Attend an evening with Andre Agassi
Jer and Bomi Bulsara went to most of Freddie Mercury’s concerts. But not Live
Aid, on July 13, 1985, when their son, quite literally, rocked the world.
“It was such a huge event it would have been too complicated,” Jer recalls.
“So we watched it on television. I was so proud. My husband turned to me and
said, ‘Our boy’s done it.’ ”
It’s hard to square Mercury’s clamorous, strutting stage presence with the
small, immaculately kept house on the outskirts of Nottingham where Jer now
lives. It is called “Fredmira”, combining the names of her two children,
Freddie and Kashmira. With its plumped cushions, chiming carriage clock and
neutral decor, it’s not the kind of place you expect a rock god’s mother to
inhabit.
Yet here he is, her much-loved and missed Freddie, in a series of stills from
his videos, looking matineeidolish handsome. (With her full lips and wide
smile, the diminutive Jer looks a lot like her son.) In the corner there is
a statuette commemorating his accession into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
A painting he did when he was 14 of two horses, one black, the other white,
hangs on the wall.
Mercury’s life was a game of contrasts. He was a cartoonish, mega-showman,
belting out anthems such as Radio Ga Ga and, most famously, Bohemian
Rhapsody. But he was also fiercely private and softly spoken. He had
huge, insane parties (featuring, so one rumour goes, dwarves serving
cocaine) yet if he was in the UK he would visit his mum once a week for his
favourite meal (dhansak) and talk about “normal family things”. He told New
Musical Express in 1974 that he was as “gay as a daffodil” but that
information slipped from public view. He was an old-school celebrity who
wilfully shrouded himself in mystery.
Then on November 23, 1991, Mercury issued this statement: “Following the
enormous conjecture in the press over the last two weeks, I wish to confirm
that I have been tested HIV positive and have Aids. I felt it correct to
keep this information private to date to protect the privacy of those around
me. However, the time has come now for my friends and fans around the world
to know the truth and I hope that everyone will join with my doctors and all
those worldwide in the fight against this terrible disease. My privacy has
always been very special to me and I am famous for my lack of interviews.
Please understand this policy will continue.”
The next day Mercury died of bronchial pneumonia resulting from Aids. He would
have turned 60 on Tuesday and the occasion is being marked by a number of
events: a tribute day in Montreux, where he had a home and where a bronze
statue of him stands, an exhibition of photographs in London, and an ITV
documentary examining his life and his legacy. Like her son, Jer rarely
gives interviews, but she is keen for him “to be remembered and celebrated”.
She grips a tissue throughout our conversation. With her is Roger Cooke,
Kashmira’s husband.
Mercury was born Farrokh Bulsara in Zanzibar. The family lived in a flat
overlooking the sea, “a comfortable life”, Jer, 83, says. As a young boy
Farrokh was very happy and loved music, she says: folk, opera, classical. He
would throw parties. At 8, they sent him to boarding school in India. “I
cried when we left him but he just mingled with the other boys,” Jer
recalls. There he adopted the name Freddie (the boys used to adopt “English”
Christian names) and formed a band, the Hectics.
Her son wasn’t a rebel, Jer insists in her quiet precise way, “but he always
wanted to be a showman”. In 1964 there was a revolution in Zanzibar and the
family came to England, settling in Feltham, West London. “Freddie was so
excited: ‘England’s the place we ought to go, Mum.’ But it was very hard.”
Bomi got a job as a cashier, Jer as an assistant at Marks & Spencer.
Freddie went to art school. “I said, ‘What are you going to do, son?’ and he
said he didn’t know. I remember him filling out application forms for jobs
and saying, ‘I hope I don’t get it.’ ” Watching Elvis Presley on TV, he
vowed: “I’m going to be like him one day.” He hung out on the music scene,
changing his surname to Mercury after his ruling astrological planet.
Queen were formed in the early 1970s. Jer remembers going to their first gig.
“Brian May’s mum and I would ask each other, ‘Are they going to make it?’
That night I thought, ‘Yes’, ” although after her son became famous she
carried on working in M&S for some time.
Did she mind Mercury’s outrageous stage persona? “It’s what a performer has to
do to please the audience,” she says. The parties? The hedonism? “As a
parent you worry but you have to let your child get on with their life.”
Roger suddenly says: “Freddie kept his life in compartments: the job, social
circle, us. He didn’t mix them much.” Jer says: “He always respected his
family and loved us so much.”
Did she know he was gay? Did he come out to her? “No.” She grips the tissue,
wells up, looks down. “That area’s too sensitive,” Roger says, and adds that
Mercury never came out to his family.
But later, more relaxed, Jer says Freddie wouldn’t have minded people finding
out that he was gay, that he didn’t care what people thought of him. But he
cared enough not to say it openly? “At that time. Society was different
then,” says Jer. “Nowadays it’s all so open isn’t it?” Jer thinks that had
he been alive today, Mercury, too, would have become more open.
Roger thinks that Mercury may have worried that coming out would affect record
sales, though he was naturally private. “His attitude was ‘My life is my
business.’ The distinction was that he was private, not shy.”
“He didn’t want to upset us,” Jer says. “I don’t think it was aimed at the
family,” Roger says. “He liked to have people in different sets.”
“When he came home he was just ‘Freddie’,” Jer says. He was down to earth,
Roger adds. “When I think of Freddie I think of that Eagles song, Life’s
Been Good: ‘It's tough to handle/This fortune and fame/ Everybody’s so
different/ I haven’t changed.’ ”
What about his illness? In his book Mercury and Me, Jim Hutton,
Mercury’s partner for the last six years of his life, says that Mercury
tested positive in 1987. Jer, again visibly very upset, looks into nowhere.
Roger says: “He didn’t tell anybody in the family. We gradually became aware
he had an illness but we had no idea what it was or how serious it was. Then
in August 1990 Kash and I saw a mark on his foot. It was Kaposi’s sarcoma (a
malignant tumour of the connective tissue often associated with Aids).
“Kash asked what it was, whether it was getting better. Freddie said: ‘You
have to understand that what I have is terminal. I’m going to die.’ That was
it. He didn’t say it was Aids. It didn’t register immediately. We were
driving home and I put a cassette on, and of all the things it was him
singing Who Wants to Live Forever? That suddenly brought home the
significance of what he had said.”
How would he have felt about the criticism that he could have done more good
had he come out and been open about his Aids diagnosis? “He would have
thought, ‘F*** ’em, it’s none of their business,” says Roger. “It was only
Jim Beach, his manager, who convinced him to release that statement.” Jer
says quietly: “He wanted the world and his fans to know the truth.”
Mercury once told his mother that he might retire and paint. “We just laughed
and told him we wouldn’t let him. We thought he would go on for ever.” The
last time Roger saw him he spoke about “normal things, certainly not the
illness”. He stared into the water of the pond of his Japanese garden. Jer
says quietly the last time she saw her son was “very emotional, very hard.
He asked, ‘Are you all right? Did any of the media worry you?’ We said:
‘Don’t worry about us dear’. He was so ill and still he was being so
caring.”
There were many tabloid stories after his death, including the charge he had
hidden his Indian background. “But Freddie wasn’t Indian,” says Roger.
“He was Parsee. The Parsees settled in India and were gradually absorbed
into its culture in much the same way as Jews were absorbed into other
cultures and countries. In fact, the Parsees were known as the Jews of
India.” But he never spoke about it? “For Freddie the past was the past. He
only wanted to talk about the future,” says Roger.
Mercury’s songs come on the radio which is “sometimes emotional” for Jer. Her
favourite is Somebody to Love. Hearing his soft spoken voice is
harder as it’s more “him”. Bomi died three years ago, which “left a big
hole”, but Jer keeps busy and has grown used to being recognised in the
street and supermarket. The other day one man said to her: “It’s good to see
you looking so well.”
She has gone through what every parent shouldn’t — outliving their own child —
and she remains as immensely protective of him as he was of her. One thing
that keeps her going, she says, are the letters she gets from people
(addressed to “Freddie Mercury’s mother, Nottingham”) saying what his songs
have meant to them. Had he been alive now, she thinks he would have composed
rock operas. In an interview he once said that he wanted to go to Hell,
rather than Heaven: “Think of the interesting people you’re going to meet
down there.”
Jer is still gripping the tissue as I leave, but she is far from tragic or
bereft. She laughs merrily as we imagine how Mercury would have celebrated
his 60th (probably debauchedly). It’s a long way from Zanzibar to Nottingham
but, like her late, life-loving son, Jer Bulsara has relished the incredible
journey.
“I’m completely panto compared with his voice and him as an entertainer. His voice was like a machinegun. It hit everything perfectly” Robbie Williams
“He had theatricality, he was larger than life, new, fresh, cool. This is a god that walks as man” Mike Myers
“The difference between Freddie and almost all the other rock stars was he was selling the voice” Montserrat Caballé
“Freddie, if you’re out there and you want to choose any artist to channel your work, please give me an album, or at least a middle eight” Robbie Williams
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