Simone left the
United States in
September 1970. The continuous performances and decline of the Civil Rights movement had exhausted her. She flew to
Barbados, expecting her husband and manager, Andrew Stroud, to contact her when she had to perform again. However, Stroud interpreted Simone's sudden disappearance (and the fact that she left behind her wedding ring) as a cue for a divorce. As her manager, Stroud was also in charge of Simone's income. This meant that after their separation Simone had no knowledge about how her business was run, and what she was actually worth. Upon returning to the United States she also learned that there were serious problems with the tax authorities, causing her to go back to Barbados again. Simone stayed in Barbados for quite some time, and had a lengthy affair with the Prime Minister,
Errol Barrow. A close friend, singer
Miriam Makeba, convinced her to come to
Liberia. After that she lived in
Switzerland and the
Netherlands, before settling in
France in 1992. Simone's divorce from her husband and manager can be seen as the end of her most successful years in the American music business, and the beginning of her (partially self-imposed) exile and estrangement from the world for the next two decades.
After her last album for
RCA Records, It Is Finished (1974), it was not until 1978 that Simone was convinced by
CTI Records owner
Creed Taylor to record another album,
Baltimore. While not a commercial success, the album did get good reviews and marked a quiet artistic renaissance in Simone's recording output. Her voice had not lost its power over the years, but developed an additional warmth and a vivacious maturity. Her choice of material retained its
eclecticism, ranging from spiritual songs to
Hall & Oates' "Rich Girl". Four years later Simone recorded
Fodder On My Wings on a French label. It is one of her most personal albums, with nearly all of the (
autobiographical) songs written by herself. In the 1980s Simone performed regularly at
Ronnie Scott's jazz club in London, where the album
Live At Ronnie Scott's was recorded in 1984. Though her on-stage style could be somewhat haughty and aloof, in later years, Simone particularly seemed to enjoy engaging her audiences by recounting sometimes humorous anecdotes related to her career and music and soliciting requests. Her
autobiography, I Put a Spell on You, was published in 1992 and she recorded her last album,
A Single Woman in 1993.
In 1993 Simone settled near
Aix-en-Provence in
Southern France. She had been ill with
breast cancer for several years before she died in her sleep at her home in
Carry-le-Rouet, Bouches-du-Rhône on
April 21 2003, aged 70. Her funeral service was attended by singers
Miriam Makeba and
Patti Labelle, poet
Sonia Sanchez, actor
Ossie Davis and hundreds of others.
Elton John sent a floral tribute with the message "We were the greatest and I love you". Simone's ashes were scattered in several
African countries. She left behind a daughter Lisa Celeste, now an actress/singer who took on the stagename
Simone and has appeared on
Broadway in
Aida.