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  • Interviewer: Could you please tell us about your first encounters with Robert Mapplethorpe

  • Who was not a famous photographer at that time?

  • Patti Smith: (laughs)

  • No, he wasn't a famous anything, I mean

  • It's very funny though, because sometimes

  • people read my book and they say --

  • "Well, you drop all these names, you seem like you ran around

  • with all these famous people..."

  • None of us were famous, even Allen Ginsberg wasn't famous

  • I mean -- there was a cult of people that appreciated him,

  • but none of most of the Beat poets -- Gregory Corso never had any money

  • everybody was scrambling, Jim Carroll was just a kid

  • It wasn't -- The cult of celebrity was not so big then,

  • even rockstars that I met that lived in the Chelsea Hotel at the same time as us

  • They weren't much different.

  • I met Robert by chance.

  • I met him going to Brooklyn, looking for some friends

  • And my friends had moved, and they told me to go in the room

  • and ask the boy in there if he knew where they went.

  • So I went in the room, and there was a boy sleeping.

  • And I stood there and looked at him,

  • And it was like looking at a shepherd boy, sleeping.

  • 'Cause he had all these masses of dark curly hair...

  • He was this slender boy, sleeping peacefully.

  • And he woke up and I was standing there, and he smiled at me.

  • And from that moment, it just seemed like we were destined to be friends.

  • Or destined to know each other. It's just, his smile was so, totally welcoming:

  • It held nothing back. I was just a stranger standing in front of him.

  • And that was my first meeting with Robert.

  • Interviewer: And, the second meeting you had, or encounter, was in Tompkin Square Park?

  • Patti Smith: No, that was the third.

  • (Laughter)

  • Patti Smith: The second was -- Robert also worked in a bookstore.

  • He worked in this bookstore named Brentano's, he worked downtown,

  • And I worked uptown in the same bookstore. And he had some kind of credit slip,

  • He wanted to buy something, and he came in to my bookstore uptown, because they sold ethnic jewelry.

  • And there was a persian necklace there, that I really loved. It wasn't expensive,

  • but it wasn't -- It was very simple, but it seemed mystical to me. And I really wanted it,

  • but I didn't have the money to buy it. So Robert came in, and we said hello,

  • And... he remembered me. And he was there for like an hour,

  • looking at every single thing. Then he pointed to the Persian necklace

  • And said: I want that. And I couldn't believe he picked the -- 'Cause there wer hundreds of things there --

  • That he picked the one thing that I wanted. So I wrapped it up, and gave it to him.

  • And to this day, I don't know how I got the guts, or the balls, to say this, but I said to him:

  • "Don't give it to any girl but me."

  • (Laughter) (Applause)

  • And he said "I won't". And he left. And then the next time I met him, uh, I was in a funny situation

  • Because a week had gone by, working... In New york City, you have to work 2 weeks

  • before you get a paycheck. I didn't know that, and -- 'Cause it was not like that in New Jersey,

  • And I was so hungry, and I had worked for a week, stood in line for my paycheck and they said:

  • "No, next week."

  • And I was really crying. I was so, so disappointed, and then, this guy asked me for dinner.

  • If I wanted to go out for dinner. A strange guy, an older guy, 30 years old... But he was kind of square, you know.

  • Oh I was really nervous, I had never gone out with an older guy before, and my mother always said, you know:

  • "Don't take anything from strangers, 'cause they always want something in return"

  • Especially a guy. So, I was thinking: "Oh... alright"

  • But I was so hungry I decided to go. So he took me to eat, and I was nervous the whole time,

  • and then we walked down to Tomkin Square Park, which was the East village,

  • The grittiest of the parks, and the coolest, and uh, It's where all the hippies slept and everything.

  • And I was sitting there on a park bench with them, and he asked me to come up to his appartment and have a cocktail.

  • And I thought: "This is just what my mother told me about."

  • So I was trying to figure out what to do and how to get out of this,

  • And I was really nervous, 'caus I was -- It just seemed like such a difficult situation

  • And all of sudden, I looked, and coming up the path was the boy! Was Robert!

  • And I didn't even know his name, actually, he was just "the boy"

  • and I saw him, and I just impulsively ran up to him, and I said:

  • "Uh, do you remember me?" and he said "Of course!"

  • and I said "Would you pretend you're my boyfriend?" and he said "Yes" !

  • So I took him over to the guy, and uh, I said: "This is my boyfriend. He's really mad."

  • And I said "So, I have to go!" And the guy was like, looking at me like...

  • like I was crazy, and I grabbed Robert's hand and I said: "Run!"

  • (Laughs)

  • So Robert and I ran, you know, ran away, and then finally, we sat on a stoop, and I said:

  • "Oh, thank you, you saved my life"

  • And then I said "Well, I guess we should exchange names, my name is Patti."

  • And he said "My name is Bob". And I said: "Bob? You don't really seem like a Bob. Can I call you Robert?"

  • And he said "Sure". So, I called him Robert and then, after time, everybody called him Robert."

  • (Applause)

  • Interviewer: But "Just Kids" begins with Robert dying, and it gives a story of your relationship, alight of intensity.

  • It's a story of love, but it is also a story of loss.

  • Patti Smith: Well I think it's also a story of unconditional friendship.

  • I think really, love and loss are the -- is framed in that, but the heart of it

  • is what true friendship is all about.

  • I mean, Robert, you know, was my boyfriend

  • And it was heartbreaking for both of us to go through the transition

  • of going from being so intimate, to being friends.

  • And, naturally, this would break up most couples, and --

  • But Robert and I had something so much deeper than things like, well

  • Sex and things like that, which -- all of these things were important. You know, lliving together, uh...

  • You know, being true to one another, being physically intimate, they're all beautiful things.

  • But the thing that we had transcended everything. And that's -- was that we -- bonded through our work

  • And, both of us felt magnified by the other. Both of us completed our self confidence

  • And our belief in ourselves as an artist through the other. And it was so strong, that I still feel it today.

  • If I falter, if I feel lacking in confidence, I can access that part of him that believes in me,

  • And I feel stronger. And there is no reason to give that up. There was no reason

  • to give -- give up, you know, other things that we shared

  • Like our common laughter, 'cause we laughed alot, and uh -- and really, had he lived,

  • I know that we would've worked and collaborated, and laughed 'till the end of our lives,

  • 'Cause we were only a month apart, and I always thought we'd know each other forever.

  • And of course we do, in a certain way, but I never imagined that he would die so young.

  • But, uhm, I cherish that thing that we nourished, and that we saved.

  • You know, we -- if we couldn't save our, you know, relationship as a couple,

  • We saved something more precious. So I think that is at the heart of the book.

Interviewer: Could you please tell us about your first encounters with Robert Mapplethorpe

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