she was gone.
(What have you got to lose?)
I don't think Cait or I will ever forget the night we saw Judy
Collins' hair.
Richard Sexton, Empire Theatre, Belleville Ontario, Dec 9 2008
| | Cait, circa 2006 |
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