David Bowie Had More 1970s Sex Than You Had

When, a new bio by Wendy Leigh, came out, I gave it a read. Share a few tidbits? I'd love to.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

I first saw David Bowie at Chicago's Auditorium Theatre on October 7, 1972. Bowie was mesmerizing; he held that room in the palm of his thin white hand, and blew us all away. I've been a fan ever since, so when BOWIE, a new bio by Wendy Leigh, came out, I gave it a read.

Share a few tidbits? I'd love to.

Bowie was born on Elvis Presley's 12th birthday.

He has one brown eye and one blue eye.

His mother caught him putting on makeup for the first time when he was three years old.

His mother never kissed him.

In his youth he was a chain smoker, an avid reader, a terrible flirt and a slob who "always expected other people to clean up after him".

Early influences include Elvis Presley, Lou Reed and Anthony Newley.

Liz Taylor once told him that he reminded her of James Dean.

He has an addictive personality and has ingested a mammoth amount of drugs.

In his prime, he had "an enormous" sexual appetite and enjoyed walking around naked, "his long, weighty penis swaying from side to side like the pendulum of a grandfather clock." After Dark magazine described his equipment as "unusually large, almost inhuman."

His first wife Angie referred to his penis as "the Lance of Love."

Pop star Lulu said he had "beautiful thighs."

He wasn't at all monogamous. Going off to spend time with a lover, he told his partner at that time that he was "going to Hampstead Heath to watch for flying saucers and UFOs."

"When we met," Bowie said about first wife Angie," we were fucking the same bloke."

He and Angie had a (very) open marriage, and both enjoyed a lot of sex with a lot of people.

Cherry Vanilla, his spokeswoman in the 70s, told a radio host that Bowie routinely made love to everyone who worked for him at least once. (And, she said, he was a great kisser.)

He's scared of flying. When one flight's delay in taking off was announced, Bowie's response was "Oh, God. That means the pilot's drunk and they're feeding him black coffee."

He owns a desk that once belonged to Nazi Joseph Goebbels.

For a time, he saved his urine in bottles.

When he first met Andy Warhol, he played the newly written song "Andy Warhol" for him. Warhol didn't like it.

Good friends have included Mick Jagger, John Lennon, Liz Taylor and Lou Reed.

He and Iggy Pop used to watch "Starsky and Hutch" together.

Bowie once designed wallpaper for Laura Ashley.

"What I love about David," says current wife Iman, "is that he's a true gentleman." The two of them, happily married since 1992, are homebodies who read out loud to each other.

Bowie no longer drinks or does drugs, and enjoys a monogamous marriage.

There's a panic room in his SoHo loft, into which Bowie and his family can lock themselves if their home is invaded.

In 2003, Bowie was offered a knighthood by Queen Elizabeth II. He turned it down.

Given how ground-breaking Bowie's music was, his unconventional early years should come as no surprise. Nor should his current, more sober and settled-down life. Many of us have followed a similar trajectory. If you lived through those times, BOWIE should bring back some great memories of a wild and crazy era.

So what's up next for David Bowie?

Who knows? As Bowie himself once said, "I don't where I'm going from here, but I promise it won't be boring."

(First published by Zestnow.)

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot