Rainer: |
Gilles,
you are known as the one who picked up Jim Morrison at a club in Paris in
1971, but it seems to me that your story had been changed by the press a
lot. How about telling our readers the real story? |
Gilles: |
The club
was called the ROCK'N'ROLL CIRCUS at that time, and after that they called
it WHISKEY A GOGO. |
Rainer: |
When did
they change the name? |
Gilles: |
During
the summer of 1971. The owner left the club and it was closed. In October
they started again under the new name. It turned into a teenybopper club
then. |
Rainer: |
So what
did you do in there? How old were you at that time? |
Gilles: |
Twenty.
|
Rainer: |
You weren't
a teenybopper anymore ... |
Gilles: |
No, but
they used to play rockmusic at the ROCK'N'ROLL CIRCUS. Everybody went there.
|
Rainer: |
Were you
a regular at the club? |
Gilles: |
I didn't
go there every night, but very often. |
Rainer: |
Did they
play Doors music as well? |
Gilles: |
Yes, sure.
And they had live acts there, too, like Led Zeppelin, Joe Cocker and many
others. |
Rainer: |
And so
that very night in May 1971 you went there for your pleasure. How did this
strange meeting happen? |
Gilles: |
I was there
with some friends in the restaurant of the club. I just saw a shadow where
the security guys were. Later I went out and saw this guy kicking the door
with his feet, because he wanted to get inside, but the security wouldn't
let him in anymore because they had just thrown him out. When I looked at
his face I realized it was Jim Morrison. He was completely drunk. But I also
remember Johnny Halliday being there the same night in the same state, completely
drunk, causing a scandal, but nobody said anything because everybody knew
it was Johnny, who was a big star in France. |
|
|
Gilles Yepremian.
Photo © 1992 Michelle Campbell |
|
Rainer: |
So you
are absolutely sure nobody had realized it was Jim Morrison outside trying
to get in? |
Gilles: |
Nobody,
I'm sure. Definitely. He didn't look like Jim at all, but like an American
student travelling in France. |
Rainer: |
If he had
had a beard, do you think you would have recognized him as well? |
Gilles: |
I don't
know, really. I had seen pictures of him with a beard on the live-album and
from the Isle Of Wight-Festival, which were published in ROCK & FOLK
magazine. |
Rainer: |
What clothes
did he wear? |
Gilles: |
He was
wearing a green military jacket and some blue jeans. |
Rainer: |
Somebody
else said Jim used to be a regular at that club and a lot of people knew
him ... |
Gilles: |
Yeah, they
say that, but I met him just this one time here. I can't judge. |
Rainer: |
I remember
the ROCK'N'ROLL CIRCUS had this long entrance, a long hallway or corridor,
and then some stairs up to the door. |
Gilles: |
Right,
and Jim was knocking at that door with his feet. I was looking out of the
door and asked him, "Are you Jim?", and he said "Yeeeaah!".
So I took him away from that door by his arm, along the hallway to the outside.
We tried to get a cab, because he was completely out of his mind. The first
cab refused to take us with it and the driver said "Go away!". But
the next one stopped. |
Rainer: |
What in
fact did you want to do with Jim? |
Gilles: |
I was sure
if he had stayed there he would have had a fight with the security guys,
I'm sure. So I decided to take him with me to Hervé Muller's flat.
|
Rainer: |
If it hadn't
been Jim Morrison but any other guy, would you have taken him away from that
door, too? |
Gilles: |
Yes, I
would have taken him away from that door. But I wouldn't have taken him to
Hervé's. |
Rainer: |
Why didn't
you accompany Jim in the taxi to his own apartment in Rue Beautreillis?
|
Gilles: |
Because
Jim wasn't in the state to give me his address, definitely not, you know,
he was absolutely drunk. |
Rainer: |
And why
didn't you take him to your own flat? |
Gilles: |
Well, at
that time I was living with my parents. I couldn't have come there with a
totally drunken American. |
Rainer: |
Hervé
was a friend of yours at that time? |
Gilles: |
Yes, a
very good friend. We had some friends in common, that's how we met. He worked
for BEST-magazine at that time and was living with Yvonne Fuka, who was the
girl making the drawings for BEST. |
Rainer: |
Let's go
on with your story. In that second cab ... |
Gilles: |
Yes, we
got in there and I told the driver Hervé's address. Soon we arrived
at the Pont de la Concorde, which is a bridge crossing the Seine, and Jim
wanted the taxi to stop. He got out and went away from the taxi. I paid the
driver and he drove away. Jim wanted to jump up the railing. I saw two cops
coming and said, "Be careful, cops are coming!". But Jim shouted,
"Fuck the pigs!", something like that, and he went quiet again. And
I stopped another cab which took us to the house where Hervé lived.
Again I paid the driver and he asked for some tip, but had just this big
banknote left. Jim asked, "What does he want?", and I told him, "He
wants some more money.". So Jim took out of his pocket like 5.000 French
Francs, which was a lot of money at that time, and gave it to the taxidriver.
The driver stared at this whole bunch of banknotes and gave them back to
me thinking we were crazy. I passed the money back to Jim and we went up
to Hervé 's flat. On each floor Jim knocked on my back and hissed
"Sssssh, they are sleeping!". I rang Hervé's door and Yvonne
opened. I remember there was this Belgian girl staying overnight in the same
apartment, and she thought we were the police wanting to search the flat.
So she threw all her hash out of the window in a hurry! We got in, and
Hervé got up and asked, "What are you doing here in the middle
of the night, it's four o'clock!" And I answered, "I'm here with Jim
Morrison!" "Fuck you, Gilles", Hervé responded. "You
just want to sleep in my apartment. Take a sleeping-bag and sleep!" But
Jim just entered the room, crashed upon their bed and fell asleep. Hervé
and Yvonne had to take their sleeping bags, because it was impossible to
move him, he was lying across the bed and stayed there like that. |
Rainer: |
Did you
stay in the flat, too, or ... |
Gilles: |
No, I left,
but came back a day later in the afternoon. Before I arrived, Jim went with
Hervé and Yvonne to the ALEXANDRÉ, which is now closed. When
I arrived at the flat, Jim again was drunk. So I found him in the same state
as I had left him. |
Rainer: |
Was this the day you took your famous photos of
Jim? |
Gilles: |
No, some
days later. But Jim stayed again at Hervé's flat that night sleeping
until the next day, then he went off and we met him again a couple of days
later for a meal at Hervé's. He came over and Pamela was with him.
And during this meal they decided to go to Corsica, 'cos I remember Hervé
had this great Corsican Rosé wine for the meal, which Jim seemed to
like as much as Pamela did. She asked, "What's this wine?", and
Hervé answered, "It's Corsican wine.", and Jim turned to Pamela
and said, "Do you wanna go there?". And on the spot they decided to
travel to Corsica the following week. It went like that. |
Rainer: |
Do you
remember anything else, any special event? |
Gilles: |
Yes, I
remember Jim wanted to listen to some music after the meal. He went to
Hervé's record collection, looked at all the albums and took out an
LP of Buffy St.Marie. I can't remember which one, but we listened to it together.
And I remember one more thing: Jim was very sad when when he heard that this guy from Canned
Heat had died ... |
Rainer: |
Al Wilson,
who was also called The Blind Owl? |
Gilles: |
Yes, Al
Wilson. Jim was very close to Canned Heat, and I noticed Al's death was a
big shock for him. |
Rainer: |
Did Jim
have a copy of the L.A.Woman album at that time? |
Gilles: |
No, he
received that some weeks later. But I remember Hervé telling me Jim
had received a test pressing, and they both listened to that record together.
|
Rainer: |
How many
times did you meet Jim and Pam together? |
Gilles: |
Two or
three times. |
Rainer: |
Have you
been to the flat in Rue Beautreillis? |
Gilles: |
No, although
Jim gave me his address and phone number on a sheet of paper, and after he
had died, I put that away, probably between the pages of a book, and I can't
find it anymore. |
Rainer: |
Pity. This
would be worth a fortune nowadays. A week after the meal they both went to
Corsica. I know they came back 10 days later ... |
Gilles: |
I can't
remember, because I didn't see them again after they came back from Corsica.
The last time I saw them was in Mid May 1971. |
Rainer: |
I remember
you once told me your English wasn't that good at that time as it is now
... |
Gilles: |
It's still
not good ... |
Rainer: |
You're
joking. Did Jim speak French at all? |
Gilles: |
No, not
at all, not a word. We had some conversation, sure, but he wouldn't talk
about The Doors. This subject was really a kind of paranoia for him.
|
Rainer: |
Did you
or Hervé try to talk about The Doors with him? |
Gilles: |
Yes, we
did, but Jim became very annoyed as soon as we touched that subject. He just
said he was too old to be a Rock'n'Roll singer. Mostly he talked about what
he wanted to do in the future, almost never anything about his past, America,
or his friends from over there. He just talked about what he was doing in
Paris, that's all. |
Rainer: |
Some people
say that Jim was tired and bored being in L.A., and that's why he went to
Paris, just to get away from everything there, including The Doors ...
|
Gilles: |
Well, that's
what I think, too. But he drank like hell, every day. During our meal at
Hervé's he didn't drink that much, but all the other times I've met
him he drank everything near him. But I can't remember seeing him smoking.
I also remember I met him with Hervé in a restaurant on Avenue des
Ternes, and he got drunk again. |
Rainer: |
Did you
ever hear Jim talking about the fact that he needed some more money coming
in from the States to pay his rent? |
Gilles: |
No. He
seemed to be rich, he had money in his pocket, always more than 5.000 Francs,
which at that time was worth like 50.000 Francs today. |
Rainer: |
What special
plans did he have? |
Gilles: |
He said
he was in Paris to write, and he also talked about cinema and movies.
|
Rainer: |
Did you
see anything he wrote? |
Gilles: |
No, he
never wrote anything when we were with him. He also never showed us some
of his poetry. |
Rainer: |
He gave
Hervé a copy of his book AN AMERICAN PRAYER. Did you see any other
books Jim had with him? |
Gilles: |
No, I just
remember the private issue that Hervé still has. But I wasn't there
when Jim gave the copy to him. |
Rainer: |
Was he
saying anything about Paris? |
Gilles: |
Oh yes,
he liked it very much, together they liked it very much. |
Rainer: |
About the
few photos you took ... |
Gilles: |
Yes, I
took them in black & white in front of Hervé's house at Place
Tristan Bernard. |
Rainer: |
We can
see a couple of people standing in front of the entrance. There's Pamela
Courson on the left, then Jim and Hervé Muller and another guy. Who
was that? |
Gilles: |
This guy,
his name was Henri-Jean Henu, was the owner of an underground newspaper in
Paris called Le Parapluie (The Umbrella). He knew from someone that Jim was
at Hervé's flat and came over. Henri-Jean had waited at the front
door for hours, and when we finally were coming out, he rushed straight up
to Jim as soon as he noticed him, gave him a newspaper and wanted to talk
to Jim about The Doors, but of course Jim refused to comment on that
subject.
|
Rainer: |
What newspaper
has Jim got under his arm? |
Gilles: |
This was
a copy of Le Parapluie. |
Rainer: |
That was
when you took your photos. How come you took just these few? |
Gilles: |
Because
it was not my camera and not my film. |
Rainer: |
One of
your pictures got published on a book cover, I remember it was a book about
Le Parapluie. The same photo is also for sale on the fleamarket here in Paris.
|
Gilles: |
I didn't
know that, really. Haven't seen a penny for that ... |
Rainer: |
In
Hervé's books there are a couple of other photos, did you take any
of these? |
Gilles: |
No, Hervé
and Yvonne Fuka took them, and later she gave the copyright of her photos
to Hervé. But I'm aware of the fact that sometimes there's a big confusion
about my pictures and Hervé's. I think they had one of mine in the
video A TRIBUTE TO JIM MORRISON, and Hervé was credited for it, not
me. And also in the NO ONE HERE GETS OUT ALIVE book there's one of mine credited
to Hervé. |
Rainer: |
Did you
ever complain? |
Gilles: |
Yes, but
the French publisher gave me no money. In the second edition they changed
the credits, and again I didn't get any money. In the latest American edition
there's still Hervé's name under the photo, although Hervé
and I wrote to the publisher. We never received an answer, and it's still
in print with the wrong name. |
Rainer: |
What do
you think about your photos being used all the time without proper credits?
|
Gilles: |
Honestly,
I don't really care that much. I don't want to do business with them.
|
Rainer: |
How do
you feel about Hervé being pretty famous for being a friend of Jim
Morrison, while it was you who started this relationship? |
Gilles: |
He's a
journalist and I'm not. |
Rainer: |
I mean
your name is totally unknown among Doors fans, except for a few people. Doesn't
it bother you? I mean you've got an interesting story to tell as well.
|
Gilles: |
I really
don't think about this that much. |
Rainer: |
How
do
you comment on the relationship between Pamela and Jim? |
Gilles: |
Pamela
always looked very shy, she didn't talk very often and she always wanted
Jim's protection. She looked quite afraid and was always near him. Just look
at my photos - when this guy came up to Jim, she went straight behind him.
But they also made the impression of a big love story, they really behaved
like that. They looked really together and happy. |
Rainer: |
Did you
notice any of them taking drugs? |
Gilles: |
No, I didn't.
Now I know that she had been a heroin user at that time, but when I met her
she didn't make that impression. And she also never asked me or Hervé
for drugs, or where to get them, nor did Jim. |
Rainer: |
What do
you think about the stories that Jim died of a heroin overdose in the club?
|
Gilles: |
Hervé
and I met a girl several months later, her boyfriend was in jail, and this
girl was called Nicole. She told everyone it was her boyfriend who sold the
drug to Jim. But who knows. It is very hard to believe what a pusher says.
|
Rainer: |
Nicole
was a drug user herself? |
Gilles: |
Yes, she
seemed to be one. |
Rainer: |
Did Hervé
do some research on that subject? |
Gilles: |
Yes, but
after Jim had died, there was so much talk, if you know what I mean. Who
knows? Like the guy from the ROCK'N'ROLL CIRCUS, he said on TV, Canal +,
he remembered Jim being there every night, but I'm sure he has never seen
Jim there or noticed it was Jim Morrison. He's lying. And on another TV show
there's a guy from Radio Europe I, Francois Jouffa, who is telling my story!
|
Rainer: |
When did
you first hear about Jim's death? |
Gilles: |
Well, I
was on holidays in Southern France and read it in a newspaper. I was shocked.
|
Rainer: |
Have you
ever met Alain Ronay? |
Gilles: |
No, I haven't.
But there was another guy, Phil Trainer, who was a friend of Hervé
and me. He was about the first who met Jim in Paris. Phil later wrote a song
about him called "Beautiful Jim". |
Rainer: |
Yes, a
great song. Did you talk to Phil about Jim or did he ever mention the session
they did in L'ASTROQUET? |
Gilles: |
Oh, at
that time probably, but I can't remember. Last time I met Phil he was with
Jerry Hopkins in 1972, I think. Then Phil went back to America. I think now
he has got a group in London. |
Rainer: |
Any meeting
with Agnes Varda? |
Gilles: |
Pity, no.
I tried to make contact, but she generally refuses to talk about Jim. She
talked to Canal +, but they had to do the interview three times I've heard,
each time she wanted to watch it and change it. I was also told she's very
angry about the article Alain Ronay wrote for Paris Match. But she still
lives at the same place like she did 20 years ago when Jim visited her.
|
Rainer: |
Oh, the
place where the birthday party happened for her daughter? |
Gilles: |
Yes, yes,
with all the kids and Jim among them ... |
Rainer: |
... which
Oliver Stone transferred to Los Angeles into a party for Ray Manzarek's daughter,
who doesn't even exist. |
Gilles: |
(laughs)
Right, right! |
Rainer: |
What is
Yvonne Fuka doing now? |
Gilles: |
She's a
psychiatrist in Paris. But although she was in the Canal + show, she never
talks about Jim. I think Hervé arranged that. |
Rainer: |
You became
a Doors collector yourself. Do you like all those countless bootlegs coming
out? |
Gilles: |
I think
it's a good thing for the collector, but not for the group. |
Rainer: |
What are
you doing for a living these days, Gilles? |
Gilles: |
I am managing
a band called Urban Sax, the band consists of 52 (!) people, 10 singers,
2 dancers, three percussionists, one bass player, and the rest are saxophonists.
We play a kind of unique avantgarde music, have got 5 records out, and also
one video taped in Tokyo. We sometimes play Germany, by the way. |
Rainer: |
When you
go to Jim's grave - how do you feel being there? |
Gilles: |
It's hard
to believe he's in there, because he seems to be still alive, with all the
records coming out, and the videos. When I first came there in 1971 there
was nothing but this piece of wood with a plate on it. In the beginning you
could always find joints and drugs on the grave, there was absolutely no
security or guards as it is now. Now the grave is like a tourist monument,
not because of Jim but for curiosity. |
Rainer: |
You're
right. I think exactly the same. Thank you for the interview. Let's go and
have a beer. |
Gilles: |
You're
welcome. |
All photos ©
1992 Michelle Campbell. Background design © 1999 Denise Jurs.
|