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Publication: Harper's Bazaar [US]
Date: May 1997
Section:
Page Number(s):
Length:
Title: "Mayte And Me"
Interviewed By: Eve MacSweeney
It's midnight at SmashBox studios, in L.A.'s desolate Culver City. the team--
photographer (napping), his two assistants, two stylists, hair, makeup, two
record-company reps, and me--has assembled for the night ahead. The clothes,
Helmut Lang, Gucci, Galliano (for him and her, and they share a shoe size)--have
been hung on racks, the jewelry laid out on the bench. We chit, we chat, we
stroll back and forth for another canap‚ or Coca-Cola, but there's suspense in
the air. Everyone's attention is subliminally fixed on the door at the end of
the studio, to which our eyes flicker repeatedly, as if expecting a hot wind to
blow through.
With the Artist Formerly Known As Prince, who now goes by the slightly less
chewy title of the Artist, there are more variables than with most. The man who
scrawled SLAVE on his cheek during the final stages of disentanglement from his
recording contract with Warner Bros. is clearly his own master now: Earlier in
the day, he rescheduled a sedate Sunday afternoon session to this late hour,
right after the Image Awards at the Pasadena Civic, where he was receiving a Key
of Life special achievement award from Stevie Wonder. Besides, there's no
absolute guarantee that he will show, or for how long; that he will talk, or for
how long. A couple of days before, he had posed for a photographer, then left
after the first roll of film had been shot, not digging the vibe. He's a night
owl, his people tell us, and tonight he'll be on a high. For the rest of us,
it's caffeine all the way.
Finally it happens. And it's less a whirlwind than a light breeze as the
Artist, his wife, Mayte, and one bodyguard walk quietly through the door and
introduce themselves. The Artist is wearing a long feminine rollneck sweater
and bell-bottoms, a pendant with a rendering of his name, 0)+>, an elaborate
silver sickle-moon cuff on top of one ear, and pink Cuban-heeled boots. Mayte,
sleek and sexy, wears a one-shoulder Versace dress, a ponytail, an ankle
bracelet, and a large rock on her fourth finger. Aaron, the bodyguard, who
looks like a deflated version of a James Bond thug--young, shaved-headed, and
Eastern European-looking, with an earpiece and the obligatory facial scar--gets
straight on the phone. The Artist's luggage was lost between Minneapolis and
Los Angeles, and he's trying to track it--I think I hear the word purple. A
message is discreetly conveyed, and the Sam Cooke that has been playing on the
sound system is replaced with the Artist;'s current triple CD, Emancipation,
which at some three hours long almost takes us through the session. Mayte
settles in for makeup and I sit down with the Artist to talk.
After all the ripples that surround him, being one-on-one with the Artist is a
bit like finding yourself in the eye of a storm. In conversation, he's low-key
and polite--not charming exactly, but with flashes of warmth. Signs of the
showmanship he displays onstage--his is the tightest, the most humorous and
entertaining live act I've ever seen--occasionally break though his offstage
wariness.
At first his eyes are on the wall, then he gets more animated and turns the
kohl-rimmed beauties on me. (This, I gather, is a fairly recent breakthrough in
the Artist's interview etiquette.) Part of his relative openness these days is
no doubt because these are happier times for him: He married Mayte, a 23-year-
old Puerto Rican dancer, just over a year ago, and he's signed a new record
deal, on his terms, with EMI. (What particularly rankled him about his Warner
Bros. contract was the fact that he didn't own his master recordings, and that
the company rationed his musical output.) Emancipation, which he released at
his own financial risk, has just gone double-platiunum--"Not bad for someone
whose career was supposed to be in the gutter," he says with a trace of
bitterness. There's a sense of that he's come through an early mid-life crisis-
- he has, after all, been a professional musician for half his 38 years--in
which he's wrestled with success, ego, religion, and control, and struggled to
come to some sort of resolution.
We start with this, and what the word emancipation means to him.
"You have to emancipate people first from themselves," he says. "Your ego wants
the biggest and the best for yourself. But you have to think what path that
would lead you down. You find that nothing satisfies you. You're continually
given things you've seen before--money, gold records, sold-out shows. You
forget that you should be thankful." Just when you're gasping at the humility
rap, he comes through with some humor. "Do you have to have a big ego to be an
artist?" I ask. "If you do it right," he says and smiles.
The business with his name is in part a negation of ego, but the slave/
emancipation riff is also more political than some of the Artist's publicity
machinery would have us believe. He talks about slave names. "Nel-son," he
enunciates. I've been looking for the Nel in my family tree, and I don't see
one. You really do belong to something or someone, and until you get from under
that, you're not free. (Obviously the bank doesn't tolerate these complexities:
A check he later sends the magazine for ownership of these photos, which he
insists on, is stamped with a no-nonsense P.R. Nelson.) He likes to roam the
Internet, he tells me, under a name we'll never know.
God has helped him, and so has Mayte. The Artist is very serious about God, and
he's very serious about sex. He expresses his amazement that anyone could
accept an award and not find the time to thank God. "That's how you can really
tell what time it is," he says. (and judging by the recent Grammy's, God is at
the top of a lot of artists' lists these days.) As for sex, when I ask him how
it feels to finally be free of his Warner Bros. deal, he tells me, "It's like
eighteen orgasms at one." I laugh, but he's not trying to be funny. Later we
talk about Kamasutra, the ballet he is currently creating for Mayte. It is, he
says, "perfect music to make love to." And he means it.
He waxes lyrical recalling the musical accompaniment and choreography of their
1996 Valentine's Day wedding, which forms the basis of Kamasutra. "There were
three sounds at the beginning," he says. "The best man walked out on the first;
I walked out on the second; and the pastor on the third. Then the musicswelled, and Mayte appeared. It was such an expression of love. There wasn't a
dry eye in the house.
"Mayte grounds me," he says. "She doesn't try to change me, but she makes me
more aware of certain things. She's given me respect for life. She's brought
in animals to the house--two dogs, two cats, two doves." Together they've been
working on a charity, Love 4 One Another, for underprivileged children and
people in need.
The couple are very clean and green. Mayte, he says, has a vision of a future
where kids will go to nightclubs not to drink or take drugs but just to chill
and get into the music. And she's converted her husband to a complete
vegetarian kick"--he talks of wanting to get a farmer on the payroll at Paisley
Park.
The sadder element of their marriage--the fact that they apparently had a
physically impaired son who died soon after birth--is off-limits, and something
that you sense the Artist has again made an effort of will and spirit to come to
terms with. "When you have faith in God, you don't have bad days," he says at
one point. When I ask if I can talk to Mayte, he demurs, saying that she's had
a lot to deal with lately.
The famous eyes are beginning to stray toward the door, so I wind up the
questions. Then the fun begins in front of the camera. The Artist and Mayte
try on clothes, falling about in hysterics at the sight of him in a red-and-
white-leather biker-style Galliano jumpsuit. "You look like Evel Knievel," she
says. "They got some pretty weird clothes back there," he tells me with a camp
roll of his eyes, before getting back onto safer ground by pulling out his own
array of trilbies and fedoras.
Visually they make an interesting couple: he so delicate, she with a strong
dancer's body, womanly curves, and a broad-planed, beautiful face. Physically,
she's relaxed and confident, at ease with herself. Posing together, she and the
Artist throw shapes around like a practiced double act, as though they do this
every day in the mirror--and they probably do.
After three costume changes and a hundred variations of embrace, the Artist
sends the hairdresser out from under the lights to announce that they're about
to call it a night. He takes one more trip across the floor in those Cuban
heels and, without looking at Aaron, holds a finger out toward him for his
pendant. And they're off.
Three weeks later, the Artist throws a private party at Manhattan's Life club to
celebrate Emancipation's sales. It's a cool scene, with black royalty gracing
the small subterranean room, into which a Minneapolis DJ has been imported to
spin the decks. Quincy Jones is here, and Spike Lee. Tony Rich, L.L. Cool J,
and Savion Glover; industry big-wheels Guy Oseary, Dallas Austin, Motown's Andre
Harrell, and Def Jam's Russell Simmons; and a smattering of white rock stars,
such as Billy Corgan, Marilyn Manson, and Joan Osbourne, whose song about God,
"One of Us," is covered on Emancipation. Lenny Kravitz arrives with much ado in
an enormous hat and shades. The Artist, dressed in red, moves through the
crowd, with Aaron in discreet attendance, taking in the jazzed-up, low-key vibe
until 6 A.M.
Everywhere he goes, he is smiling, smiling.
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