She made him a star. He married someone else in secret. And when she found out, it shattered her—but never stopped her. In 1961, Joan Baez was already the Queen of Folk—a global phenomenon with an ethereal soprano voice and sold-out concerts. Bob Dylan was a scruffy 20-year-old nobody playing basement clubs in Greenwich Village. She saw him perform and was stunned. "I never thought anything so powerful could come out of that little toad," she later admitted. But she recognized genius when she heard it. So she did something extraordinary: she shared her spotlight. She brought him on stage at her biggest shows, including the legendary 1963 Newport Folk Festival. She introduced him to her massive audience. She turned a club act into a household name. And somewhere along the way, they fell in love. For a few shining years, they were folk music royalty. Their voices blended perfectly. Dylan himself said he "always loved singing and playing with her." Their duets felt like magic. But fame has a way of changing people. By 1965, Dylan's star had exploded. He'd gone electric, moved beyond protest songs, and was becoming one of the most influential artists of the generation. The quiet folk scene they'd shared was suddenly overrun by chaos, entourages, and screaming fans. Baez felt herself disappearing. During the 1965 UK tour—captured in the documentary "Don't Look Back"—she watched him pull away. Despite traveling with him, she wasn't invited to perform. She felt ignored. Treated "like baggage." "It happened so fast, and it was so huge," she said, "that I kind of got lost in the shuffle." Their goals had diverged. Baez was committed to activism, to using her platform for peace and justice. Dylan was committed only to his art, increasingly refusing the "protest singer" label she'd hoped he'd embrace. And then came the final blow. In November 1965, Dylan married