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Authors: Julia Blackburn

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When Billie was first in hospital she had friends visiting her and well-wishers sending her messages. She had a radio and comic books, and Zaidins even brought in a gramophone so that they could listen to the recordings she had
just made with Ray Ellis for MGM. One nurse allowed her to drink a bottle of beer. William Dufty provided her with cigarettes and also arranged to earn her some money by producing an article for
The Inquirer
, entitled ‘How drugs saved my life’, for which she received $500.

There was obviously a rather mad party atmosphere in Billie’s room. Zaidins wanted to arrange a new recording deal with MGM and when Billie doubted if she would ever be able to sing again, he reassured her, saying, ‘Look, Lady, these people at MGM are business people. They check into things. They’ve already talked to the doctors. Would they pick up your option if they thought you were going to die?’ Billie warmed to the idea and said they could bring the recording equipment into the hospital and call the new record
Lady at the Met.

But then, on 11 June, Billie was arrested in her hospital bed on the charge of possessing narcotics and everything became much more serious. According to Zaidins, ‘She was free from drugs when she went into that hospital and I believe the tests proved she was free of drugs … She had no need for drugs, mentally or physically. So her involvement with the drugs found under or by her pillow had to be phoney.’
b

Everybody who was involved had a different account of what drugs were found and where, and they all disagreed as to whether Billie was ‘clean’ or not. For his part, Zaidins was convinced that Billie’s worst fears had come true and somebody had planted the drugs in her room. In the interview he said, ‘I can only speculate as to why, and I don’t want to do that here.’

Whatever the truth was, it does seem that Billie’s arrest and the very real threat of imprisonment then facing her contributed more to her sudden decline in hospital than the medical complications that appeared on her death certificate. Everyone agreed that she had been getting better, but
she told Zaidins ‘She didn’t think she was going to make it. She said she was tired. She was unhappy.’
c

When Billie Holiday died on 17 July, there was an immediate flurry of activity as the people who had been involved in her life got ready for the financial, legal and emotional battles that were bound to follow. Zaidins, who had fallen out with Joe Glaser after a recent quarrel, suddenly found himself ‘buddy-buddy’ with Billie’s agent. At the funeral he even travelled with Joe Glaser and Louis McKay in the first limousine behind the casket, and the three of them were among the pall-bearers.

Zaidins said he couldn’t remember much about this final stage in his relationship with Billie. ‘I was in a state of grief,’ he said. ‘I actually cried for a couple of weeks after this woman died. I don’t know what it was, don’t ask me how or what. It was as if she was somebody in my own family. I was very emotional about it.’

Thinking about it all those years later, Zaidins wondered if Billie might not still have been alive ‘had this country treated her the way she should have been treated, given her the respect to which she was vastly entitled … In America we somehow or other do not place our jazz personalities on the same level as classical musicians and singers. We seem to look down on them as fair game, when we ought to elevate them to the status to which they are so richly deserving.’

And if she had lived, he thought she would probably have changed her style. ‘She loved recording with violins and flutes and I think she would have gone in that direction.’

*
This chapter is based on the interviews with Linda Kuehl and with the film producer John Jeremy, who used parts of his conversation with Zaidins in his 1984 documentary film,
The Long Night of Lady Day.
Zaidins himself died in 2002, but I spoke at some length with his widow, Alice.


‘To wish someone ill fortune … especially by predicting failure’ (
Dictionary of American Slang
).


Zaidins said, ‘There were people who agitated her and convinced her she was being stolen from. She probably earnt a gross of thirty to fifty thousand dollars in her last years, which isn’t a hell of a lot considering expenses: musicians, commissions, her piano player, to whom she had to pay a regular salary whether she worked or not …’

§
It was Frankie Freedom who took Billie to hospital at the end and was said to have been responsible for giving her the ‘white powder’ that led to her final arrest. But that part of the story is very hard to verify and Frankie Freedom himself disappeared without trace.


‘Mal Waldron was a very quiet guy and he didn’t play funky, soulful music. She’d criticise him saying, “How come you’re a black man and you can’t play funky music?” ’

a
Ray Ellis remembered Earle Zaidins coming to the sessions. ‘He was like her manager, almost a manager-lawyer. He was very dedicated to her. He really dug her. He would just flip out when he listened to her sing – have an orgasm is the only way I can explain it. He is the last guy in the world you’d imagine to flip out over Billie Holiday!’

b
According to Alice Zaidins, her husband was certain that Billie was completely free of drugs, but later he was persuaded by Alice Vrbsky that she must still have been an occasional user.

c
Like many others, Zaidins saw Billie as a masochist. ‘She was only happy being miserable … Why else would she have gotten involved in that marital life?’ But later in the interview with John Jeremy he added, ‘To be a girl singer, you’ve got to be a masochist. You’re going from town to town in hotel rooms and you’re alone.’

THIRTY-SEVEN
Alice Vrbsky

‘A woman of her word.’

A
lice Vrbsky speaks very slowly and clearly and when she needs to think about a question before answering it, she doesn’t seem to mind that the tape recorder is listening to her silence. I have here combined two interviews with her. The first was made by Linda Kuehl in 1971, when Alice was in her late thirties, and the second was made by the jazz collector Norman Saks in 1985. On both occasions Alice gives pretty much the same account of her friendship with Billie, although in the later interview she is far more outspoken in her opinion of Louis McKay and in her talk about drugs. She giggles quite often, making a shy, rumbling sound when she explains how young she once was and how little she understood about the world. As she draws closer to the end of her story, her voice gets even slower and you have the sense that she is not simply remembering the past – she is also walking back into it, until she can see that woman called Billie Holiday, as she knew her during the final two years of her life. Here is Alice Vrbsky talking.

I’d only heard her on records, but then in the summer of 1957 I got to see her in Central Park. I enjoyed the
performance so much that I went up to thank her afterwards. She’d signed the programme and I was trying to tell her how much I admired her. I said I’d got the album
Lady Sings the Blues
, but I hadn’t got it with me, and I asked would she mind if I brought it down for her to sign and, she said, ‘Fine, bring it down!’

So the next day I showed up with the record and the first thing she said was, ‘Ah! A woman of her word!’ – just like that. And on the album she wrote, ‘Thank you for loving me.’ You see we hit it off. I can’t explain it, but we hit it off.

Her husband, Louis McKay, asked if I would be her secretary. I was really surprised, I was just a novice. But he made it sound wonderful and I thought this was great, I’d get to see some of the country and I’d get to hear her sing. For the first two weeks he paid me cash – sixty-five dollars I think it was – but that was the one and only time I was paid by him because then he sort of disappeared. She paid me after that. She’d pay for all the travelling and everything, although I didn’t really earn anything. I was twenty-four years old and living at home. I didn’t need the money.

When I started with her we went to Los Angeles. Her husband made arrangements to get us an apartment, but then he faded out quite promptly. The apartment was in a pretty lousy condition; the floors and walls were grimy and we were both scrubbing and wiping and mopping, but she did the major part of it, it was I who was helping
her.
She was a hard worker. It wasn’t as if she just laid around and didn’t do anything.

We had that apartment for four weeks and then we went on to San Francisco. This was around September 1957. I remember we’d been gone for six weeks and she had this Carnegie Hall concert booked, and so we had to finish the last show in California and pack and get right into the show in New York. Thirty-six hours without sleep. She did wonderfully.

She always fixed her own hair and make-up. She used
an ordinary eyebrow pencil – in fact, I have a small stub of it at home: Maybelline, orangey-red on the outside. At home she just put on lipstick and eyebrows with an ordinary eyebrow pencil. For stage she wore stage jewellery that was not in the best condition and she used a pancake make-up with a little powder over it. She put the pancake on her body. All I had to do was to take care of her dresses and make sure they were clean and zip her up, and lots of times I would zip her skin up.

She wore a light girdle, just to hold her stockings, white or pink; an ordinary bra, white usually; white panties, not lacy or anything. She wasn’t a frivolous woman; the things she wore every day were not very outlandish and not very expensive. She liked slacks. She had very good wool slacks. When she had money before I knew her, she knew what to buy and bought quality things, but she didn’t buy too much when I was with her. She was hard up, in the sense of money. And she wouldn’t sit around undressed between shows in her dressing room; she just stayed the way she was dressed. Maybe that was different when she was young.

In New York when I first worked for her, she was living at the Wilson Hotel. She was a Chinese food addict and she often asked me to bring back some Chinese food from the restaurant next door. She’d put it on regular plates or eat it out of the box. She wasn’t the kind of person that needed to be waited on. Steamed porgy with rice was what we got most of the time. She liked plain white rice. I never saw her use chopsticks.

My parents liked her. She came to dinner once and she kept them up until three in the morning, and my folks weren’t used to that. But fortunately it was the weekend and they didn’t mind. Her hours were always irregular. She was a night person and she’d never go to bed before 5 a.m. She usually got up around noon and often slept through appointments, if she had any.

Sometimes she’d drag me down to Broadway and
we’d go to these all-night shows on 42nd Street. We were like two old moles. I remember once she took me to 7th Avenue and 125th Street and we went into this bar, and she ordered me a club soda because I still wasn’t drinking in those days and she showed me the atmosphere – what it was like in a Harlem bar. We usually took a cab. That was the way we got around.

She said she’d tried every drug in the book, and she was on drugs all the time I knew her. Someone would bring her drugs, maybe a couple of times a week. She said Louis McKay had not helped her at all and had put her back on drugs; I presumed he was supplying her. I’d seen her melting the stuff down on a spoon and using an ancient needle to put it in her veins. It was a very primitive kind of arrangement and not very sanitary and must have been painful. I’m a diabetic and the only thing I did was to give her a syringe because I couldn’t stand to see the way she was injecting herself. Today you can walk into any place and get a disposable needle, but in those days it was different. I never got involved in her drugs in any way, but a guy once offered me some marijuana and I said, ‘No, thanks. I get drunk on the music!’ And later Lady would often say, ‘She gets drunk on the music!’ She liked that.

She said it was all wrong the way they treated drug addicts as criminals and made criminals out of them.
*
And one time she said to me, ‘If I ask you to help me, you can help me, but if I don’t ask you, there’s nothing you can do.’ And I think she was really admitting it was up to the drug addict to give up the habit. She had a couple who were friends and she felt bad because they took stuff, and their children would play games of taking the stuff because their parents were hooked and Billie said those children didn’t have a chance.

She told me when she first got married she wanted children very badly and she would sometimes lie in bed with her feet up after intercourse, because she thought that might help. But by the time I knew her she realised it would have been too late. Still, I think she would have been a good mother. I saw her with the two boys Louis had with a woman in California. She often took care of them and they liked her. She swore they weren’t really Louis’, and said his woman told her they were trick babies.

She wasn’t always the easiest person to get along with, because of the things she was under the influence of. One time I walked out because nothing I did was right and I was trying the best I could, so I said to hell with it. Two days later she called me and said, ‘I can’t find so-and-so and would you come over?’ and so I went. I remember she said to me, ‘If you want to hang around show people, you can’t be sensitive. You’ve got to get over that.’

I enjoyed being with her. Of course I enjoyed her as an artist, but I also enjoyed just talking to her. She’d talk a lot about her mother. I got the feeling there was a lot of friction between her and her mother, because Sadie didn’t approve of the things she was doing, but they were very close. She said, ‘I haven’t spoken to anybody the way I speak to you since my mother died. I almost feel as if she has come back to me in some way.’ I had the feeling she needed to have somebody who loved her enough to understand her.

She was a very intelligent woman who knew about many things I knew nothing about, and who knew about sizing things up. She always said what she meant, and I learnt a great deal about real feelings rather than phoney feelings from her, just by watching her and seeing how she treated people and how she talked to them. She’d be friendly with someone if she liked them, no matter who they were, and she wouldn’t be friendly with someone just because he was a bigshot. She’d say,
‘People don’t think I like laughing. They don’t think I lead any kind of normal life.’ I think it bothered her that people thought she was something peculiar, in the sense of being totally depressed and out of everything. She didn’t live such an unusual life, but she was bitter against society and the phoneyness.

I never felt she used people and that might have been part of the problem, because people were using her all the time, but she never learnt to use them. In her heyday, when she had scads of money coming in, she told me how people asked for money and she gave it to them and nobody ever gave it back to her. They weren’t people I knew, so the names didn’t mean anything. But they weren’t around when she needed them later.

She wasn’t the kind of person who pitied herself, or if she did, it was only when she was alone. She wasn’t the kind of person who complained. But she used to say, ‘I can sing in Carnegie Hall and in a place where they sell ice cream to kids, but I can’t sing where people drink.’ I think she missed being in the clubs in New York. I remember she was in the Apollo Theater to see Al Hibbler, and they called her up to the stage and she sang with him and the response from the audience was fantastic.

One of my main jobs was making out her parole reports, because she’d been arrested a year or so before. All that was required was information about where she was performing and where they could find her, if they wanted to find her. So I’d give them the itinerary for a month and we’d say, ‘Oh, I’m doing fine. Everything’s going well.’ It didn’t really mean anything at all, but she hoped they wouldn’t bother her so long as she sent them in. It was a scary time for her because she was always expecting them to walk in and arrest her again.

She wasn’t working regularly, she was working when she could. You can’t live if you don’t work, and this was her problem in the last two years I knew her – just finding enough work to keep ahead of things. I don’t know if the clubs felt she wasn’t reliable, or that she was past it, or what. I usually went to every engagement and I don’t recall her missing a set. The owner of Birdland said he could arrange a deal with her and he would buy a licence

for her, if she would sing in his club for six months of every year, but Billie said, ‘I’m not going to sell half of myself, contract-wise, to anybody.’ But she was bitter about the fact that it could have been done.

She told me her father died in a similar way to Bessie Smith; he was shunted around from place to place and she felt his death was very close to a lynching, although the exact facts were never known. She said she could have gone to the South and made a lot of money when she became a soloist without the big bands, but she just felt she couldn’t bring herself to go down there. Even in 1958 there was as much segregation in Las Vegas as in Baltimore. She played Baltimore twice while I was working with her and we stayed in a Negro hotel because it couldn’t be otherwise. But even when she played places like Detroit, she wasn’t allowed to stay in a white hotel.

The club owners and the guys who ran the hotels assumed that, because I was travelling with her, I must have been a black woman who was trying to pass for white.
§
She said as soon as people saw her together
with a white woman, they assumed it was a sort of relationship. And she said that the white men she may have had affairs with didn’t want it to be known that they knew her when they met her in public, and they’d just cut her off. It was the basic dishonesty of society at that time.

I remember in Detroit she was sitting in a bar with two musicians who were white, and one of the club owners came to her later to say she wasn’t supposed to have drinks with customers at the bar. She said, ‘My God, I’ve gone through this so many times before!’ In Los Angeles she stayed at the Sahara Hotel, but that was only because they made special arrangements because she was playing there, and her musicians had to stay somewhere else. She asked one of her black friends, ‘Why don’t you come and see me at the Sahara?’, but no black person was allowed to come to the show. She said, ‘They wouldn’t even hire me to be a maid here, or to wait at the tables, and they would never let me in.’ In Detroit when she was with Artie Shaw’s band, she had to put on white make-up.

She wanted to take me to Europe with her, but she couldn’t afford to. She went to Europe with the idea that people were more liberal there, not as prejudiced against everything. She was really looking forward to it, but she was really glad to be home when she came back. She said she missed New York. She was a little disappointed by not being able to understand the language and she had some trouble with management, from what I gathered. She didn’t come back with any overwhelmingly happy memories. She bought me a
kerchief from Milan and that was about all. I don’t know what she did about drugs and that might have been part of it too, but I’m only guessing.

For the last year and a half she lived in an apartment in New York. There were no religious objects around. She didn’t really have any possessions because she’d been living in hotels and so she wasn’t somebody who could accumulate things. She had a radio and she’d carry it with her from room to room. She had her phonograph and maybe twenty-five records. She didn’t turn it on that often and when she did, she’d play more instrumental music, not for background but as something she’d really listen to. I remember one time she said about Miles Davis, ‘You know it bothers me. It sounds as if he’s playing off-key on some of the notes.’

I used to mix her drinks. She smoked heavily and she had a cigarette and a glass in her hand more often than not. When I was there I tried to make her eat something for breakfast, but this was in the early days; in the end she wouldn’t even eat. By June 1959 she was mainly drinking Gordon’s gin and Seven-Up, and that was what she was living on and that was why she started losing so much weight. She stayed at home and watched TV mostly at the end. Her only bad habit was that she would often fall asleep while she was smoking a cigarette and she’d burn holes in her nightgown or bathrobe. She’d make jokes about it and say, ‘I’m real holy!’

She seemed to go suddenly, like my father, who looked well six months ago and then suddenly he had cancer and he was dying. Two months before she went to hospital she looked very haggard and her cheeks were sunk in and she wasn’t eating much. She got yellower as she got sicker. A young Negro boy called Frankie Freedom was staying there for the last weeks and helping her. I don’t know where he came from. He was tall and thin and young, about seventeen or eighteen. He had ambitions to be in the theatre and I don’t know
how Lady got to know him that well, but maybe she needed somebody around in the daytime, especially since I had to get a job, so I couldn’t be there all day and all night. I just came in the evenings, or she’d call and ask me to take care of her clothes. I took her clothes to the cleaners, took the dog out. She’d see her lawyer and Bill and Maely Dufty, but there weren’t other regular visitors.

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