and often paying them ten times what they offered homegrown performers. I only learned too late that Tom was unwell, and I regret that I did not take time to track down the passionate Canadian who had given me my start in the recording business.
• • •
As December of 2013 rolled around, I once again returned to my tropical paradise of Palm Beach, and for the second time my sister and mother came to spend Christmas with me after a Caribbean cruise they had enjoyed together.
How many more Christmases would we be able to share? I wondered. Remembering the two that I had spent alone, I composed a wistful Enya-like song in waltz time, titled “Alone on Christmas Day,” and promptly recorded a demo to email Peter. Unfortunately, far too many people do spend Christmas Day alone and often not by choice, as had been my case. This particular song I dedicated to them.
The muse also inspired me to write a folky style song called “People Who Care for the Animals,” referencing several of my heroes who have championed animal welfare: Tippi Hedren, whom I had met years earlier at her Californian animal sanctuary, Shambala; Madeleine Pickens, who rescued thousands of wild mustangs; and Wayne Pacelle, who runs the Humane Society of the United States. If only we humans could be more compassionate to the needs of other species that we share the planet with. I have always believed that we should not exploit and abuse them the way we do for our own ends. I have such great respect and admiration for the tens of thousands of courageous people around the world who are tirelessly fighting to save and protect animals, educating and enlightening humanity and changing laws. It is an overwhelming and often thankless task, and this song is dedicated to all of them.
I refined and edited the long poem I had written called “The Cat Who Played Guitar,” and hoped I could one day find the right children’s book publisher to bring the story to life. Back in Los Angeles I had spent days producing an unbelievably realistic cover image of Muffin sitting on a tiny Mexican chair holding in his paws a miniature guitar from Sevilla. In the photo my very cooperative kitty is wearing the diamond-buttoned black velvet tuxedo that my dress designer, Gilles Savard, had created for him. Jack and Maggy were thrilled that I planned to immortalize the beautiful feline we had all loved so much. Just short of his twentieth birthday our poor Muffin was put to sleep as his lungs had finally given out. He was the most precious animal I had ever known, and Maggy told me that Jack was inconsolable.
Another song that came to me in a moment of inspiration was “I Should Have Met You Many Years Ago.” When she heard the narrative of my country-style lyrics, my mother excitedly asked me whom I had met, but I had to shake my head and explain that it was drawn purely from my imagination. As usual Peter and I were exchanging demos every few days and continuing to enjoy our creative musical collaborations. I had no idea if these pieces would end up on a future album, but when the ideas flowed, I had to immediately seize them and transform them into songs. I absolutely loved the writing process: coming up with the perfect lyrics to fit my melody, or vice-versa, and then creating interesting guitar sections, which usually felt as though they were composing themselves and just needed to be scribbled out in my messy notation.
My next song writing inspiration resulted in a Leonard Cohen–style ballad whose chorus line I had spotted on the Church of the Redeemer billboard at Bloor and Avenue Road in Toronto. “There is no remedy for love but to love more” had struck me as a rather profound statement, but even better as a great chorus to a future song! Little did I realize that it would also provide me with the title for my second autobiography. Discovering that it was a famous quote by philosopher Henry David Thoreau made the phrase even more intriguing. Finally, in the quiet of my little house, I had time to let the lyrics and music flow. Although this song does not express my own philosophy or my personal experiences with love, I imagine that people who have been stung much more than I have by Cupid’s arrows might identify with the cynical personification of love as a manipulating temptress.
On one of my peaceful Palm Beach evenings, the muse gifted me with “Nothing’s as Cruel as Time,” a piece that many women “of a certain age” will relate to, and that I jokingly referred to as “my cougar song.” But, although the song is semi-autobiographical, no young man has yet “claimed what remained of my heart.”
And finally that season, after reading so much about the tragic consequences of global warming, I composed “A Prayer for Planet Earth,” which I consider to be the sister song to my earlier “Song for the Arctic.” I hope that some of the many organizations trying to bring awareness about the plight of our earth might be able to use it in a way and that it might help educate us about what irreversible devastation we humans are causing to our precious planet. Some perceptive listeners familiar with Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” might catch Peter’s subtle nod to this masterpiece in the orchestration he created for the bridge section of my song.
13
Tea with a Prince
On April 27, 2013, I had the honour of being invited by Prince Philip to share a private tea with him at the Fairmont Royal York. Ironically, it was in the Royal Suite, the very same room where I had occasionally met up with Pierre Trudeau back in the seventies. Prince Philip’s short, twenty-four-hour visit to Toronto was to commemorate the two-hundredth anniversary of the Battle of York. It seemed I was the only person invited to tea, so I chose my killer beige high heels and a pretty Holly Harp dress, and I hoped my hair would behave itself. I carried a matching shawl made from the same silk fabric and wore a stylish black suede coat, lined in pink silk, with rose and green brocade on the front. The Prince’s equerry, Dale White, escorted me into the suite, where Prince Philip greeted me, a big smile lighting up his face as he warmly shook my hand. I noticed a dark purple bruise on his right eye and cheek, and when I expressed concern he told me his mother always had the same in her senior years; the stain apparently just appears at random then fades away. Perhaps it is a special manifestation of that blue blood that runs in the royal veins!
As we exchanged pleasantries about his visit, two staff members laid out a flowery china tea set and served our choices of Earl Grey for HRH and English breakfast for me. The waiter told us that the honey was produced from beehives kept on the roof of the hotel. I was pleased to learn that Prince Philip no longer drinks as much tea as he used to and tries to forgo the obligatory British biscuits or, as we call them, cookies. Earlier in the day he had spent time with our Lieutenant-Governor and his wife, David and Ruth Ann Onley, then attended a ceremony for the battalion at Fort York and a reception at the hotel prior to meeting me. Following our tea time rendezvous he was going to be picked up and driven straight to the airport to fly home to England.
Prince Philip impressed me with his knowledge of history, explaining a little about the war of 1812, how the Canadians had fought off the Americans and blown up a store of gunpowder, which exploded and killed the leader.
I let him hear my patriotic song, “Canada, My Canada” using a small speaker called an X-mini, the likes of which he had never seen and which seemed to fascinate him. He expressed admiration for my accomplishment of persuading so many well-known singers to participate.
“Do you have any idea of what I should use for the cover of my new album?” I questioned.
Prince Philip chuckled mischievously and suggested I wear three maple leaves and nothing else! We both laughed at his original idea, but I told him it might be more prudent to choose a typical Canadian scene with a lake and a canoe.
Earlier that afternoon Governor General David Johnston had admitted Prince Philip as a Companion of the Order of Canada and appointed him a Commander of the Order of Military Merit. Both honours had come as a complete surprise to him, and Prince Philip expressed how much he liked the look of these medals. Normally the Order of Canada is only presented to Canadians, but for Prince Philip they simply changed the rules.
My royal companion asked about my house in Palm Beach and he told me that all he remembered when last there were blue-haired old ladies wearing white fox stoles! I explained that, yes, Palm Beach has a fair number of rich, elderly widows, but there are also many young people living there these days, and a visitor’s impressions depend upon which events they attend. He remembered the beauty of the town and how much he had enjoyed swimming in a huge infinity pool