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Yellow Submarine Premiere

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Today marks the 45th anniversary of the premiere of the Yellow Submarine.  Here is the story of how David Stark was able to meet the Beatles at the premiere.   This story was published in a 1988 issue of Beatle Book Monthly. 




Yellow Submarine Premiere
Richard Buskin talks to a Beatles fan who managed to sneak into the exclusive premiere!

In 1968, David Stark was a fifteen year old schoolboy, who like countless other Beatles fans the world over was prepared to go to almost any lengths in order to meet up with his idols.  During the next few years he achieved this aim on several occasions, but the first and possibly the most daring of his encounters occurred on Wednesday, July 17, 1968, the day of the “Yellow Submarine” world premiere in London.

After arriving in Piccadilly Circus with a school chum in mid-afternoon, and spending several hours watching the gathering crowds from the roof of the cinema (thanks to an open door at the side and a conveniently placed elevator), the two lad managed to enter the theatre’s “dress circle” only to be stopped by an usher who demanded to see their tickets.

“I told him that we’d left our tickets when we came in downstairs,” recalls David, “and when the manager arrived and asked us why were there in the first place I replied that we had been sent tickets by our ‘good friend’ Clive Epstein, whom I had in fact met while on holiday a few years earlier.  Well, the manager wasn’t too convinced with that explanation and took us to the bar to find Clive – gulp! - but he was more impressed when I spotted Dick James and asked him if I had seen Clive.  He told me that he had been held up in Liverpool, at which point the manager said, “Okay, I can see you know people here.  You can stay, but next time hold on to your tickets!”  Unbelievable luck!
Even more incredibly lucky was David’s choice of seats – immediately behind the Fab four and their friends!

“We just stood around as everyone came in,” he recalls.  “I remember seeing Status Quo, Grapefruit and some members of The Who.  And then all of the sudden camera flashguns started going off everywhere, and the whole place buzzed as the Beatles arrived with their entourage.  They went down to the front row of the “dress circle,” closely followed by the photographers, and as the photographers left I noticed two empty seats behind Paul!

“At this point I was really sweating it out, especially when I looked to my right and saw that Iw as sitting next to Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones!  I thought we were going to be thrown out of any moment.  Eventually I plucked up the courage to ask him if it was okay to sit there, and he said it was, as the seats were reserved for Mick Jagger and Marianne Faithfull, but they were still in the States!  John Lennon then turned around and asked Keith Richards something like, “So who are you friends?,” and Keith said, “Oh sorry, haven’t I already introduced you to Mick and Marianne?”
A better opportunity to speak to John, Paul, George and Ringo came after the feature-length cartoon finished and received its ovation from the audience.  The Beatles stayed in the foyer, waiting for the pandemonium outside to subside a little and for their cars to arrive, and David took full advantage of the situation to talk to both John and George.

“Everyone was really up,” he recalls.  “They were obviously pleased with what they had seen on the screen.  John, with Yoko at his side, was telling me about the new Apple offices that had just moved into in Savile Row, and when I asked him if the Beatles were recording any new songs he said he’d been working on one that was constructed around a children’s nursery rhyme.  I worked out later that he must have been talking about “Cry Baby Cry”.  George, meanwhile, in his yellow suit and hat, told me he hoped his soundtrack album for the “Wonderwall” film would be released sometime later in the year.

“Apart from meeting the Beatles, the most vivid memory I have of that night was the incredible sight of thousands and thousands of people outside the cinema, all struggling to get a glimpse of their idols and chanting the chorus to ‘Yellow Submarine’.  Incredible!”
David did not attend the party held afterwards at the Royal Lancaster Hotel after all, he had not been invited!  But at least he had seized what was probably the last ever opportunity to experience Beatlemania at first-hand.

Butterfly Collar

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Lovely photo of Paul from the New Orleans recording sessions of 1975.   Even in his 1970's garb, he is looking good!

Tourists

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John and Sean look like your average British tourists in Hong Kong posing for a photo.  But it appears like someone has noticed them.  "Is that???  No...it can't be!" 

Best wishes

Walking Ringo

Sara's Beatles Pilgrimage Tour: Part 1 Liverpool

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My Beatles pilgrimage tour
Part 1:  Liverpool, England

If you have been a visitor here for a while, you might remember that my mom and I went on a Beatles trip to Liverpool and London in 2010.   I planned the trip out myself and I did a pretty good job of finding great Beatles things to see and do.  However, when I returned from my trip I realized that there was so much more that I missed out on.    I decided that someday I would go back and take a more individualized tour.   

About a year ago I was looking at the secrets posted on one of my favorite sights, postsecret.com.    The secret said something like “I wish I had taken another trip to Europe with my mom.”     That really got me thinking about going back to England.    I wanted to go back with my mom for another Beatles tour,  and not trying to be mean, but my mom is currently in her early 60’s and in good health.   However, I do not know how much longer that will be the case.      I really did not want to be that person that had the regret of never going back to England after my mom passes away.    It isn’t really a pleasant thing to think about, but it is a reality of life.   We all get older and can’t do the things we used to do.     So I started to look into a more individualized Beatles tour of Liverpool, London and Hamburg.    I hadn’t planned on going back in just three years, but what the heck!   Why not!

I looked at a lot of tours online.   There are several Beatle tours available to book from.   I went with the Beatlespilgrimage tour.   Let me honestly tell you that I feel like if you are a die-hard Beatles fan like me, then theBeatles pilgrimage tour is the way to go.    You work with a fellow fan named Tony who sets you up with everything you need for the tour.   He does all of the little detailed work and all you have to do is enjoy your trip.    You could book all of the things yourself, but as I found out in 2010, it is more difficult than it sounds and you end up missing things.   When you go with the Beatles Pilgrimagetour, you get the best Beatles tour guides plus you get the things like train tickets and such all set for you.   I am not trying to do a commercial for this company, but I really can’t recommend them enough.    I would recommend going on one of the group tours because it is fun to meet fellow Beatle fans and travel around with them.    If you do book a tour and are asked,  let Tony know that you read about it on Meet the Beatles for Real.   (But seriously this is a travel report and not a commercial, so on with the trip!)

Liverpool, England
Day 1:
We flew over night and landed in Manchester, England.    From Manchester we had to get on a train that took us to Lime Street Station in Liverpool.     From there we got in a taxi that took us to the Hard Day’s Night Hotel.    Since it was still morning there (I never did get use to the time difference), our room was not ready.     So my mom and I took the time to explore a little bit of Liverpool.   Having been there three years ago, we remembered the basics and took a walk down Mathew Street and the Beatles shops and down to Albert Dock (or as my mom calls it ‘Uncle Albert Dock’) to have a look around.   We were told that our room was going to be available at noon.   When we got back, our room was not ready and we were told to come back at two.    So back out we went.  We had asked the hotel where the ugly Beatles statue of the four guys standing in a circle was located, and they had no clue what we were talking about.   They said there was not a statue of the four Beatles in Liverpool.   Low and behold I located it inside #8 Mathew Street.  They made me feel like a fool, but I knew what I was talking about.   We had fish and chips at a local café and walked around some more.    By 2:00, we had been awake for 24 hours and were tired of walking around and just wanted to get into our rooms and freshen up.    We saw other people getting room keys.   But low and behold, our room was not ready.     I have to give the Hard Day’s Night props for giving us free drinks while we waited for another 45 minutes, but still I was a bit peeved.      Plus the hotel still smelled funny from that fire they had in February and it was making me feel sick to my stomach.

Yes this ugly Beatles statue really does exist. 


After we got all of that settled, we got a second wind and we were ready to meet our tour guide, Jackie.   Jackie Spencer is the best tour guide in Liverpool.    Even if you don’t go through the Beatles Pilgrimage Tour, you have to go on Jackie’s tour!    What I liked about her is that she wasn’t just a tour guide, she was a true Beatles fan (George is her favorite).    When she was telling us things around Liverpool, she had such passion and love for the Beatles.    And the more time we spent with her, I began to feel like she was a friend and not just a hired tour guide.     I know that was her job, but I also felt like she loved the opportunity of meeting Beatle fans from around the world and showing them her hometown.   

Jackie took us on a brief walking tour of Liverpool.  It was Saturday night and Liverpool was CRAZY!   Come to find out, guys and gals who are having bachelor and bachelorette (or stag and hen) parties like to come to Liverpool dressed in crazy costumes and they party hard!    Mathew Street was full blown insanity with people dressed as everything from nuns to Where’s Waldo.   So we sort of avoided that part of town and did some more quite Beatles sights. 

Highlights of this walking tour were seeing the maternity hospital where John Lennon was born,  going into the Philharmonic and having a drink and then getting to see the men’s loo, and most of all having a drink at the Ye Cracke in the War Room.     The only disappointment was that the Jacaranda is no longer open.   It is left abandoned with Beatles photos still up on the wall (I know from looking in the window).   I really hope someone opens it back up soon.   That mural that Stu painted is hidden away in there.  What a shame!

The plaque at the Ye Cracke


Day 2:
On this day we were basically on our own.   The first thing we did was tour John’s home at Mendips.  Even though I had done this tour once before, I was still amazed at being inside of John’s childhood home.   It was emotionally packed for me to stand in his bedroom and look out the window.     Then we went onto Paul’s childhood home on Forthlin Avenue.    The new custodian was much better than the previous one I had (the one that was drinking on the job and told me outright lies).    One of the best parts of that tour for me was hearing Paul’s personal message to the visitors.   It was neat to hear Paul’s voice while in the house.

Your emotional but happy MTBFR blogger, Sara leaving Mendips


Next was time to explore the museums and things at the Albert Dock.   Our first stop was the Beatles Story Exhibit.   I did without the headphones this time, which baffled the workers there.   While the exhibit is meant for those who only have a basic knowledge of Beatles information, I still find it very worthwhile if not just to see the actual guitars and clothing.   I think the recreations of places like the Cavern club are a bit silly since the real deal is just down the road.      The Elvis and Me exhibit is a bit boring for me since I am not much of an Elvis fan.    There are a lot of Elvis artifacts, but not a whole lot of Beatles things.    They try to show how the Beatles and Elvis are tied together, but I thought it was a bit of a stretch with how they were really pushing the 1965 meeting.     There is a side exhibit of “hidden photos” that was very nice and well worth seeing.   

Hi everyone!   I am just here at the Beatles Story with the Fab 4.


Next we went into the Liverpool Museum.   This is a free museum and seems to be very big and have a lot of things in it.   However, we didn’t have time to dilly dally around looking at the history of Liverpool.   So we went straight up to the music section and found the Beatles part.   They had there the “All you need is love” Yellow Submarine quilt that John and Yoko used during the Bed-in.   I was planning on writing a blog entry about this very quilt (still am) and so to see it in person was awesome!    After the museum, we took the “Ferry Across the Mersey” and yes they did play the Gerry and the Pacemakers song.

Then we went back to Mathew Street and went into the Grapes.   We had a drink at the booth where the Beatles sat and then I sang karaoke .  I thought I was pretty cool stuff singing at the pub where the Beatles hung out.   The last stop for the night was the Cavern Club where we heard the Mersey-Beatles perform.   They were awesome!

The Mersey-Beatles perform at the Cavern.  After a few drinks they start to look like the real thing! (They sounded great!)


Day 3:
This last day in Liverpool was also our most action packed.   We went with our tour guide, Jackie in a van (driven by a great guy named Phil) where she would tell us about the sights and then we would stop and get out for photos and a look around.   Some of the places we went were:   The Casbah club (where Roag gave us a tour…I love him!),  Penny Lane, Strawberry Fields, Arnold Grove,  The Clubmoor Club,  Stu’s grave, St. Peter’s church,  and lastly we went into the Dingle and into Ringo’s childhood home where we were met by the wonderful woman that currently lives there, Margaret.     She had cupcakes and Coke for us to celebrate Ringo’s birthday.   She was such a sweet woman.   She lived a few houses down when Ringo was a teenager and knew Ringo.    She doesn’t allow all of the tour groups inside of her home, but allows Jackie’s tour in for Ringo’s birthday celebration every year.    She would not accept any money, but was taking up a collection for the Linda McCartney breast cancer charity.     Going into Ringo’s home and meeting Margaret was truly one of the highlights of Liverpool.

Just me acting like I in the band at the Clubmoor Club


My mom and I in the Spider Room of the Casbah with Roag Best.   



  
This was in a a Beatles park in Penny Lane.  



Margaret standing outside her home, 10 Admiral Grove, where Ringo lived from 1945-1963
I hope I didn’t bore you all too much because the trip into London and Hamburg reports are soon to follow.

A little rant

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The comment under my travel report has upset me.    I expect more from Beatle fans than to make fun of others.   It takes a lot of courage to put yourself online.   I have never hid who I really am or what I really look like.   I could easily hide behind my computer screen, but I have made a decision not to do that.

I know that I am overly sensitive the way it is.   I do not understand why an anonymous comment from someone has me in tears.  

I just want to say one thing to the world of online people.   Those who run these blogs are real people who have real lives and real feelings.   Before you put something out there for comments on youtube or a blog or facebook think about what you are saying.  Think about how it might make someone else feel.   Is it better to just keep your comments to yourself?   

I am not a big Yoko fan, but she said something recently about how there is no room in life for negativity.   That is just a really true statement.  What good do you get out of saying mean things? 

Now as for me, I am going to go enjoy my weekend with people in my life who like me just the way I am.

Meeting Paul and then Ringo

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This girl is so cute meeting Paul and Ringo!   This photo was taken at the press conference in Boston during the 1964 tour.

Funky style

This sign is so true!

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"I'd hate 2 have grown up in a world without Beatles..."

Yep...I can relate to this sign!   The Beatles have been part of my world basically my whole life.  Thank goodness no one these days has to grow up without them!

Vience

Flowers for Ritchie

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I would just die if this ever happened to me.   Look how close this fan is to Ringo!  

Beatles Pilgrimage tour: Part 2 London

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My Beatles Pilgrimage tour Part 2 – London

From July 9-12, 2013, my mom and I were in London as part of the Beatles Pilgrimage Tour.    There is so much to see and do in London!  There is a lot of great Beatles things as well as non-Beatles things.   I really like London.   I think it is the easiest “big city” to travel around in and the people just seem really nice.  

Day 4:  London
The majority of this day was spent traveling by train from Liverpool to London.   It is a pretty easy 2 hour train ride.   The Virgin Trains are similar to the Amtrack Trains here in the United States, but this one make less stops than the Amtrack does.  

We arrived at Euston (rhymes with Houston) Station and walked to our hotel, The Premiere Inn.   Our tour group got check into their rooms except for (no surprise here) our room was not ready.  Seriously!   This is just how it goes for us.     We got to check into the room about 45 minutes later.   The room was pretty nice.   It was a big upgrade from the hotel we stayed at in London in 2010!    We found it strange that there was a big bed and then one small bed.   But whatever….we just go with the flow.

We met our tour hostess, Lucy.   Lucy is a great guide!   She is a fan just like you or I.   She had just seen Paul in concert two weeks earlier and had a lot to share about that.   I am just so glad that I met Lucy.  I think we will be Beatle pals for a long time.     She took us over to the British Library (it was near the hotel) where they have a section of Beatles handwritten lyrics (recently some were donated by Hunter Davies).   You can’t take photos in there, so I don’t have any to share.  But it was very neat.   John wrote the lyrics out to “A Hard Day’s Night” on a birthday card Julian had laying around.    

Then we traveled to Buckingham Palace and saw the insanity about the baby-to-be that was going on around there.   News trucks just camp out there all day and all night just in case the baby comes.   We walked around Hyde Park and Green Park.     Then we had dinner at the Hard Rock Café in London and took a tour of the vault.    The London Hard Rock Café has Stu’s original bass guitar.    They also have one of John’s army jackets.   What was missing that I saw last time was the shirt John wore at the Troubadour Club.    I looked online and noticed that it is now part of a traveling exhibit that the Hard Rock is doing.   I wonder if they learned what shirt it was from this blog?

Mom and I outside of Buckingham Palace

Stu's bass guitar


Day 5:  Henely-on Thames
We traveled by train to the town that George Harrison and the Harrison family called home, Henely-on-Thames.   Henley is a very quaint little river town.    I can see why George liked Henley so much.   I can honestly say that I enjoyed my time there. 
We went to Friar Park, which was a highlight of the trip to me.     I have typed out countless stories for this blog of fans who met George at the gates of Friar Park.   What I had in my mind while typing those stories is not what the place actually looked like.   It is so neat to see that you were wrong about what you pictured in your head.     The front gates are actually right by the road.  I thought they were set back a ways and there was a road that lead up to them, but nope…they are right there off a main road.    Of course you aren’t allowed to go any farther than the front gates and you can’t even see the main house from the gates (I thought maybe you could), but it still was just so neat to be standing outside of George’s home!   
We had lunch at George’s favorite Henley pub, the Row Barge.   The Row Barge is a great little pub!   The people in there were so friendly and kind to us.   The food was good and the atmosphere was great.    They said that Dhani had been in there just the previous night and they were expecting him that very night!    They only had good things to say about George.   If you ever find yourself in Henely, the Row Barge is a must!
We walked to the church and saw Dusty Springfield’s grave and then down by the river and had ice creams.  
The evening was free to do whatever you’d like in London.    My mom and (with Lucy’s help) went to see Jersey Boys at the theater.    Since I am a big theater geek, I wanted to experience the theater in London.  It was different than in the States and was a great experience.

the gates of Friar Park


Day 6:  London –Beatles driving tour
On this day we drove all around London and surrounding areas and saw a lot of Beatles sights.    We saw many of the places that were used in the movies, A Hard Day’s night and Help! (Marylebone Station,  the Turk’s Head, the pub where the Beatles jumped out the windows in Help, the river where Ringo walked etc etc etc).   We went to Abbey Road (always exciting!) and saw so many houses that I can’t even remember them all.   I know we saw the flat Ringo owned and let John and Yoko live there, Brian’s home on Chapel Street,  the apartment the Beatles shared on Green Street, The Asher’s house, Cavendish Avenue…and more.  
My favorite part of the day (and possible the whole trip) was going to Chiswick and seeing where the guys recorded “Paperback Writer” and “Rain.”    The tree was still there and so were all of the statues that you see in the film.      It has changed at all.    Pretty amazing!


Brian's Chapel Street House

The tree where the Beatles sat for the Rain promo

Day 7:  London – Beatles Walking tour
In the morning we completed our tour with a walking tour to see the sights that were easier to see on foot.     Most of the things I saw on the walking tour were repeats for me.      We saw the Bag o’ Nails (where Paul and Linda met), the Apple rooftop (the front had scaffolding over it), the Palladium, Paul’s MPL offices, the loo from “Not only but also” and several clubs.   
Then we stopped by the Beatles store to shop and I bought several books and things that I have never seen in the United States.     Our next stop was Notting Hill for a little shopping and onto the Sticky Fingers restaurant for our last dinner.   

I am ready to barge into the MPL office!

Overall we had a great trip to London!    But I still have Hamburg to report about. 

Apple in 1970

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Posting about my trip to London reminded me of some photos I had gotten permission to share before I left on my trip from someone else who also went on a trip to London.   Only this person's trip was in August 1970 and he was able to photograph 3 Savile Row during the time when the Beatles were still in the building and Apple company that worked out of that location.   I think the Apple flag is just awesome.   I bet it would go for a lot of money at an auction these days.  

All of these photos from from "twanger13" and are posted with permission.







John Rolls!  Was John around there somewhere?

Chatting up the birds


The uh-oh years

Ryder

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Much thanks goes to Kevin at WGYTTN blog for sending this one my way.   It is a gorgeous photo of John!  

Now where do we think this is taken?  My  best guess is on the way to a radio interview in 1975.  


Wigged Out

Wooo Seattle!!!

Immigration stampede

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another one that I have to thank Kevin at WGYTTN blog!  
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