lebold had sent him the phd, written in french, and was surprised when cohen responded favourably to it. they then began emailing one another for a few years, which gradually developed into a friendship. this led to their meeting in l.a., and cohen allowing lebold to immerse himself in the singer/poet’s archives.
leonard cohen visits paris in 2012. he was a superstar in france, notes cohen expert christophe lebold.
joel saget
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afp/getty images
lebold tells inquiring student laura jined that in one email cohen told him they would have a drink together.
“i was so shocked that he answered me at all, but that drink together did happen — only eight years later,” lebold recalls.
student addison quinn asks lebold what kind of person cohen was.
“he was among the nicest people i ever met, and this was after he came back from a five-year tour and having played over 300 concerts around the world,” lebold answers. “he was such a lovely man: humble, gracious, intelligent, sharp-witted — a really beautiful person. he seemed as interested in me as i was in him.
“he became a writer because he didn’t have a choice. when he was nine, his father died and he wrote a poem for him. he put that poem in one of his father’s bow ties and buried it in the garden. he later said that he had spent the rest of his life digging up the garden to find that poem again. and so he became a poet. in his case, writing was his way to fight demons. but he was really a literary alchemist turning his depression into joy and light.”