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Here come the fans!

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As we read in the newspaper reports, the fans who were trying to see the Beatles did $5,000 worth of damage to the property where the Beatles were staying and the surrounding houses.    Fans tried to get in but they were not fortunate enough to make it....


members of the fan club with their Hollywood Bowel tickets in hand...are off to locate the Beatles!

open to Residents only???  Sure officer---we all live here!   


Leaving the press conference

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So I forgot to post these photos yesterday.  I knew I was forgetting something that I have saved, but since I am grouping all of the Los Angles photos over two days, I might as well share these.   They really show how crazy it was when they were leaving the Cinnamon Cinder.  No wonder the rest of the press conferences in L.A. were at the Capitol Records Tower!




The Beatles Wild Night in Hollywood

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This story from Modern Scene magazine goes for the "bad boy" angle on the Beatles.  And I think it works pretty well.    A few things about this article.   First of all it is obviously not the total truth.  They try to make it sound like Paul is at the Whiskey a Go Go (and they don't do a good job of it), but we all know that he was with Peggy Lipton.   We have read now two accounts of a party that the boys held for young girls at the rented house where John Lennon breaks a camera.  I have no read about this party in any books, just these magazine articles, but I seem to think there must be some truth to the story. 


The Beatles Wild Night in Hollywood
By Ann Water for Modern Screen Magazine

John Lennon broke free from his dark corner of the room and plunged toward a pretty girl who had just snapped a picture.  Grabbing the camera, his face livid with rage, John broke it then ripped out the film furiously and exposed it.   Panting, john glared at the 16 year old, who looked downright dazed then went back to what he’d been doing.

In another corner of the room, Ringo, looking slightly sleepy, danced a slow, close shuffle with a cute little blonde.  George was offering some refreshments to his date, while Paul had his arm protectively around a raven-haired beauty.   From the phonograph came not Beatles music, surprisingly enough, but a sexy, blues beat.
The party was taking place in the Beatles private house at 356 St. Pierre, Bel-Air.  That house, surrounded by the Beatles intricate and incredible police force (run by an ex-head of Scotland Yard) has high walls, only one entrance and exit door, and was supposedly the same place Elvis Presley used to stay in at a rental of $4,000 a month.

The same night another sizzling event took place.  One girl, who claimed she wasn't high, hopped up the ladder to the diving board, then plunged, fully clothed, into the pool.   A Beatle dived into the pool to save her, and she was later reported to have said, “I only did it so that I could feel a Beatle wrap a towel around me!”
The party was really wild, didn't end until six in the morning, and the girls out-numbered the boys 4 to 1.  What’s more, the ages of the girls ranged from only 14-17, which raised not a few eyebrows around the Hollywood scene.

As the party progressed far into the night, the boys certainly seemed to be in high spirits.  As a joke, one of the Beatles took the floor and did a none too flattering imitation of their manager, who wasn't present.  The other three boys laughed loudly saying that the mimic had certainly got their manager down to a T.

At one point, three of the Beatles said that John was throwing his weight around even though he is the Boss Beatle and was a bit of a “loudmouth.”  John took their ribbing in good humor, though, and pretended he’d suddenly gone deaf.

The next night, the boys trotted off to Whiskey a Go Go, a jazz nightclub, and met the buxom beauty they’d been dying to see – Jayne Mansfield.  They sat at the same table, Jayne resplendent in a furry-type, Scoop-neck sweater, and platinum hair plaited on the top, set off with a gold headband.  The Beatles looked, well, casual, you might say.  Ringo was still wearing the cowboy rigout he’d donned in the early afternoon, and he’d taken such a fancy to it, he wouldn’t even remove the jacket, even when he got hot.

Ringo in the "cowboy" outfit that he wore to the Whiskey that night.  He wore the vest again in 1967 during the Sgt. Pepper era. 


George wore an open-neck shirt, so did Paul, while John steadfastly refused to remove those enormous sunglasses.  One photographer (this time a pro) got rather a wet reception from George though.
Anxious to record the cozy scene for posterity, the photog moved in on the table and George, hair flopping in eyes, collar crooked and with a bottle of booze in front of him, waggled an indignant finger at the photographer to warn him not to take a picture.  It was the boys’ night off and they didn't care to be photographed looking quite so “relaxed.”



The photographer didn't heed George’s warning, so George stood up and flung his drink right in the man’s face!  Very high-spirited.  Jayne Mansfield gazed on, looking quite bored with the whole proceeding, while Ringo looked the way he always does – like a little boy lost.  Nobody could tell what John was thinking because of those darn glasses and Paul was busy chatting with a little lady to his left.  However, the event left rather a nasty taste in everyone’s mouths.

The soon left the Whiskey and scuttled back to their private bode to hold another wild wingding of a party which lasted until the wee hours again.  No wonder the boys sleep to about three in the afternoon.

And then one fine evening in August, Dean Martin’s pretty daughter, Claudia, who’s 19, flung herself onto Ringo’s lap and went into a mock faint!  It all happened at a swingy charity party tossed in Brentwood by Mr. and Mrs. Allen W. Livingston for the Hemophiliac Foundation of Southern California. Some of Hollywood’s biggest stars and their children were there, including John Forsythe and his brood, Gary Lewis (Jerry’s son), Jack Palance and his three kids, Lloyd Bridges and his daughter and Nanette Fabray and her children.  Bob Cummings’ kids were there too.  Now and then Paul, who loves kiddies, took a healthy kiss, but laughed when teenage girls begged for the same treatment.



The Beatles were seated on four chairs in the beautiful garden, while a long, long reception line formed single-file to parade past them.  But Claudia, who’s just crazy for Ringo, broke the line to rush over to him.  Ringo didn't look the least perturbed, and even seemed to enjoy it.  It was quite a while til Claudia got off his lap, too!

Outside and inside the house was so heavily guarded that someone was heard to remark, “If President Kennedy had this kind of protection, he would never have been killed.”


Even though the party was supposed to have been top secret, hundreds of teenage fans had gathered outside yelling, “We want the Beatles!  We want the Beatles!”  When the boys finally exited from the party in their car, 200 girls flung themselves to the ground on the grass, some in a dead faint.  Other fans quickly jumped into cars and onto motorcycles so they could chase the Beatle’s car. 

The Fest for Beatle fans Chicago 2014 -- Sara's Review

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2014 marked my personal 20th anniversary of Beatlefest conventions in Chicago.   I went to my very first Fest in 1994, when I was 17 years old.   The summer before, I had attended the Illinois Teenager Institute in Bloomington, Illinois.  ITI was sort of like a camp for kids who didn't do drugs and were positive peer leaders in their high schools (yes...I was one of those kids).   I was wearing one of my Beatles t-shirts there and an adult counselor stopped me and asked if I had ever gone to Beatlefest.  Beatlefest??  What is that??   He told me that it was awesome and I had to go. He said to call 1-800-BEATLES and order a catalog.    I have no idea who that man was, but I am so thankful that he told me about the Fest.   In pre-"everyone has the internet" days, you had to hear about things like this through word of mouth.  

And so the next summer, right before I went off to college, I begged my mom to take me to Beatlefest.   And 20 years ago, I had no idea that I would one day know so many Beatle authors and be a speak on two panels myself.    

If I was going to give a name to this year's Fest, I would call it "the Fest for Beatle Friends."   I spent so much of my time chatting with Beatle friends both old and new from all around the world.   From friends that I have met many years ago to people I just started chatting with while waiting in line to get into an event, I had such a great time enjoying the company of fellow Beatle fans.    

Due to the negativity going on in the Beatles community, especially on tumblr, and some not so nice comments I had been receiving, I had lost a lot of faith in Beatle fans.   I was scared that this fandom was going in a direction that I did not like at all.  However, Beatlefest has renewed my faith in all of you.   I am sorry for ever doubting that Beatle fans are some of the best people in the world.   I am sorry that I allowed a few bad "apples" (yes that is a pun) to ruin my attitude. 



As always, my mom and I had a great time at the Fest for Beatle fans.   We went into the event knowing that it was going to be fun and we weren't going to allow changes in the layout of the hotel, or the attitude of a few negative people stop us from enjoying ourselves.    Unfortunately, since my school started bright and early Monday morning, we had to leave at 4:00pm on Sunday, missing out on about 8 hours worth of Beatles fun.   But we made the best out of the time we had there.



On Friday we got our wristbands and went into the main ballroom and listened to the introduction of the authors.   Of course most of the authors are friends of mine, which made me really happy to see them all up on stage talking about their books.  Afterward we took some time to check out the art contest, Beatles museum, record room, market place and all of the other artists that was showcasing their work (Eric Cash's things are amazing!).    Then it was an evening of listen to various people talk about my favorite thing to talk about--the Beatles!   The surprise guest of the fest was Dee Ellis. Dee has a new book called Confessions of a Beatlemaniac that retells her life in 1964-1966 including when she met three of the Beatles in a Cleveland hotel in 1966.   I will be reviewing her book very soon.   She has such enthusiasm and is so animated when she talks, that you feel like you are right there with her when she is telling her story.   Dee is a sweet woman and I am so glad that I met her!   I also listened to Ringo's former finance, Nancy Andrews talk and show some of the photos from her new Ringo Starr photograph book.  Nancy is so kind that is is just no shock to me that Ringo fell in love with her.    The last thing I did on Friday night was listen to several people talk about the Beatles 1964 summer tour.   Great discussions!

Nancy Andrews talk about the photos she took of Ringo Starr

Wally Podrazik leads a discussion on the 1964 Beatles tour with Ivor Davis, Al Sussman, Chuck Gunderson and Bruce Spizer


Saturday was a super busy day and I didn't want to miss anything!    I was once again honored to take part in the "She's a Woman--historian" panel where we discussed the legacy of the Beatles.   Big wigs in the Beatles world such as Mark Lewisohn and Bruce Spizer came to this panel discussion.   I was pretty nervous up there with those guys in the crowd, but it went really well.   Another highlight from Saturday was hearing Wally Podrazik interview Mark Lewisohn.   I found it to be a great interview and I just love hearing Mark talk about the Beatles!    I did a lot of shopping, chatting, and enjoying Beatles music. I personally did not care for the musical guests this year.   I do not like the Monkees, but my mom does and so we listened to Peter Noone and Mickey (I think that is who it was) form the Monkees sing and they were both very good.    I spent the end of Saturday with the "people under the stairs" singing Beatles songs.  One of these days I am going to find out who these folks are.  I see them each and every summer and recognize them, and yet I do not know them.

Women's historians:   Tina Kukla, Allison Boron, Susan Ryan, me, Kit O'Tool and Karen Duchaj

Mark is finally getting a good interview by Wally


As I said, I had to leave early on Sunday, so I wasn't able to do everything I wanted to do. First I was able to hear my dear friend, Jude Southerland Kessler's presentation on the Beatles and John Lennon in 1964.   She is such an amazing speaker!!    I made sure not to miss the puppet show!   I do not think I have missed a Beatles puppet show since Bob Abdou started putting them on.   If you go to a Beatlefest,  I really encourage you to see the puppet show.   It is good fun.   Then I was on my 2nd panel which was about the Beatles in the Cyberworld.    I was excited about this panel because it gave me a chance to talk about this blog and tell some of the stories.   I hope I didn't monopolize the discussion too much.   It is really intimidating to be on a panel with Beatles authors and I just have a blog.   But....I really loved doing it.   

Bob Abdou with his Beatle baby puppet

Professor "moptop", Richard Buskin, Rob Rodriguez, Kit O'Tool, me and Lana Stagg talk about the Beatles online


I am so glad that I was able to attend the fest this year and I encourage all of you out on the west coat to check out the Fest in L.A. in October! 

Welcome to the mile high city boys!

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The Beatles landed in Denver, Colorado to thousands of fans lined up to see them.   Yep...their break was over and it was back to work for the four boys from Liverpool.  

The Denver Press conference

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This press conference has been featured a few times before on this blog.  I think the Beatles look so adorable in their little vests with their names on them.

Here is a photo that was sent in from a reader:


And some snapshots:



photo by De Scoise

photo by De Scoise

photo by De Scoise


In an article for the Daily Sentinel, Melinda  Mawdsley writes about one fan that was lucky enough to have gotten into the small press conference in Denver.

Rhealene Plumleigh, 64, had a much different experience than most of the teenagers who attended the Beatles’ Red Rocks show. She had a backstage pass.

Admittedly mature for her 14 years, Plumleigh traveled to Denver from Amarillo, Texas, armed with a press pass she’d asked for from her hometown newspaper, the Amarillo Globe-News, where she worked as a proofreader.

Most specific memories of the day have faded, but Plumleigh, who now lives in the Grand Valley, remembers several things distinctly.

First, the press room at Red Rocks was really small. She arrived early and had a seat, but then the decision was made to start screening the press members allowed in the room.

Concerned she would be kicked out — she was 14 and not in a suit — Plumleigh hid under a table.
After the screening, she took a seat in the front row.

George Harrison repeatedly pointed at her and her friend to ask questions during the pre-show press conference, she said.

“We were young, and we had intelligent questions,” Plumleigh said. “We asked about the music. The press was inclined to ask stupid questions about their life. It was so unimportant to me.”
Unfortunately, the music was tough to hear at Red Rocks, she said.

Plumleigh stood on the side of the stage for a while, thanks to her pass, where there was less screaming.

“I’m so glad I wasn’t in that crowd,” Plumleigh said. “That was crazy stuff.”

Scary times for the Beatles

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The Beatles touring was become more and more frightening to them during the 1964 tour of North America.   They had death threats, predictions of airplane crashes and crazy riots.   The first of the big death threats seems to be from Denver, Colorado.   This note, seen here, was sent from a "Beatle Hater" prior to the show and was investigated by the FBI.    The Beatles were fully aware of the risk they took as they performed, as were Brian and George Martin as you can see from this quote from the Anthology.   (This quote really stuck with me after all of these years....maybe because we all know the fate of John).

There had been death threats. I remember going to one of their concerts at the Red Rock Stadium in Denver where Brian and I climbed up on a gantry overlooking the stage, and we looked down at the boys below during the performance; and the amphitheatre is such that you could have a sniper on the hill who could pick off any of the fellows at any time - no problem. I was very aware of this, and so was Brian, and so were the boys.'

George Martin
Anthology

If you would like to read the FBI files, there are available here. 

Four Brits and a flag

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photos by Nicholas DeScoise


These iconic photos of the Beatles standing with a large American flag as a backdrop appeared on the cover of 16 magazine's Beatles special and is featured in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.   These photos are similar to the photographs Dezo Hoffman took in January 1964 of the Beatles in Paris, yet they have a less serious look about them.

They were taken in Denver  by a then 19 year old fan named Nick DeScoise.   Nick had been photographing the Beatles in Denver for the high school where he had recently graduated.   He had taken photographs of them during the press conference and was walking with them down a hall where they saw a very large American flag on display.    Nick said in a 1995 new story about the Beatles at Red Rocks, "The idea just hit us. This wold be the funniest picture -- in front of the American flag.  They gave me five shots and then they went out and did their songs."

An impromptu photo shoot with a teenage photographer ended up being a famous photo.   Great stuff!

Playing at Red Rock

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photos taken by Nicholas DeScoise


The Beatles concert at the Red Rocks Amphitheater has always been one that is clouded with mystery.   Not very many photos have been available of the performance and not a lot is stated in books or magazines about this particular show.   

No one will ever truly know how many fans attended this concert.   It was not a sold-out show, however this open-air amphitheater did not have ticket takers at all of the entrances and many fans snuck into the show without paying.    Today several fans have came forward and stated that they saw the Beatles in Colorado and did not pay for a ticket.    It truly is unknown how many were there for the concert.   Besides those inside, it has been said that the parking lot was jammed packed with people that were listening to the concert in their cars.   People were sitting on top of vehicles and they could hear the Beatles without all of the screaming that those on the inside were hearing.

One myth that Chuck Gunderson dispelled is that the Beatles were taking hits from oxygen tanks during this show.    Chuck has photos of this concert that show the wings and oxygen tanks were not seen sitting out.  Also those who were there backstage did not see oxygen tanks.  So the whole oxygen rumor can be put to rest and never published in another Beatles book.   


Red Rock Beatle Memories

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Finding photos of the Beatles at the Red Rocks concert was difficult, but finding photos of the fans at the concert was easy.   Here are some great photographs of Beatlemania at it's highest.   The color photo shows a girl in the middle of the crowd looking at the camera.  That is Connie Paris, who was a big Beatles fan and attended the concert at the Red Rocks with five of her friends from high school.  In March of 1968, Connie went missing after she was going to the Denver library to work on a school paper.    A few days later her body was found and it was apparent that she had been strangled to death.  Connie's murder has remained a mystery all of these years and so I want to dedicate this blog post to the memory of a Beatle fan who saw the Beatles in concert and her friends recall them all jumping up and down when the Beatles were on stage.    


Here are some memories I found scatted throughout the world wide web about this concert.



"I was there! With astonishing trust and understanding, my pretty cool parents bought my sister (13) and I (9) tickets, drove us to Red Rocks, waited for us in the parking lot, and probably heard the concert better than we did. They knew what the Beatles meant to us. Mom had even taken us to the airport to see them arrive. I can't imagine dropping a nine-year-old off for a concert today. I also can't imagine having to make a withdrawal from savings to buy a concert ticket ($6.50 a pop)." -- anonymous


"I was there! My mom bought tickets for me and my best friend, but her mother wouldn't let her go. I was 14, she was 13. So mom took me, and she loved the Beatles, thought John and Paul were geniuses!" -- anonymous


"I was 7....my mom took me.....biggest problem is that everyone stood nearly the whole concert......and all the teenie-bopper girls were screaming. Being 7 and nowhere near as tall as most of the crowd, I really didn't get to see or hear much.....but I was in heaven just being there. "–Stephanie



“The thing that sticks in my mind the most is the parking lot.” "Cars and buses were parked end to end. There were no traffic lanes, just a sea of vehicles parked as close together as they could possibly get. When it was over, exiting the parking lot took such a long time."–Holly H.

"I went with my best friend from Laramie and my mother drove us because she was afraid of all the traffic. We got there at 2:30 p.m. and the place was already about a third full," Diane L.


And here is part of a news story about a fan that was at the concert



Robert Boice was 6 years old at the show, brought along by his mom and sisters to celebrate the growing Beatlemania that had enveloped their home in Cheyenne. His family managed to get into the venue early by telling police they were tourists from Wyoming and knew nothing about the show.

"The license plate on our car and the way we were dressed really helped," Robert said. "We actually wound up in about the fifth row in the middle and were able to hear a lot of it. The best you could hear was the between-songs banter, which was mostly just one-liners from John, who was always so good at that stuff."

Robert's sister Jacklyn Boice listed some of the songs she remembered from the set in the journal she kept at the time: "Twist and Shout,""Roll Over Beethoven" and "Boys," which was done by Ringo. In all, she said the show was only about 35 minutes.

"The last song of the concert was 'She Loves You,'" she said. "Some girls began surging toward the railing, but the police held them back."

Hang on for Cincinnati!

Both sides of the party

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I just think this is too cool.  Here are two photos of the Beatles leaving the airport in Cincinnati, Ohio.  You can see in the color photo that someone is  talking to Paul and about to snap a photo of him and I just so happen to own the photograph of Paul that was being taken!   


from the collection of Sara Schmidt

Cincinnati press

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From the collection of Sara Schmidt

From the collection of Sara Schmidt



photo by :  Glenn Hartong


What's Future For Beatles?  Count Money.
By David Bracey
The Cincinnati Enquirer August 28, 1964

What will they do when the wave of Beatlemania subsides?  Beatles John Lennon had the answer Thursday in a Cincinnati press conference.

"Count the money."

The four British singers sat it out in sweltering heat in a private room in Cincinnati Gardens while newspaper, radio and television men fired questions.

The Beatles -- Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison and Lennon, were cheerful and co-operative.  The conference, set up by publicity man, Dino Santangeio, was well organized; a contrast to the bedlam-like scene in Denver, Colorado the night before.

The Beatles answered questions on almost everything, sometime wittily, often seriously and occasionally in a manner that cut cocky questioners down to size.  Never, though did a Beatle crack border on malice.

When a television reporters asked what excuse they had for their collar-length hair, Lennon began:  "Well, it just grows out y'er head..."  McCartney cut in "We don't need an excuse.  You need an excuse."

A newspaperman from Dayton, who said the four ought to be able to handle a crowd of 30,000 without police protection, was told by Lennon, "Well, maybe you could. You're fatter than we are."

Somebody asked the boys what they thought of Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater.  McCartney, baby-faced member of the group and their most ready speaker, admitted that he did not know too much about the American political scene.  But he said he thought  "Mr. Johnson was a better man."

As for British politics, he said he did not know too much about that, either.  Teen-agers stand up and scream piercingly and painfully when the Beatles appear.  Why?  They were asked.

McCartney said none of them knew, but he had heard teenagers pay to go to their shows just to scream.  "A lot of them don't even want to listen," he said, "because they have got the records."

A reporter asked what they thought of the psychiatrist who drew an analogy between the hysteria generated by their beat and the speeches of the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.

Lennon said abruptly "Tell him to shut up.  He's off his head," (mad).

A questioner asked McCartney what he thought of columnist Walter Winchell.   McCartney answered bluntly:  "He said I'm married and I'm not."

"Maybe he wants to marry you,"  Harrison suggested.

Ringo Starr, the group's large-nosed drummer, was asked why he does not sing Ringo, who gave a rare public rendition the night before in Denver, commented, "I can see you haven't bought our lp's."

The four answered a question admitting that the show that comes after the show is sometimes the one to see.  They said they whopped it up until 4 or 5 in the morning depending on how much sleep they need.

What would they have done had they not become Beatles?

"We would have just been bad entertainers," Harrison said.  They all have had only one ambition, to be in show business.

Ringo said he could not see anything to replace their magical power other than a new generation of teenagers with different tastes.



Beatles are the gear

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Fans with posters wait for the Beatles to arrive at the Garden







Beatles?  They’re ‘Gear’ Man

August 27, 1964

Cincinnati (AP) – Four mop-topped lads from Liverpool headed into Cincinnati today and, to use a teen-age phrase, this metropolitan area faced a frantic and “fantabulous” time.

“They’re ‘gear’ man,” (“the moistest”)—sighed 14 year old Karol Burgess, squealed in delight at the hardly expected acquisition of two tickets to tonight’s show by the Beatles before a capacity 13,000 others in Cincinnati Gardens.

Karol had proved pretty “gear” herself by appealing, in a newspaper want ad, for the prized pasteboards.  She got them from Kathy Reid, 13, who had decided, after reading of near-riots at the scene of Beatle concerts, that discretion was the better part of valor and so, to remain at home.
“Fantabulous” was Kathy’s word for the four English youths who, here for the third stop on their American tour, have marched rough-shod in four-four time into the consciousness and languages of teenagers, if not always those of their parents.



Some 100 policemen were ordered to duty around Cincinnati Gardens, some to report hours before the 8pm opening; approximately 40 others were assigned to their uptown hotel and another 100 private guards were employed by a group of local disc jockey who are sponsoring the show.

Teenagers Revel in Madness

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photo by Walt Burton


photo by Walt Burton

photo by Walt Burton

photo by Walt Burton





Total Beatlemania:   shoes off and standing on a folding chair trying to see the Beatles


Young Fans Drop Veneer of Civilization for Beatles
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Writer unknown

A screaming, howling "Beatle-cane" struck Cincinnati Gardens Thursday night.   Veteran reporters and policemen were stuck for words to describe the demonstration 14,000 seemingly demented teenagers put on for their idols.  "Unbelievable" was the closest they could come to creating a word picture of the bedlam.

The frenzied mob began its ritualistic dance about 7pm when the doors of the Gardens opened, but the demonstration was only the "eye" of the Liverpool spawned storm.  The worst was yet to come.

The first act on the program, The Bill Mack Combo (sic) stimulated the mood of the crowd, and the second act, the Exciters, sang and danced the Monkey, which whetted the appetites of the adolescents.

The it struck.  The Beatles made their appearance, and the mob exploded into a maelstrom of sound--screaming, stomping, crying, begging, moaning -- every imaginable sound a human is capable of making.

The Beatles played for 25 minutes, but they might as well have been doing a pantomime.  The screaming was so loud for 10 minutes that the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and the Marine Corps Band would have been drowned out.

The youngsters were in the midst of an emotional banzai attack against anything that remotely resembled logic and order.  Some sobbed, clutching their hands to their mouths.  Others waved their hands above their heads and screamed at the top of their lungs.  Some umped up and down on their seats.

The estimated 115 degree temperature melted bouffant hairdos as well as inhibitions.  Well groomed girls who had hoped, without really hoping, that they would attract the eye of a Beatle, began to look like Brillo pads.

A priest turned around in the crowd, looked at a reporter with tears in his eyes and said, "I don't believe it.  Just look at them...at their faces!"

A technician from a television station was trying to measure the sound with an instrument.  He gave up when the instrument recorded its maximum reading and broke.

Pushed past their psychological limits, members of the audience began to "break" too.  Girls started to faint en masse.  Eyes turned cherry red.  Throats became too hoarse to utter even a whisper of adoration.  Shock began to set in, and the merry go round gradually broke down.  The time was 10:07 p.m.

More than 100 police officers, detectives and Pinkerton detectives were assigned to the Gardens for security reasons and to maintain order.  They were helpless to do anything except stare.

The Beatles ran off the Gardens stage before the audience knew what was up, scooted into waiting automobiles and headed toward Lunken airport from which their chartered plane took off for New York shortly after midnight.

Captain Ted Bird of the Cincinnati Police Department said that the young audience "conducted themselves like young ladies and gentlemen.  They screamed, yelled and panted, but there was no other sign of disorder.  They were a credit to Cincinnati."

When it was over, the stage was littered with tattered notes that had been thrown there by fans.  "I love you Ringo."  "Please call me Paul, my number is..."  "I can't go on without you, my dearest darling John."  Most of the notes had been stomped on by the high-heeled Beatle shoes, mute testimony of the undying devotion the British performers felt for their faithful flock.

An English reporter traveling with the Beatles is named George Harrison, too.  He complained to American newsmen that he always is getting his laundry mixed up with Beatle Harrison.  He said the entourage has received no mail from home since it left for the United States. 

And after it struck, the "Beatle-cane" moved on to strike again somewhere else.  And the maintenance men at Cincinnati Gardens began picking up the trash and Beatle buttons.



Tried to Hold 'em Back
Cincinnati police blocked off Kellogg Avenue near Eastern Avenue, at 3:45p.m. and tried to hold down the spectator population as much as possible.  Judging from the crowd at the airport, they didn't succeed.

Four acts accompanied the Beatles on their trip, and departed in a chartered bus.  The Beatles rode in Cadillacs.

As the day wore on, the crowd would anxiously peer at every plane that landed, including the smallest single-engine craft.

A lone pilot stepped from the twin-engine plane and was roundly booed.

Concessionaires prepared for a big night.

They stocked 5200 hot dogs, 5200 buns, 2000 pounds of popcorn, and 20,000 cups for soft drinks for the expected 13,000 spectators.

A television commentator told the Enquirer three girls, 16, 17 and 18 had gone to his studio Thursday morning and said they had hitchhiked by train from Warren, Ohio, to see the Beatles.

They said they hid in a train's washroom, changed at Lima, hiding this time in a boxcar, and arrived in Cincinnati at 7:30a.m.




Arriving in the middle of the night

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It was 3:02 a.m. and the Beatles arrived in New York to the sight of about 3,000 fans waiting to see them.   Paul and Ringo give a wave before they are taken off to the Delmonico Hotel. 

The adventures of the St. Christopher Medal

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When the Beatles arrived at the Delmonico Hotel during the early hours of the morning, 3,000 fans were waiting for them.  As the Beatles got out of the car, the group of fans broke through the police barricade and ran towards the boys.   One of those fans was Angie McGowan who managed to rip Ringo's shirt and take the St. Christopher medal that was on a gold chain off his neck.   One newspaper report said that "retired triumphantly into the crowd."

What a souvenir!  A necklace that Ringo Starr had around his neck!  But what Angie and everyone else weren't aware of at the time was that particular necklace had sentimental value to Ringo.  He got it as a gift from an aunt in Liverpool for his 21st birthday.   Ringo had a big party on July 7, 1961.  80 people squeezed into his home in the Dingle for a celebration.   And one of his aunts gave him the medal of the saint that looks after you during travel.   Since Ringo was really starting to make it big with Rory Storm and the Hurricanes and was doing some traveling, he was happy to receive the necklace and put it on that night.   It remained around his neck every day until it got removed at the Delmonico hotel in 1964.   Ringo was upset and wanted his necklace back.

After Cousin Bruce noticed that he didn't look very well, Ringo told the DJ for WABC radio that someone had grabbed his St. Christopher medal.    Knowing a good scoop when he sees one, Cousin Brucie used the radio to not only help Ringo, but also help the station.   He got on the air and asked if the person that "found" Ringo's St. Christopher medal (he used the word found and not stole or took or grabbed on purpose) would come forward, he would see to it that the fan would get a personal meeting with Mr. Starr.    Ringo told the listeners that "It means more to me than almost anything."   After that, 155 people called in, claiming to have the medal in their possession.    One of the callers was Mrs. McGowan who told Brucie that her daughter, Angela had found Ringo's necklace and wanted to know if her 16 year old daughter was in trouble.   Brucie assured her that Angie was not in trouble, and arranged for the mother and daughter to stay at the hotel and meet up with Ringo the next day.    With the medal and the finder  secretly tucked away, please for the return of the necklace continued throughout the night and into the daylight hours just for ratings boosts.

Finally the time came.  Film crews as well as radio crews were on hand to see the safe return of the necklace.  Angie apologized for ripping Ringo's shirt and Ringo said, "I can buy another shirt, I can't replace this." (meaning the medal).   Ringo was very sweet to Angie and her friends.   He allowed them to kiss him on the  cheek and signed autographs.   In watching the footage, I am surprised by how composed Angie appears to be.   She speaks in a quiet voice but with confidence and not like an out of control fan.

Angie has visited this blog on several occasions over the years and emailed me a long time ago.   She says that there is more to her story than what Cousin Brucie says and that her adventures continued after the kiss from Ringo.  One thing that happened was that she became a sudden celebrity among Beatle fans!   People were writing to her and wanting to know about what it was like to kiss Ringo!  She was sending out photos and corresponding with all sorts of fans.    I hope Angie writes a book or an article about what  exactly happened.








Photo ops at the NYC press conference

The power of the radio and the Beatles

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Nothing quite like it had ever happened before.   When the Beatles came to the Delmonico Hotel on August 28, 1964,  the fans waiting outside the hotel had something that generations before them didn't have:   transistor radios.

One major Beatles station in the City was WABC --also known as "W A Beatles C" with Cousin Brucie and Scott Muni and others.   And the jocks of WABC had a suit inside of the Delmonico Hotel with unlimited access (thanks to giving the security wine and gifts) of the hotel.   They were broadcasting live about what was happening inside the hotel and 10,000 of their listeners were right below them in the street.    Every Beatles fan standing outside of the hotel was listening to the station on their radio or a radio of someone near them.   They were listening to what the Beatles had for breakfast and what time they got up and any inside information.    They also were singing along in mass unions to Beatles and others hit songs on the radio.

The radio guys loved it!   They would use their high-tech wireless microphones and stick them out the window  and ask the fans to do all sorts of things:  sings WABC jingles, sing happy birthday to President Johnson, sing We love you Beatles, tell them to scream "Ringo!" so he might throw a tie out to them (yeah right....someone would have gotten killed over that tie!).    They were able to hear interviews with the guys.   It had to have been exciting to these fans.

Not surprising, there were any real issues (besides a few girls fainting) outside of the hotel.  10,000 fans and they were all waiting with baited breath to hear what was going on inside of the hotel through their transistor radio.

It was a break-through for WABC and radio in general and it was an unforgettable time for the Beatle fans outside of the Delmonico 50 years ago today.

Mary Smith --- we salute you!

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Whenever I think of the Beatles concert at Forest Hills Stadium in New York, I automatically think of Mary Smith.

Mary was the girl who rushed the stage and actually got on stage with the Beatles and grabbed George.   She didn't cause any harm and I always just admire the guts she had to run for it and I am shocked that she was successful! 

Mary had snuck away to go to the concert and her parents did not know she was there.   Mary took off her shoes and ran for the Beatles.    If you want to read more about Mary's time to shine, you must read Chuck Gunderson's book, Some Fun Tonight.   He really goes into detail about Mary Smith.  (There is a link on top of this page so you can buy the book).








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