Suze Rotolo, Muse and Girlfriend to Bob Dylan, Dies at 67

Suze Rotolo, who entered into a romantic relationship with Bob Dylan in
the early 1960s as his career was just getting started and, in one of
the signature images of the decades, walked with him arm-in-arm on the
cover of his groundbreaking second album, “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan,”
died on Thursday at her home in Manhattan. She was 67.

The cause was lung cancer, her husband, Enzo Bartoccioli, said on
Monday.

Ms. Rotolo, whose nickname was pronounced Su-zee, met Mr. Dylan in 1961
at a Riverside Church folk concert at which he was performing. She was
17; he was 20.

“Right from the start I couldn’t take my eyes off her,” Mr. Dylan wrote
in his memoir, “Chronicles: Volume 1,” published in 2004. “She was the
most erotic thing I’d ever seen. She was fair skinned and golden haired,
full-blood Italian. The air was suddenly filled with banana leaves. We
started talking and my head started to spin. Cupid’s arrow had whistled
past my ears before, but this time it hit me in the heart and the weight
of it dragged me overboard.”

In her own book, “A Freewheelin’ Time: A Memoir of Greenwich Village in
the 60s” (2008), Ms. Rotolo described Mr. Dylan as “oddly old-time
looking, charming in a scraggly way.”

They began seeing each other and shared a walk-up apartment on West
Fourth Street in Greenwich Village.

The relationship, lasting four years, was rocky. She was the daughter of
Italian Communists with her own ideas about life, art and politics that
made it increasingly difficult for her to fulfill the role of a helpmate
and, as she put it in her memoir, a “boyfriend’s ‘chick,’ a string on
his guitar.”

Her social views, especially her commitment to the civil rights movement
and her work for the Congress for Racial Equality, had a strong
influence on Mr. Dylan’s writing, as did her interest in theater and the
visual arts, which exposed him to ideas and artists outside the world of
music.

When, to his distress, she went to Italy in 1962 to study art at the
University of Perugia, her absence inspired the plaintive Dylan love
songs “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right,” “Boots of Spanish Leather”
and “Tomorrow Is a Long Time.” He later wrote a song highly critical of
her family, “Ballad in Plain D.”

Ms. Rotolo spent most of her adult life avoiding discussions of her
relationship with Mr. Dylan and pursuing a career as an artist, but she
relented after Mr. Dylan published his autobiography. She appeared as an
interview subject in “No Direction Home,” Martin Scorsese’s 2005
documentary about Mr. Dylan, and wrote “A Freewheelin’ Time” in large
part to tell her side of the Dylan story and to portray herself as more
complicated than a muse.

A fuller obituary can be found here.

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http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/02/28/suze-rotolo-muse-and-girlfriend-to-bob-dylan-dies-at-67/
Via InstaFetch

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