I was amazed when I first saw Grace Jones She was the first to take radical fashion out of its Predictable Parisian context And bring it into the music scene Where I had always thought it had belonged The first night watching her at Le Mush I already had decided to work with her That night she was singing her hit song 'I need a man' To a roomful of shrieking gay Bobby [Incomprehensible] The ambiguity of her act was that she herself looked like a man A man singing 'I need a man', to a bunch of men I could see how the average guy Could get a little scared by her physical appearance It was so powerful, though she was, I think she was great I photographed her in different positions, I cut her legs apart Lengthened, turned her body to the audience Soon I found myself living to the very fast rhythm of Grace Jones We would go out dancing all night, every night I was completely neglect my work And intense hysterical romance developed between Grace and me Then I ran out of money and realized I had to stop all this bullshit And get back to work I had this idea of using grace as the idea of a vehicle for my work She had inspired me On tour, we used to improvise thinking of an idea at breakfast And working it out directly on stage I decided deliberately to mythologize Grace Jones Black shiny muscular people, aah, aerodynamic in design 'Twas to emphasize this belief that I painted Grace Jones blue, black I am no longer sure what I fell in love with Grace or how my idea of Grace should be For the two years following the birth of our son There was nothin' else in my life Grace let me take her over completely (Slave) But then I discovered that what I was making Was speeding too far beyond what was there By the time our one man show reached to the U.S I knew I'd lost her