Scottish Daily Mail

The woman who scared 007 witless

She set fire to her lover’s trousers, hit Russell Harty on live TV and was the only Bond girl to leave Roger Moore quaking ...

- ROGER LEWIS

SoMeTIMeS a person can be so famous and iconic it hardly matters that we would be hard-pressed to enumerate or describe many of their actual superlativ­e accomplish­ments. Andy Warhol was a slick and slapdash painter of transcende­ntal banality, his silkscreen prints completed by ‘assistants’ — yet his work fetches hundreds of millions of dollars.

elizabeth Taylor made no memorable movies after Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? in 1966 — yet when she died in 2011 she was a celebrated Dame Commander of the order of the British empire, a rank also accorded to Joan Collins.

Grace Jones, too, as she is the first to say, is ‘famous for being famous, because as part of what I do there is a high level of showing off’. But surely there is more to the woman, who expects kerbside-to-airside VIP treatment and stretch limos on permanent call, than the fact that 30-odd years ago she beat up chatshow host Russell harty, punishing him on live TV for his ‘boorish condescens­ion’?

Maybe it suffices that Grace, who is like a creature imagined by Gauguin — halfhuman and half-jaguar or panther — was one of the most beautiful women of the late 20th century, ‘a black Dietrich . . . even the black Monroe’.

or perhaps it will do that she remains the world’s trickiest customer — for who else dares say about themselves, as Grace does in this electrifyi­ng book, that she is believed to be ‘demanding, crazy, offensive, indulgent, chaotic, depraved. I can be a pain, but most of all, I can be a pleasure’?

Fasten your seatbelts — this is going to be a bumpy book!

Grace is vague about her age, but evidence suggests (‘the Second World War had finished’) that she grew up in the Fifties in Jamaica — an island with ‘a slithering hint of the supernatur­al’.

We Have superb descriptio­ns of the ‘shamrock-green hills that seem to hover under misty clouds’, the silhouette­s of trees hanging over walls like ‘hulking dinosaurs’, the giant moths, trembling fireflies, screaming mongooses and bats.

What an ideal habitat for Grace, who even as a youngster stood out as exotic and alien, with ‘charcoal skin . . . You could only make out my eyes and teeth, sparkling in the dark’.

her background is not dirt poor: her father’s family were politician­s and administra­tors who ran the National Library of Jamaica in Kingston. They also served in the World Wars as soldiers in the British West Indies Regiment.

The Joneses were a religious family, their Pentecosta­l faith being ‘mystical and obsessive’, says Grace, a mix of Christiani­ty and traditiona­l ancestral cults.

It was ‘emotional and exuberant’, but with strict ideas about sin and free expression, construed as disobedien­ce.

Grace was often cruelly walloped by her step-grandfathe­r, a hated figure, ‘a kind of gothic monster’ who meted out serious abuse. Grace would go to school, knowing all day that upon her return home, ‘you were going to get a whipping’.

Paradoxica­lly, the step-grandfathe­r formed Grace’s later style. She can see how, in her act, she has adopted the man’s mannerisms: ‘the fixed stare, the dominant stance’, the pouting and the aggression that were to make her fortune.

Grace’s parents left her behind in the Caribbean when they moved to the U.S. to found a branch of the All Saints Apostolic Church.

She followed them eventually in 1961, and quickly discovered Southern Comfort (‘I liked what it did to my mind’) and sex (‘I still cry when I have a big orgasm . . . f rom a combinatio­n of pleasure and guilt’). She loved fancy clothes, becoming ‘addicted very quickly to dressing to impress . . . Flash sequins and shimmering gowns’, and paid for this by working as a telephonis­t, where she whizzed about the office on roller skates.

Grace went to Philadelph­ia with an Italian boyfriend, where ‘I lived as a nudist’. The police often arrested her under the mistaken assumption that she was a prostitute.

This was the Sixties, so Grace experiment­ed with drugs — Quaaludes and Valium — and walked into walls.

‘Acid intensifie­s what is real to such an extent it doesn’t seem real,’ she says knowledgea­bly. Under the influence, Grace examined flowers and the petals emitted sparks.

She did a stint as a Playboy Bunny, ‘a classier step up from dancing in go-go clubs’, and began putting together a portfolio of photograph­s of herself adorned with ‘tribal white marks on my face’.

Because of her high cheekbones, Grace’s

modelling career took off — $60 an hour at least, millions later on.

‘I shaved my head and my eyebrows, perfecting the warrior appearance. I was black, but not black; woman, but not woman; American, but Jamaican; African, but science fiction.’

With a name like Jones, she is probably Welsh into the bargain.

Looking like a fabulous sculpture, Grace had a premonitio­n she’d be taken seriously in Europe.

Her ambitions and drive were heightened when a New York fashion industry insider came out with an astonishin­g piece of racist so- called advice: ‘Selling a black model in Paris,’ Grace was told by this bigwig, ‘is like trying to sell them an old car nobody wants to buy.’

To which Grace responded: ‘I hope you die of cirrhosis of the liver,’ which she thinks he did. That or cancer, anyway.

But Grace’s instincts were correct: the Paris fashion crowd adored her — Helmut Newton created Grace’s high-heeled dominatrix persona.

He taught her how to stand and strut. No wonder Russell Harty was given the willies. Grace appeared on his chatshow in 1981 (‘I knew nothing about his camp reputation’), and after a few cursory remarks he turned his back on her, preferring to talk to Patrick Lichfield, the royal photograph­er, instead.

When Grace attempted to get his attention, Harty scolded her, making the fatal mistake of treating her like a naughty girl.

‘Harty was rude,’ says Grace. ‘I wasn’t going to put up with it. I kept lunging at Harty, hitting and hitting him.’

You can watch it on YouTube. It was

l i ver indeed ‘one of those career-defining moments’, especially for poor Harty.

When he died, it was the main thing obituarist­s dwelt on — as, when the time comes, will be the same for Parky with Emu.

Part of the problem was that it was Grace’s first visit to London and she hated the place, finding it full of ‘old, crumbling buildings filled with broken windows, ghostly cranes, dirty water and piles and piles of bird droppings.’

She was happier back in New York where, fashion having caught up with her, she became a performanc­e artiste and centrepiec­e at ‘throbbing dance palaces’ like Studio 54.

Wearing skin-tight bodysuits, Grace was ‘an animal on the prowl’ in a sea of dry ice.

Grace recorded albums, appeared at events, clubs and corporate gigs often with Andy Warhol, who turned her into a screen print.

She was not by any means a convention­al pop singer, nor was she easy to cast as an actress. Grace says that she’d have liked to have been in Game Of Thrones or X-Men, but she’s too original: ‘I stand out too much.’

She was a Bond girl, however, in A View To A Kill, where she scared the daylights out of Roger Moore.

‘Please stop looking at me like that, with such venom,’ he pleaded.

GRACE was also in Conan the Destroyer with Arnie, and one of her boyfriends was Dolph Lundgren, whom she met when he was studying chemical engineerin­g at the University of Sydney.

It was a turbulent relationsh­ip. Dolph, she says, ‘could see I was getting high a little much’, particular­ly when — being in a bad mood — ‘I was setting fire to Dolph’s trousers’.

He moved into a hotel, so Grace went after him with a gun. ‘This was the kind of hysteria that took place in Los Angeles,’ she explains in mitigation, though I can’t quite see it as entirely the place’s fault — Grace would cause mayhem in Tooting Bec.

Grace sums herself up very well: ‘I am rooted and restless. I am at peace, but I want to interrupt. I love the quiet, but I want to shatter the silence. It’s time to go, but I don’t want to go.’

What a handful. In her contracts — an example is printed as an appendix — along with the first- class travel, presidenti­al suites at five-star hotels and other luxuries, Grace stipulates that a dozen fresh Colchester oysters are to be placed in her dressing room, as well as a case of Louis Roederer Cristal Champagne. The oysters must be left unopened, however.

‘Grace does her own shucking.’ A veritable sight to be seen, I’m sure.

One company, which found itself unable to come up with the wodges of cash Grace demands before she’ll put in a personal appearance, tried to bribe her with a baby: ‘We have an employee who has a baby she is prepared to offer as security . . . You can keep the baby until we bring you the money.’

Grace couldn’t believe her own ears: ‘I didn’t take the baby.’

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 ?? Picture: ANP / GOVERT DE ROOS / IDOLS ?? Tricky: Grace Jones admits she can be a pain and a pleasure
Picture: ANP / GOVERT DE ROOS / IDOLS Tricky: Grace Jones admits she can be a pain and a pleasure

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