Interview:
The Beatles
a candid conversation with England's mop-topped millionaire
minstrels
Our interviewer this month is the inimitable Jean
Shepherd, whose nostalgically comic boyhood reminiscences and
acerbic social commentary have earned him not only the applause of
PLAYBOY's readers, but also a loyal audience of three million for
the free-form one-man radio talkathon which he wings weekly over New
York's WOR from the stage of The Limelight in Greenwich Village. A
nimble-witted and resourceful broadcast reporter who's traded verbal
lances with such formidable subjects as Malcolm X and Harry S.
Truman, he debuts herein as an interviewer for the printed page.
Shepherd writes of his subjects:
"I joined the Beatles in Edinburgh in the midst
of a wild, swinging personal appearance tour they were making
throughout the British Isles. The first glimpse I had of them was in
a tiny, overheated, totally disorganized dressing room backstage
between their first and second shows. I had taken the night flight
up from London and suddenly found myself face to face with one, or
rather four, of the 20th Century's major living legends. All of them
looked up suspiciously as I walked in, then went back to eating,
drinking and tuning guitars as though I didn't exist. Legends have a
way of ignoring mere mortals. I looked hard at them through the
cigarette smoke, and they began to come into focus, sprawling half
dressed and self-involved amid the continuous uproar that surrounds
their lives.
"They had been playing one-night stands in
Glasgow and Dundee, and I went with them from Edinburgh to Plymouth,
Bournemouth and half a dozen other towns. They were all the same:
wild, ravening multitudes, hundreds of policemen, mad rushes through
the night in a black Austin Princess to a carefully guarded inn or
chalet for a few fitful hours of sleep. And then the whole cycle
started all over again.
"It became impossible to tell one town from
another, since to us they were just a succession of dressing rooms
and hotel suites. The screams were the same. It all assumed the
ritual quality of a fertility rite. Latter-day Druids, the Beatles
sat in their dressing room - a plywood Stonehenge-surrounded by
sweaty t-shirts, trays of French fries, steak, pots of tea, and the
inevitable TV set; while from somewhere off beyond the walls of the
theatre came the faint, eerie wailing of their worshipers, like the
sea or the wind. But the Beatles no more heard it than a New York
cop hears traffic. Totally oblivious to the mob-and to the honks and
plunks of other Liverpudlian rock 'n rollers warming up down the
hall-they sat sipping their Scotch from paper cups and watching "Dr.
Kildare" on the telly.
"I, meanwhile, sat and watched * them * --and
wondered why. In two years they had become a phenomenon that had
somehow transcended stardom - or even showbiz. They were mythical
beings, inspiring a fanaticism bordering on religious ecstasy among
millions all over the world. I began to have the uncomfortable
feeling that all this fervor had nothing whatever to do with
entertainment, or with talent, or even with the Beatles themselves.
I began to believe they were they catalyst of a sudden world madness
that would have burst upon us whether they had come on the scene or
not. If the Beatles had never existed, we would have had to invent
them. They are not prodigious talents by any yardstick, but like
hoola-hoops and yo-yos, they are at the right place at the right
time, and whatever it is that triggers the mass hysteria of fads has
made them walking myths.
"Everywhere we went, people stared in
openmouthed astonishment that there were actually flesh-and-blood
human beings who looked just like the Beatle dolls they had at home.
It was as though Santa Claus had suddenly shown up at a Christmas
party. Night after night, phalanxes of journalists would stand
grinning, groveling, obsequious, jotting down the Beatles' every
word. In city after city the local mayor, countess, duke, earl and
prelate would be led in, bowing and scraping, to bask for a few
fleeting moments in their ineffable aura. They don't give
interviews; they grant audiences, which is the way the world wants
its legends to behave.
"All around them, wherever they go, shimmers a
strange, filmy, translucent pal of palpable unreality, so thick that
you can almost taste it. And at the very center of this vast cloud
of fantasy are the four young men themselves, by far the most real
and least enchanted of them all. They have managed somehow to remain
remarkably human, totally unlike the kewpies created by fandom and
the press. In real life, the Beatles don't make Beatle noises. Nor
are they precocious teenagers. They are grown-up, Scotch-drinking
men who know what the world expects of them - which is to be Beatles
and to wear long hair, funny clothes and be cute. But all that stops
when the curtain falls and the high-heeled shoes come off and the
drums are put away.
"Their unimaginable success-which has made them
world figures important enough for the Prime Minister and the
Queen's consort to discuss in news conferences, and has made them
without a doubt the most successful money machine in recent
times-his left them faintly bemused, but also extremely guarded in
their everyday life, almost as though they're afraid that an
extraloud sneeze will burst the bubble and they'll be back in
reality like the rest of us.
"Of the four, George Harrison seems to be the
one most amused and least unsettled by it all. The truest swinger
among them, he is also the most sarcastic, and unquestionably the
most egotistical; he fingers his hair a lot, and has a marked
tendency to pause meaningfully and before mirrors. Even so, he's a
very likable chap-if he happens to like you. John Lennon, on the
other hand, is a rather cool customer, and far less hip than he's
made out to be. He does radiate a kind of on-the-top-of-it
confidence, however, and is the unacknowledged leader of the group.
Paul McCartney (sometimes known as 'the cute Beatle') reminded me of
Ned, the fun-loving Rover Boy - the friendliest of the lot; but
unlike Ned, he also has a keen eye for a well-turned figure, and he
worries a lot about the future. Ringo Starr, the smallest Beatle -
even smaller in person than he appears on screen - is a curious
contrast with the others. Taciturn, even a bit sullen, he spends a
good deal of time sitting in corners staring moodily at the Venetian
blinds. Perhaps because he wasn't their original drummer, he seems
slightly apart from the rest, a loner. Still, he has a way of
growing on you - if he doesn't grow away from you.
"We began to become friends. And a week or so
and what felt like 10,000 miles and 10,000,000 screams later, we
found ourselves ensconced in Torquay in southwest England, on the
gray shores of the English Channel. They had just played two shows
before a raging throng of subteen girls in nearby Exeter. Within
seconds after the final curtain, like a gang of convicts executing a
well-rehearsed and perfectly synchronized prison break, they had
eluded a gimlet-eyed army of idolaters outside the stage door and
careened off in anonymous vehicles, with coat collars up and hats
pulled low - four hunter fugitives and one terrified hostage (me) -
into the wintry night. Pseudonymously registered and safely
padlocked in their suite at their hotel-the identity and whereabouts
of which were a more closely guarded secret than SAC's fail-safe
recall code - they slipped out of their Beatle suits and into
sportswear, ordered up a goodly supply of Coke, tea and booze, and
began to unwind. We found ourselves talking quietly-and all of a
sudden, almost communicating. Somewhere along the line I turned on
my tape machine. Here's what it recorded."
Playboy: OK, we're on. Why don't we begin by ...
John: Doing "Hamlet". (laughter)
Ringo: Yeah, yeah, let's do that.
Playboy: That sounds like fun, but just for fun,
why don't we do an *interview* instead?
George: Say, that's a fine idea. I wish I'd
thought of that.
Paul: What shall we ask you for your first
question?
Ringo: About those Bunny girls ...
Playboy: No comment. Let's start over. Ringo,
you're the last Beatle to join the group, aren't you?
Ringo: Yes.
Playboy: How long were you guys together as a team
before Ringo joined up?
John: A few years probably, sort of off and on,
really, for three years or so.
Paul: yeah, but really amateur.
George: The local pub, you know. And in each
other's uncle's houses.
John: And at George's brother's wedding. Things
like that. Ringo used to fill in sometimes if our drummer was ill.
With his periodic illness.
Ringo: He took little pills to make him ill.
Playboy: When you joined the others, Ringo, they
weren't quite as big as they are now, were they?
Ringo: They were the biggest thing in Liverpool.
In them days that was big enough.
Paul: This is a point we've made before. Some
people say that a man is made of muscle and blood ... no, they
don't. They say, 'How come you've suddenly been able to adjust to
fame, you know, to nationwide fame and things?' It all started quite
nicely with us, you see, in our own sphere, where we used to play-in
Liverpool. We never used to play outside it, except when we went to
Hamburg. Just those two circles. And in each of them, I think we
were round the highest paid, and probably at the time the most
popular. So in actual fact we had the same feeling of being famous
then as we do now.
George: We were recognized then, too, only people
didn't chase us about.
Paul: But it just grew. The quantity grew, not the
*quality* of the feeling.
Playboy: When did you know that you had really hit
it big? There must have been one night when you knew it had really
begun.
John: Well, we'd been playing round in Liverpool
for a bit without getting anywhere, trying to get work, and the
other groups kept telling us, 'You'll do all right, you'll get work
someday.' And then we went to Hamburg, and when we came back,
suddenly we were a wow. Mind you, 70 percent of the audience thought
we were a *German* wow, but we didn't care about that.
Paul: We were billed in the paper: 'From
Hamburg-The Beatles'.
John: In Liverpool, people didn't even know we
were from Liverpool. They thought we were from Hamburg. They said,
'Christ, they speak good English!' Which we did, of course, being
English. But that's when we first, you know, stood there being
cheered the first time.
Paul: That's was when we felt we were ...
John: ... on the way up ...
Paul: ... gonna make it in Liverpool ...
Playboy: How much were you earning then?
John: For that particular night, 20 dollars.
Playboy: Apiece?
John: For the *group*! Hell, we used to work for a
lot less than that.
Paul: We used to work for about three or four
dollars a night.
Ringo: Plus all the Coke we could drink. And we
drank a lot.
Playboy: Do you remember the first journalist who
came to see you and said, 'I want to write about you?'
Ringo: We went round to *them* at first, didn't
we?
John: We went and said, 'We're a group and we've
got this record out. Will you ...'
George: And then the door would slam.
Playboy: We've heard it said that when you first
went to America you were doubtful that you'd ever make it over
there.
John: That's true. We didn't think we were going
to make it at all. It was only Brian telling us we were gonna make
it. And George. Brian Epstein, our manager, and George Harrison.
George: I knew we had a good chance - because of
the record sales over there.
John: The thing is, in America it just seemed
ridiculous - I mean, the idea of having a hit record over there. It
was just, you know, something you could never do. That's what I
thought, anyway. But then I realized that it's just the same as
here, that kids everywhere all go for the same stuff. And seeing
we'd done it in England and all, there's no reason why we couldn't
do it in America, too. But the American disc jockeys didn't know
about British records; they didn't play them, nobody promoted them,
and so you didn't have hits.
George: Well, there were one or two doing it as a
novelty.
John: But it wasn't until Time and Newsweek came
over and wrote articles and created an interest in us that the disc
jockeys started playing our records. And Capitol said, 'Well, can we
have their records?' You know, they had been offered our records
years ago, and they didn't want them. But when they heard we were
big over here they said, 'Can we have 'em now?' So we said, 'As long
as you promote them.' So Capitol promoted, and with them and all
those articles on us, the records just took off.
Playboy: There's been some dispute, among your
fans and critics, about whether you're primarily entertainers or
musicians - or perhaps neither. What's your own opinion?
John: We're money-makers first; then we're
entertainers.
Ringo: No, we're not.
John: What are we, then?
Ringo: Dunno. Entertainers first.
John: OK.
Ringo: Cause we were entertainers before we were
money-makers.
John: That's right, of course. It's just the press
drivels you into it, so you say it cause they like to hear it, you
know?
Paul: Still, we'd be idiots to say that it isn't a
constant inspiration to be making a lot of money. It always is, to
anyone. I mean, why do big business tycoons *stay* big business
tycoons? It's not because they're inspired at the greatness of big
business; they're in it because they're making *money* at it. We'd
be idiots if we pretended we were in it solely for kicks. In the
beginning we were, but at the same time, we were hoping to make a
bit of cash. It's a switch around now, though, from what it used to
be. We used to be doing it mainly for kicks and not making a lot of
money, and now we're making money without too many kicks - except we
happen to like the money we're making. But we still enjoy making
records, going onstage, making films, and all that business.
John: We *love* every minute of it, Beatle
people!
Playboy: As hard-bitten refugees from the
Liverpool slums - according to heart-rending fan magazine
biographies-do you feel prepared to cope with all this sudden
wealth?
Paul: We've managed to make the adjustment.
Contrary to rumor, you see, none of us were brought up in any slums
or in great degrees of poverty. We've always had enough; we've never
been starving.
John: yeah, we say those articles in the American
fan mags that 'Those boys struggled up from the slums ...'
George: We never starved. Even Ringo hasn't.
Ringo: Even I.
Playboy: What kind of families do you come from?
George: Well, you know, not rich. Just workin'
class. They've got jobs. Just work.
Playboy: What does your father do?
George: Well, he doesn't do anything now. He used
to be a bus driver ...
John: In the Merchant Navy.
Playboy: Do you have any sisters or brothers,
George?
George: I've got two brothers.
John: And no sisters to speak of.
Playboy: How about you, Paul?
Paul: I've got one brother, and a father who used
to be a cotton salesman down in New Orleans, you know. That's
probably why I look a bit tanned. But seriously, folks, he
occasionally had trouble paying bills - but it was never, you know,
never, 'Go out and pick blackberries, son; we're a bit short this
week.'
Playboy: How about you, John?
John: Oh, just the same. I used to have an auntie.
And a dad whom I couldn't quite find.
Ringo: John lived with the Mounties.
John: Yeah, the Mounties. They fed me well. I
didn't starve.
Playboy: How about *your* family, Ringo, old man?
Ringo: Just workin' class. I was brought up with
my mother and me grandparents. And then she married me stepfather
when I was 13. All the time she was working. I never starved. I used
to get most things.
George: Never starved?
Ringo: No, I never starved. She always fed me. I
was an only child, so it wasn't amazing.
Playboy: It's quite fashionable in some circles in
America to hate your parents. But none of you seem to.
Ringo: We're probably just as against the things
our parents liked or stood for as they are in America. But we don't
hate our parents for it.
Playboy: It's often exactly the opposite in
America.
Paul: Well, you know, a lot of Americans are
unbalanced. I don't care what you say. No, really. A lot of them are
quite normal, of course, but we've met many unbalanced ones. You
know the type of person, the political Whig.
Playboy: How do you mean?
Paul: You know-the professional politician type;
in authority sort of thing. Some of them are just mad! And I've met
some really *maniac* American girls! Like this girl who walked up to
me in a press conference and said, 'I'm Lily.' I said, 'Hello, how
do you do?' and she said, 'Doesn't my name * mean * anything to
you?' I said, 'Ah, no ...' and I thought, 'Oh God, it's one of these
people that you've met and you should know.' And so Derek, or press
agent, who happened to be there at the time, hanging over my
shoulder, giving me quotes, which happens at every press conference
...
George: You better not say that.
Paul: Oh yes, that's not true, Beatle people! But
he was sort of hanging about, and he said, 'Well, did you ring, did
you write, or something?' And she said, 'No.' and he said, 'Well,
how did you get in touch with Paul? How do you know him?' And she
said, 'Through God.' I mean, we both sort of gulped and blushed. I
said, 'Well, that's very nice, Lily. Thanks very much. I must be off
now.'
Playboy: There wasn't a big lightning bolt from
the sky?
Paul: No, there wasn't. But I talked to her
afterward, and she said she'd got a vision from God and God had said
to her ...
John: "It's been a hard day's night." (laughter)
Paul: No, God had said, 'Listen, Lil, Paul is
waiting for you; he's in love with you and he wants to marry you,
and he'll know you right away.' It's very funny, you know. I was
trying to persuade her that she didn't in actual fact have a vision
from God, that it was ...
George: It was probably someone *disguised* as
God.
Paul: You wouldn't hardly ever meet someone like
that in England, but there seemed to me to be a lot like her in
America.
John: Well, there are a lot more *people* in
America, so you've got a much bigger group to get nutters from.
Playboys: Speaking of nutters, do you ever wake up
in the morning, look in the mirror and say, 'My God, I'm a Beatle'?
Paul: No, not quite. (laughter)
John: Actually, we only do it in each other's
company. I know I never do it anymore.
Ringo: We used to do it more. We'd get in the car,
I'd look over at John and say, 'Christ, look at you, you're a bloody
phenomenon!' and just laugh-cause it was only him, you know. And a
few old friends of ours done it, from Liverpool. I'd catch 'em
looking at me, and I'd say, 'What's the matter with you?' It's just
daft, them just screaming and laughing, thinking I'm one of them
people.
Playboy: A Beatle?
Ringo: Yes.
Paul: The thing that makes *me* know we've made it
is like tonight, when we slipped into a sweet shop. In the old days
we could have just walked into a sweet shop and nobody would have
noticed us. We would have just got our sweets and gone out. But
tonight we just walked in-and the people just dropped their sweets.
Before, you see, there would have been no reaction at all. Except
possibly, 'Look at that fellow with the long hair. Doesn't he look
daft?' But nowadays they're just amazed; they can't believe it. But
actually we're no different.
Playboy: The problem is that you don't seem to be
like real people. You're Beatles.
Paul: I know. It's very funny, that.
George: It's all the publicity.
Paul: We're taken in by it, too. Because *we*
react exactly the same way to the stars *we* meet. When we meet
people we've seen on telly or films, we still think, 'Wow!'
John: It's a good thing, because we still get just
as tickled. Paul: The thing is that people, when they see you on TV
and in magazines and up in a film, and hear you on the radio, they
never expect to meet you, you know, even our fans. Their wish is to
meet you, but in the back of their mind they never think they're
actually gonna meet us. And so, when they *do* meet us, they just
don't believe it.
Playboy: Where do they usually find you-hiding in
your hotel rooms?
John: No, on the street, usually.
Playboy: You mean you're brave enough to venture
out in the streets without a bodyguard?
Ringo: Sure.
George: We're always on the streets. Staggering
about.
Ringo: Floggin' our bodies.
George: You catch John sleeping in the gutter
occasionally.
Playboy: When people see you in the street, do you
ever have any action?
George: Well, not really, because when you're
walking about, you don't bump into groups of people, as a rule.
Playboy: Can you even go out shopping without
getting mobbed by them, individually or collectively?
John: We avoid that.
Paul: The mountain comes to Mohammed.
George: the shop comes to us, as he says. But
sometimes we just roll into a store and buy the stuff and leg out
again.
Playboy: Isn't that like looking for trouble?
Paul: No, we walk four times faster than the
average person.
Playboy: Can you eat safely in restaurants?
George: Sure we can. I was there the other night. John: Where?
George: Restaurants.
Paul: Of course we're *known* in the restaurants
we go in.
George: And usually it's only Americans that'll
bother you.
Playboy: Really?
George: Really. If we go into a restaurant in
London, there's always going to be a couple of them eating there;
you just tell the waiter to hold them off if they try to come over.
If they come over anyway, you just sign.
Ringo: But you know, the restaurants I go to,
probably if I wasn't famous, I wouldn't go to them. Even if I had
the same money and wasn't famous I wouldn't go to them, because the
people that go to them are drags. The good thing when you go to a
place where the people are such drags, such snobs, you see, is that
they won't bother to come over to your table. They pretend they
don't even know who you are, and you get away with an easy night.
George: And they think they're laughing at us, but
really we're laughing at them. Cause we know they know who we are.
Ringo: How's that?
George: they're not going to be like the rest and
ask for autographs.
Ringo: And if they do, we just swear at them.
George: Well, *I* don't, Beatle people. I sign the
autograph and thank them profusely for coming over and offer them a
piece of my chop.
John: If we're in the middle of a meal, I usually
say, "Do you mind waiting till I'm finished?"
George: And then we keep eating until they give up
and leave.
John: That's not true, Beatle people!
Playboy: Apart from these occupational hazards,
are you happy in your work? Do you really enjoy getting pelted by
jelly beans and being drowned out by thousands of screaming
subteenagers?
Ringo: Yes.
George: We still find it exciting.
John: Well, you know ...
Paul: After a while, you begin to get used to it,
you know.
Playboy: Can you really get *used* to it?
Paul: Well, you still get excited when you go onto
a stage and the audience is great, you know. But obviously you're
not as excited as as you were when you first heard that one of your
records had reached number one. I mean, you really go *wild* with
excitement then; you go out drinking and celebrating and things.
Ringo: Now we just go out drinkin' anyway.
Playboy: Do you stick pretty much together
offstage?
John: Well, yes and no. Groups like this are
normally not friends, you know; they're just four people out there
thrown together to make an act. There may be two of them who sort of
go off and are friends, you know, but ...
George: Just what do you mean by that?
John: Strictly platonic, of course. But we're all
rather *good* friends, as it happens.
Playboy: Then you do see a good deal of one
another when you're not working?
Paul: Well, you know, it depends. We needn't
always go to the same places together. In earlier days, of course,
when we didn't know London, and we didn't know anyone *in* London,
then we really did stick together, and it would be like four fellows
down from the north on a coach trip. But nowadays, you know, we've
got our own girlfriends - they're in London - so that we each
normally go out with our girlfriends on our days off. Except for
John, of course, who's married.
Playboy: Do any of the rest of you have plans to
settle down?
Paul: I haven't got any.
George: Ringo and I are gettin' married.
Playboy: Oh? To whom?
George: To each other. But that's a thing you'd
better keep secret.
Ringo: you'd better not tell anybody.
George: I mean, if we said something like that,
people'd probably think we were queers. After all, that's not the
sort of thing you can put in a reputable magazine like Playboy. And
anyway, we don't want to start the rumor going.
Playboy: We'd better change the subject, then. Do
you remember the other night when this girl came backstage ...
George: naked ...
Playboy: Unfortunately not. And she said ...
George: "It1s been a hard day's night."
Playboy: No, she pointed at you, George, and said,
"There1s a Beatle!" And you others said, "That's George." and she
said, "No, its a Beatle."
John: And you said, "This way to the bedroom."
Playboy: No, it was, "Would you like us to
introduce you to him?"
John: I like my line better.
Playboy: Well, the point is that she didn't
believe there was such a thing as an actual Beatle *person*.
John: She's right, you know.
Playboy: Do you run across many like her?
George: Are there any other kind?
Playboy: In America, too?
Ringo: Everywhere.
Playboy: With no exceptions?
John: In America, you mean?
Playboy: A few.
Paul: yeah, some of those American girls have been
great.
John: Like Joan Baez.
Paul: Joan Baez is good, yeah, very good.
John: She's the only one I like.
George: And Jayne Mansfield. Playboy made her.
Paul: She's a bit different, isn't she?
*Different*.
Ringo: She's soft.
George: Soft and warm.
Paul: Actually, she's a clot.
Ringo: Says Paul, the god of the Beatles.
Paul: I didn't mean it, Beatle people! Actually, I
haven't even met her. But you won't print that anyway, of course,
because Playboy is very *pro* Mansfield. They think she's a rave.
But she really is an old bag.
Playboy: By the way, what are Beatle people?
John: It's something they use in the fan mags in
America. They all start out, "Hi there, Beatle people, 'spect you're
wondering what the Fab Foursome are doing these days!" Now we use it
all the time, too.
Paul: It's low-level journalese.
John: but I mean, you know, there's nothing wrong
with that. It's harmless.
Playboy: Speaking of low level journalese, there
was a comment in one of the London papers the other that paralleled
you guys to Hitler. Seriously! It said you have the same technique
of drawing cheers from the crowd ...
Paul: That power isn't so much us being like
Hitler; it's that the audience and the show have got sort of, you
know, a Hitler *feel* about them, because the audience will shout
when they're told to. That's what the critic was talking about.
Actually, that article was one which I got really annoyed about,
cause she's never even met us.
Playboy: She?
Paul: the woman who wrote it. She's never met us,
but she's dead against us. Like that Hitler bit. And she said we
were very boring people. "The Boresome Foursome", she called us. You
know, this woman was really just shouting her mouth off about us -
as people, I mean.
Ringo: Oh, come on.
Paul: No, *you* come on. I ran up the newspaper,
you know, but they wouldn't let me speak to her. In actual fact,
they said, "Well, I'll tell you, the reason we don't give her phone
number out is because she never likes to speak to people on the
phone because she's got a terrible stutter." So I never did actually
follow it up. Felt sorry for her. But I mean, the cheek of her,
writing this damn article about us. And telling everyone how we're
starting riots, and how we're such bores - and she's never even met
us, mind you! I mean, we could turn around and say the same about
her! I could go and thump her!
George: Bastard fascist!
Playboy: Ringo ...
Ringo: Yes, Playboy, sir?
Playboy: How do *you* feel about the press? Has
your attitude changed in the last year or so?
Ringo: Yes. Playboy: In what way?
Ringo: I hate 'em now more than I did before.
Playboy: Did you hear about the riot in Glasgow on
the night of your last show there?
John: We heard about it after.
Playboy: Did you know that the next day there was
a letter that accused you of directly *inciting* the violence?
Ringo: How can we say that? We don1t even wiggle.
It's not bloody fair.
George: Bastards!
Paul: Glasgow is like Belfast. There'll probably
be a skirmish there, too. But it's not because of us. It's because
people in certain cities just hate the cops more than in other
cities.
George: Right.
Paul: There were ridiculous riots last time we
were there - but it wasn't riots for us. The crowd was there for us,
but the riots after our show ...
Ringo: All the drunks come out, out of the pubs.
Paul: ... it was just beatin' up coppers.
Playboy: They just used the occasion as a pretext
to get at the cops?
George: Yeah.
Paul: In Dublin this trip, did you see where the
crowd sort of stopped all the traffic? They even pulled a driver out
of a bus.
John: They also called out the fire brigade. We
had four engines this time.
Paul: Well, it's vaguely related, I suppose. It's
got *something* to do with it, inasmuch as the crowds happen to be
there because of our show.
John: But nobody who's got a bit of common sense
would seriously think that 15-year-old girls are going round
smashing shop windows on account of us.
George: Certainly not. Those girls are *eight*
years old.
Playboy: This talk of violence leads to a related
question. Do you think there'll be another war soon?
George: Yeah, Friday.
Ringo: I hope not. Not just after we1ve got our
money through the taxes.
John: The trouble is, if they do start another
war, then everybody goes with you.
Playboy: Do you think the Rolling Stones will be
the first to go?
Paul: It won't matter, because we'll probably be
in London or Liverpool at the time, and when they drop the bomb,
it'll be in the middle of the city. So we probably won't even know
it when it happens.
Playboy: I brought this up for a reason, fellows.
There was an essay not long ago in a very serious commentary
magazine, saying that before every major war in this century, there
has been a major wave of public hysteria over certain specific
entertainers. There was the Irene Castle craze before World War I
...
Paul: Oh, yes.
George: I remember that well.
Playboy: And then, before World War II, there was
the swing craze, with Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw, and all the
dancing in the aisles. And now *you* - before ...
John: Hold on! It's not our fault!
Playboy: We're not saying you may have anything to
do with inciting a war ...
Paul: Thanks.
Playboy: But don't you think you may be a symptom
of the times, part of an undercurrent that's building up?
Paul: that sort of comparison just falls down when
you look at it, really. It's just like saying that this morning a
fly landed on my bed and I looked at my watch and it was eight o'
clock, and that therefore every morning at eight o' clock flies land
on the bed. It doesn't prove anything just cause it happens a few
times.
Playboy: Let's move on to another observation
about you. Did you know that the Duke of Edinburgh was recently
quoted as saying he thought you were on your way out?
John: Good luck, Duke.
George: No comment. See my manager.
Paul: He didn't say it, though. There was a
retraction, wasn't there?
John: Yeah, we got a telegram. Wonderful news.
Paul: And we sent one back. Addressed to "Liz and
Phil".
Playboy: Have you ever met the Queen?
John: No, she's the only one we haven't met. We've
met all the others.
Paul: All the mainstays.
Playboy: Winston Churchill?
Ringo: No, not him.
John: He's a good lad, though.
Playboy: Would you like to meet him?
George: Not really. Not more than anyone else.
Paul: I dunno. Somebody like that you wish you
could have met when he was really at his peak, you know, and sort of
doing things and being great. But there wouldn't be a lot of point
now, because he's sort of gone into retirement and doesn't do a lot
of things anymore.
Playboy: Is there any other celebrity you *would*
like to meet?
Paul: I wouldn't mind meeting Adolf Hitler.
George: You could have every room in your home
papered.
Playboy: Would you like to meet Princess
Margaret?
Paul: We have.
Playboy: And how do you like her?
Ringo: OK. And Philip's OK, too.
Playboy: even after what he supposedly said about
you?
Ringo: I don't care what he said; I still think
he's OK. He didn't say anything about me personally.
Paul: Even if he *had* said things about us, it
doesn't make him worse, you know.
Playboy: Speaking of royalty ...
Paul: Royalty never condemns anything unless it's
something that they know everybody else condemns.
Ringo: If I was royal ...
Paul: If I was royal I would crack long jokes and
get a mighty laugh. If I was royal.
Playboy: You guys seem to be pretty irreverent
characters. Are any of you churchgoers?
John: No.
George: No.
Paul: Not particularly. But we're not
antireligious. We probably seem to be antireligious because of the
fact that none of us believe in God.
John: If you say you don't believe in God,
everybody assumes you're antireligious, and you probably think
that's what we mean by that. We're not quite sure *what* we are, but
I know we're more agnostic than atheistic.
Playboy: Are you speaking for the group or just
yourself?
John: For the group.
George: John's our official religious spokesman.
Paul: We all feel roughly the same. We're all
agnostics.
John: Most people are, anyway.
Ringo: It's better to admit it than to be a
hypocrite.
John: The only thing we1ve got against religion is
the hypocritical side of it, which I can't stand. Like the clergy is
always moaning about people being poor, while they themselves are
all going around with millions of quid worth of robes on. That's the
stuff I can't stand.
Paul: A new bronze door stuck on the Vatican.
Ringo: Must have cost a mighty penny.
Paul: But believe it or not, we1re not
anti-Christ.
Ringo: Just anti-Pope and anti-Christian.
Paul: But you know, in America ...
George: They were more shocked by us saying we
were agnostics.
John: they went potty; they couldn't take it. Same
as in Australia, where they couldn't stand us not liking sports.
Paul: In America they're fanatical about God. I
know someone over there who said he was an atheist. The papers
nearly refused to print it because it was such shocking news that
someone could actually be an atheist. Yeah, and admit it.
Ringo: He speaks for all of us.
Playboy: To bring up another topic that's shocking
to some, how do you feel about the homosexual problem?
George: Oh yeah, well, we're all homosexuals too.
Ringo: Yeah, we're all queer.
Paul: But don't tell anyone.
Playboy: But seriously, is there more
homosexuality in England than elsewhere?
John: Are you saying there's more over here than
in America?
Playboy: We're just asking.
George: It1s just that they've got crewcuts in
America. You can't spot 'em.
Paul: There's probably a million more queers in
America than in England. England has its scandals - like Profumo and
all - but at least they're heterosexual.
John: Still, we do have more than our share of
queers, don'1t you think?
Paul: It seems that way because there are more
printed about them over here.
Ringo: If they find out that somebody is a bit
bent, the press will always splash it about.
Paul: Right. Take Profumo, for example. He's just
an ordinary ...
Ringo: Sex maniac.
Paul: ... just an ordinary fellow who sleeps with
women. Yet it's adultery in the eyes of the law, and it's an
international incident. But in actual fact, if you check up on the
statistics, you find that there are hardly *any married* men who've
been completely faithful to their wives.
John: *I* have! Listen, Beatle people ...
Paul: All right, we know John's spotless. But when
a thing like that gets into the newspapers, everybody goes very,
very, Puritan, and they pretend they don't know what sex is about.
George: They get so bloody virtuous all of a
sudden.
Paul: Yes, and some poor heel has got to take the
brunt of the whole thing. But in actual fact, if you ask the average
Briton what they really think of the Profumo case, they'd probably
say, "He was knockin1 off some bird. So what?"
Playboy: Incidentally, you1ve met Mandy
Rice-Davies, haven1t you?
George: What are you looking at *me* for?
Playboy: Because we hear she was looking at
*you*.
John: We did meet Christine Keeler.
Ringo: I'll tell you who *I* met. I met
what's-her-name - April Ashley.
John: I met her too, the other night.
Playboy: Isn't she the one who used to be a man,
changed her sex and married into the nobility?
John: That's the one.
Ringo: She swears at me, you know. But when she
sobers up she apologizes.
John: Actually, I quite like her. Him. It. That.
Paul: The trouble with saying something like
"Profumo was a victim of circumstances" or "April Ashley isn't so
bad, even though she's changed sex" - saying things like that in
print to most people seems so shocking; whereas in actual fact, if
you really think about it, it isn't. Just saying a thing like that
sounds more shocking than it is.
Ringo: I got up in the Ad Lib the other night and
a big handbag hit me in the gut. I thought it was somebody I knew; I
didn't have any glasses on. I said "Hello" and a bloody big worker
"Arrgh." So I just ran into the bog. Because I'd heard about things
like that.
Playboy: What are you talking about?
George: He doesn't know.
Playboy: Do you?
George: Haven't the slightest.
Playboy: Can you give us a hint, Ringo? What's the
Ad Lib, for example?
Ringo: It's a club.
George: Like your Peppermint Lounge, and the
Whiskey a Go Go. It's the same thing.
Paul: no, the English version is a little
different.
John: The Whiskey a Go Go is exactly the same,
isn't it, only they have someone dancing on the ceiling, don't
they?
George: Don't be ridiculous, they have *two* girls
dancing on the roof; and in the Ad Lib they have a colored chap.
That's the difference.
Playboy: We heard a rumor that one of you was
thinking of opening a club.
John: I wonder who it was, Ringo.
Ringo: I don't know, John. There was a rumor, yes.
I heard that one, too.
Playboy: Is there any truth to it?
Ringo: Well, yes. We was going to open one in
Hollywood, but it fell through.
John: Dino wouldn't let you take the place over.
Ringo: No.
Paul: And we decided it1s not worth it. So we
decided to sit tight for six months and buy ..
George: America.
Playboy: Have you heard about the Playboy Club
that's opening in London?
Ringo: Yes, I've heard about it.
Playboy: What do you think of our Clubs?
Ringo: They're for dirty old men, not for the
likes of us - dirty *young* men. They're for businessmen who sneak
out without their wives knowing, or if their wives sneak out first,
for those who go out openly.
George: There1s no real fun in a bunny's fluffy
tail.
Playboy: Then you don't think a Club will make it
here?
George: Oh yes, 'course it will.
Ringo: There's enough dirty old men here.
Playboy: Have you ever read the magazine?
John: Yes.
George: Yes.
Ringo: I get my copy every month. Tits.
Playboy: Do you read the "Philosophy," any of
you?
Paul: Some of it. When the journey's really long
and you can't last out the pictures, you start reading it. It's OK.
Playboy: How about Playboy's Jazz Poll? Do you
read it, too?
John: Occasionally.
Playboy: Do you enjoy jazz, any of you?
George: What kind?
Playboy: American jazz.
John: Who, for example?
Playboy: You tell us.
Paul: We only dig those who dig us.
Playboy: Seriously, who? Anyone?
John: Getz. But only because someone gave me an
album of his. With him and someone called Iguana, or something like
that.
Playboy: You mean Joao Gilberto?
John: I don't know. Some Mexican.
Playboy: He's Brazilian. John: Oh.
Playboy: Are you guys getting tired of talking?
John: No.
Paul: No, let's order some drinks. Scotch or
Coke?
John; I'll have chocolate.
George: Scotch for me and Paul and chocolate for
the Beatle teenager.
John: Scotch is bad for your kidneys.
Paul: How about you, Ringo? Don't you want
something to keep you awake while you're listening to all this
rubbish?
Ringo: I'll have a Coke.
John: How about you, Playboy, are you man or
woman?
Paul: It's a Beatle people!
George: Who's your fave rave?
Paul: I love you!
George: How gear.
Playboy: Speaking of fave raves, why do you think
the rock 'n roll phenomenon is bigger in England than in America?
John: Is it?
Paul: Yes. You see, in England, after us, you have
thousands of groups coming out everywhere, but in America they've
just sort of had the same groups going for ages. Some have made it
and some haven't, but there aren't any real *new* ones. If we'd been
over there instead of over here, there probably would have been the
same upsurge over there. Our road manager made an interesting point
the other day about this difference in America. In America the
people who are the big stars are not our age. There's nobody who1s a
really big star around our age. Possibly it may seem like a small
point, but there's no conscription - no draft - here. In America we
used to hear about someone like Elvis, who was a very big star and
then suddenly he was off in the Army.
John: And the Everly Brothers.
Paul: Yes, the Everly Brothers as well went into
the Army at the height of their fame. And the Army seems to do
something to singers. It may make them think what they're plying is
stupid and childish. Or it may make them want to change their style,
and consequently they may not be as popular when they come out of
the Army. It may also make people forget them, and consequently they
may have a harder job getting back on top when they get out. But
here, of course, we don1t have that problem.
John: Except those who go to prison.
Paul: It's become so easy to form a group
nowadays, and to make a record, that hundreds are doing it - and
making a good living at it. Whereas when we started, it took us a
couple of years before the record companies would even listen to us,
never mind give us a contract. But now, you just walk in and if they
think you'1re OK, you're on.
Playboy: Do you think you had anything to do with
bringing this all about?
John: It's a damn fact.
Paul: Not only us. Us and people who followed us.
But we were the first really to get national coverage because of
some big shows that we did, and because of a lot of public interest
in us.
Playboy: What do you think is the most important
element of your success - the personal appearances or the records?
John: Records. Records have always been the main
thing. P.A.s always follow records. Our first records were made, and
then we appeared.
Playboy: Followed closely by Beatle dolls. Have
you seen them?
George: They're actually life size, you know.
Playboy: The only ones we've seen are five inches
high.
Paul: Well, we're midgets, you see.
Playboy: How does it make you feel to have
millions of effigies of yourselves decorating bedsides all over the
world? Don't you feel honored to have been immortalized in plastic?
After all, there's no such thing as a Frank Sinatra doll or an Elvis
Presley doll.
George: Who'd want an ugly old crap doll like
that?
Playboy: Would you prefer a George doll, George?
George: No, but I've got a Ringo doll at home.
Playboy: Did you know you are probably the first
public figures to have dolls made of them - except maybe Yogi Berra?
John: In Jellystone Park. Do you mean the
cartoon?
Playboy: No. Didn't you know that the cartoon
character is based on a real person - Yogi Berra, the baseball
player?
George: Oh.
John: I didn't know that.
Paul: Well, they're making us into a cartoon, too,
in the States. It's a series.
John: The highest achievement you could ever get.
Paul: We feel proud and humble.
Playboy: Did you know, George, that at the corner
of 47th Street and Broadway in New York, there is a giant cutout of
you on display?
George: Of me?
Playboy: Life size.
Ringo: Nude.
Playboy: No - but the reason we mention it is that
it's really a signal honor. For years on that corner, there's been a
big store with with life-size cut-out of Marilyn Monroe, Anita
Eckberg or Jayne Mansfield in that window.
John: And now it's George.
Paul: The only difference is, they've got bigger
tits.
Ringo: I suppose that's *one* way of putting it.
George: the party's getting rough. I'm going to go
to bed. You carry on, though; I'll just stop my ears with cotton -
so as not to hear the insults and the smutty language.
Playboy: We've just about run out of steam
anyway.
John: Do you have all you need?
Playboy: Enough. Many thanks, fellows.
John: Of course a lot of it you won1t be able to
use - 'crap' and 'tit' and 'bloody' and 'bastard' and all.
Playboy: Wait and see.
Ringo: Finish your Scotch before you go.
John: You don't mind if I climb into bed, do you?
I'm frazzled.
Playboy: Not at all. Good night.
Ringo: Good night, Playboy.
George: It's been a hard day's night.
END
Copyright
©
1965 Playboy Magazine |