Private life and public image
On
October 14 1964, Watts married Shirley Ann Shepherd, whom he had met before the band had its first big hit; they are still together. They had one daughter, Seraphina Watts, born in
1968.
Watts has expressed a
love-hate relationship to touring. In Canada's
Macleans magazine, he told interviewer Brian Johnson that he has had a compulsive habit for decades of actually sketching every new hotel room he occupies – and its furnishings – immediately upon entering it. He stated he keeps every sketch, but still doesn't know why he feels the compulsion to do this.
Watts' personal life has outwardly appeared to be substantially quieter than those of his bandmates and many of his rock and roll colleagues. Although he is often thought to be a reserved and steady influence on the Rolling Stones, he has suffered from a variety of touring life hazards. Published ancedotes from Bill Wyman and Keith Richards have described Watts in the 1970s passing out after being awake for several days from too much good cheer, falling into a full spaghetti dinner. A famous anecdote has him punching a drunken Mick Jagger in a hotel in the mid-1980s. After a full night of partying, Jagger phoned Watts' hotel room early in the morning asking where "his drummer" was. Watts met him down the stairs and punched him, saying "Don't ever call me your drummer again. You're my fucking singer."
Ever faithful to his wife Shirley, Watts consistently refused sexual favors from
groupies on the road and discussed his regular bouts of
insomnia incurred from not sharing his bed with his wife in Robert Greenfield's
STP: A Journey Through America With The Rolling Stones, a document of their
1972 American Tour. When the group held court at the
Playboy Mansion during that tour, Watts famously took advantage of Hugh Hefner's renowned game room rather than frolic with the women. It was not until he finally sought treatment for alcoholism and drug addictions in the late 1980s, which included several years of
heroin and
amphetamine use, that his wife and daughter Seraphina began regularly joining him on Rolling Stones tours.
Since the 1990s, he has admitted to another addiction; this one less damaging. Shopping in high fashion stores has become common for Watts. His personal wardrobe has attracted so much attention, the British newspaper
The Telegraph named him one of the World's Best Dressed. In 2006 Vanity Fair elected Watts into the International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame, joining such alumni as his style icon,
Fred Astaire.
In June 2004, Watts was diagnosed with
throat cancer, and underwent a course of
radiotherapy. The cancer has since gone into remission and he is once again recording and touring with the Stones.