MARIANNE   
BY  DAVID  BLUE 
 
 
  
 
 
It is interesting that singer/songwriter David Blue (1941-1982) stole, at least temporarily, Marianne from Cohen and wrote a song Marianne about her with references to, among other things, to Cohen and his song So Long, Marianne (1968):
 
         
   
I loved Marianne in the winter  
In the loft of her favorite lover  
She was growing older  
The winter nights were cold  
She told me I'm frightened  
I said yes I know    
Her eyes held me to her  
They burned with such a fire  
For the saints on the walls  
Holy candles in the halls  
For those who had left her  
I held her and cried    
Oh Marianne you are beautiful  
To be this friend  
To a stranger who  
Leaves you only to fall  
Do not cry you have helped me  
I will not say goodbye    
I knew her from another song  
Her older poet wrote before  
We played it in the morning laughing on the floor  
Till he came knocking on the lower East Side door    
Yes you know I miss her  
Her and her stories of the night  
I called her a rabbit  
She gave me back my life  
I haven't heard her voice since the Isle of Wight    
Oh Marianne you are beautiful  
To be this friend  
To a stranger who  
Leaves you only to fall  
Do not cry you have helped me  
I will not say goodbye  
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Marianne by David Blue (S. David Cohen) on his album Stories (Asylum 1972; CD reissue Line/Linea LECD 9.01059 O, Germany, 1991, 8 tracks, TT 36:07; lyrics from CD booklet). (Thanks to  Rudi Schmid)
 
David Blue once appeared in a Canadian play which ran in Montreal at the Centaur Theater in the late-70s. The play was based on Leonard Cohen's writings: poetry, novels, songs.
As I recall (it's been at least 16-18 years since I saw the play), David Blue did spend most, if not all, of the play sitting in the tree singing Cohen songs and quoting excerpts from other writings while actors played out the scenes on the stage below.
It was a fairly interesting production for those of us who were familiar with Cohen's work to that date.  However, it pretty much bombed with the Centaur Theater's subscription audience which filled 75 or 80% of the seats. (Thanks to Mike Regenstreif) 
  
David Blue website.
  
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