Gail Collins Pappalardi

Songwriter

Birthday February 2, 1941

Birth Sign Aquarius

DEATH DATE 2013-12-6, Ajijic, Jalisco, Mexico (72 years old)

#59402 Most Popular

1941

Gail Delta Collins (February 2, 1941 – December 6, 2013) was an American songwriter, record producer and visual artist.

1969

Collins married Felix Pappalardi on May 30, 1969.

She came to prominence (as 'Miss Gail Collins') co-producing, with Pappalardi, the self-titled debut album by Energy, a group featuring Corky Laing.

1976

She also co-produced, with Pappalardi, the Felix Pappalardi and Creation album in 1976.

Collins co-wrote Cream's "World of Pain" with her husband and "Strange Brew" with Pappalardi and Eric Clapton.

Both songs are included on the album Disraeli Gears.

She contributed lyrics to many Mountain songs.

Her artwork appears on many album covers by Mountain, including Climbing!, Nantucket Sleighride, Flowers of Evil, Mountain Live: The Road Goes Ever On, Twin Peaks and Avalanche.

1978

She was associate producer on the 1978 album by Hot Tuna, Double Dose.

1983

On April 17, 1983, Felix Pappalardi was shot once in the neck in the fifth-floor New York City apartment he shared with Collins Pappalardi.

He was pronounced dead at the scene, and Collins Pappalardi was charged with second-degree murder.

Collins Pappalardi claimed that the killing was an accident.

During the trial, it was revealed that the couple had an open marriage and that Collins Pappalardi had shot her husband after he had returned in the early morning from seeing his girlfriend.

She was acquitted of second-degree murder and manslaughter but found guilty of criminally negligent homicide and sentenced to 16 months to 4 years in prison.

1985

On April 30, 1985, she was released on parole.

2013

On December 6, 2013, Collins was found dead by her landlord in the Mexican village of Ajijic, Jalisco, a resort town with many American expatriate residents.

She had been undergoing cancer treatments there.

She was cremated.

Her three cats were euthanized after her death and cremated so that their ashes could be mixed with hers.