Theoretical and experimental results are presented that help explain the nature of the unsteady aerodynamic interactions between a rotor/body combination in forward flight. Experimental measurements of the time-dependent body pressures are compared with predictions made by two analytical models of the body, rotor, and its wake system. The first model is an elementary representation using a lifting line model of the rotor, a vortex ring wake, and a planar surface model for the body. The second model consists of a more sophisticated unsteady source panel representation for the body, a lifting line analysis for the rotor, and a prescribed wake system. Appropriate unsteady terms are included in both analyses. The results show that the unsteady pressure loads on a large part of the body are dominated by the pressure field induced by the rotating blades. These loads are well predicted using either model. Additional unsteady effects on the body are due to either close passage or direct impingement of the rotor wake vortices. It is shown that if the rotor wake geometry is accurately modelled, then the unsteady pressure signatures can be readily predicted in all locations except where the wake impinges directly on the body. In such cases, viscous interactions appear to play a strong role in the process and as such are not easily predicted with potential flow models.