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In 2007, Columbia Pictures released the psychedelic Across the Universe, using 33 songs by The Beatles to form a story of young bohemians living in New York during the Vietnam War era.

Liverpool dockworker Jude (Jim Sturgess) heads to the US in search of his American father, where he becomes friends with Princeton dropout Max (Joe Anderson) and Max’s sister, Lucy (Evan Rachel Wood).

Max and Jude move to New York, sharing a flat with Prudence (T.V. Carpio), a lesbian runaway from Ohio; Sadie (Dana Fuchs), a Janis Joplin-like soul singer; and the Jimi Hendrix-like Jo-Jo (Martin Luther McCoy), who is fleeing the race riots in Detroit. When Lucy’s boyfriend is killed in Vietnam, she also moves to New York, where she and Jude fall in love.

The film is in a near-constant state of song — there are only 30 minutes of spoken dialogue – ending with the cast uniting in a rooftop performance of “All You Need is Love”. This mirrors The Beatles’ own final performance on the rooftop of the Apple Corps building in London in 1969.

Source: Phoebe Macrossan/theconversation.com

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Sir Ringo Starr has been married to Barbara Bach for some time, but they have no children together. Sir Ringo already had three children with his first wife, Maureen, and met Barbara some time after their divorce. So how did Barbara meet Sir Ringo, and where were they?

Sir Ringo Starr met Barbara Bach, his future wife, on the set of the film Caveman in 1980.

The film starred Sir Ringo and Barbara, alongside Dennis Quaid and Shelley Long.

Caveman was not received well by critics, with Roger Ebert saying: “It has a basic problem, which is that there is no popular original material for it to satirize.”

Ringo and Barbara married at Marylebone Town Hall on April 27, 1981, and have been together ever since.

Source: Jenny Desborough/express.co.uk

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Klaus Voormann remembers taking the stage with John Lennon and Yoko Ono's conceptual Plastic Ono Band for their first gig at the Toronto Rock 'n' Roll Revival festival in September 1969. When Ono, wrapped in a bed sheet, let out one of her signature, guttural wails, the once-enthusiastic crowd was confounded.

"Standing on stage, you could see the way the people react, whispering to each other. Not disinterested but just, 'Christ, what's happening up there?'" the 82-year-old recalls.
"[Ono] was wanting the people to know there were people dying [in Vietnam]. She had us imagine tanks are coming, bombs are coming, dead people on the road. When you're standing behind her, you realise what she's trying to do. But it was too strong for the crowd. They came to see John Lennon the ex-Beatle, you know? They didn't want to think about death and war.

Source: Robert Moran/smh.com.au

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Few people will ever know what it’s like to have a sibling forever remembered and discussed the world over, but that is the reality for Julia Baird, who has now lived the greater portion of her life deprived of John’s physical presence, yet surrounded by his imperishable legacy.

At the end of the 1970s, the inimitable icon John Winston Ono Lennon, who would have turned 80 last month, was longing for his family and reflecting on boyhood summers spent in Scotland.

Had his life not been cut tragically short in New York City 40 years ago this December, the former Beatle would have returned. An audio recording, made shortly before his death, confirms his intention to take second son Sean to Edinburgh in 1981.

For John’s eldest sister, Julia, the knowledge that her big brother, who she hadn’t seen in over a decade, had been planning to come home was excruciating.

Source: scotsman.com

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Michael Jackson worked with Sir Paul McCartney many times in his early career, even performing a duet. He also did an iconic radio interview with George Harrison, showing how these two were also very close. MJ was such a fan of The Beatles he even purchased a huge amount of the Lennon-McCartney back catalogue - but does he still own them?
Does Michael Jackson still own the rights to songs by The Beatles?

Michael Jackson purchased the publishing copyrights to songs written by Lennon-McCartney and some early songs by George Harrison.

This was something which, according to one biography of the Thriller singer, Michael had joked about with Sir Paul McCartney at dinner.

However, things became real when the catalogue of songs from ATV Music became available to purchase, and both Sir Paul and Yoko Ono, John Lennon’s widow, decided against purchasing them.

Source: Jenny Desborough/express.co.uk

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A poignant, and fab, mosaic of the Beatles 01 November, 2020 - 0 Comments

"They ARE awful. But I also think they're fabulous. Let's just go and say hello."

What if young record store manager Brian Epstein had not, in 1961, after a scrappy gig in a "sweaty basement," popped over to say hello to the band? What if, as Craig Brown wonders in "150 Glimpses of the Beatles," Paul had done better in his exams, moved up a school year and never gotten to know George? Or Ringo had had more patience with U.S. immigration forms and succeeded in moving to Houston? Or the engine fire on a 1965 flight from Minneapolis to Portland had ended in catastrophe, cutting the band off in their prime? We are haunted by the shadows of what didn't happen. "Think what we would have missed if we had never heard the Beatles," the Queen once mused. As the world marks 40 years since the murder of John Lennon - gone, now, for as long as we had him - shimmering alternative histories are especially poignant. A feeling of loss is palpable.

Source: Craig Brown/theday.com

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An oceanfront Palm Seashore property as soon as owned by the late John Lennon and his spouse Yoko Ono has bought for round $36 million, in keeping with an individual with information of the deal.

Named El Solano, the property listed six months in the past for $47.5 million. Positioned on South Ocean Boulevard, popularly known as Billioniare’s Row, the home is subsequent door to a property owned by creator James Patterson, information present.

Mr. Lennon and Ms. Ono purchased the property round 1980, in keeping with the e book “Nowhere Man: The Remaining Days of John Lennon,” by Robert Rosen. Mr. Lennon was shot to demise a number of months later, and the couple’s plans to renovate the property by no means got here to fruition. Ms. Ono bought the property in 1986.

The sellers had been John and Cindy Websites. Mr. Websites, previously an government at Bear Stearns, is a accomplice at funding agency Wexford Capital. Ms. Websites based Go Determine, a series of barre-centered health studios. They purchased the home for $23 million in 2016, information present.

Source: apkmetro.com

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Ringo Starr put together an impressive solo career after The Beatles,. Following the official breakup of the band in 1970, Ringo got started with the humble Beaucoups of Blues album. The following year, Ringo began his run of hit singles.

Ringo kicked off that streak with “It Don’t Come Easy,” a track his old friend George Harrison produced. With Harrison writing and arranging and Ringo on vocals, the song charmed audiences and cracked the top five in the U.K. and America.

Suddenly, Ringo was a viable solo artist. Since he never was a prolific songwriter, Ringo considered just releasing singles for a time. But if he wanted to do that he needed a follow-up to “It Don’t Come Easy.” When the idea for his next single came to him in his sleep, he got to work with a recycled drum part from a Beatles classic.

Source: cheatsheet.com

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Maya Hawke scored her biggest role to date with the news on Friday that she'll be starring in the upcoming comedy film Revolver.

The 22-year-old actress will play the lead role in the film about a surprise meeting with The Beatles in Alaska in the mid-1960s, Variety reported.

Joining the Stranger Things star as her on-screen dad will be her real-life father Ethan Hawke, 49.

The northern city is thrown into chaos after a flight carrying The Beatles to Japan makes an unannounced stop in Anchorage, sending the residents into fits of Beatlemania.

Jane thinks her ticket to adulthood involves losing her virginity to George Harrison during the band's pit stop at a local hotel, but she learns that what she's really seeking is right in front of her.

Not much is known about Ethan's arc in the film, but he's more than qualified to play Jane's father.

Source: Brian Marks/dailymail.co.uk

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The Stones were bolder. The Who was louder. But the Beatles simply ruled, from their first single in ’62 until their breakup eight years later. The argument can still be made that they ruled.

Everyone knew them, or thought they did.

As Craig Brown’s “150 Glimpses of the Beatles” suggests, to understand them, you must push past the publicity, the myths, the lies. His doorstop of a book digs deep to try to uncover the truth.

It was July 6, 1957, when the Beatles began. John Lennon, surly and nearly 17, was performing at a school event with his band, the Quarrymen. Paul McCartney, just 15, watched nervously. “I wouldn’t look at him too hard, in case he hit me,” McCartney said later.

Afterward, McCartney worked up the nerve to introduce himself. He played a few songs, including “Be-Bop-a-Lula.”

“He was as good as me,” Lennon marveled. “It went through my head that I’d have to keep him in line if I let him join. But he was good, so he was worth having. He also looked like Elvis.”

Source: Jacqueline Cutler/nydailynews.com

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