Sean admits he has little to do with the millions of people for whom his father has become a secular saint, who speak the name “John Lennon” in the same breath as “Albert Schweitzer” or “Nelson Mandela” and create monuments to him of every kind, from an airport in Liverpool to a “tower of light” in Iceland and a graffiti wall in Prague. “My mom doesn’t really understand why I don’t want to meet those who worship John Lennon, why I don’t want to visit the John Lennon tribute concerts or go to the John Lennon Museum. It just hurts too much. I’ve sung ‘This Boy’ at a tribute concert because I love the song and I’m a professional musician, I can do any gig I’m asked to, but I didn’t like doing it.

  “It’s not that I don’t want to honor him, because I feel like my whole life is a living tribute to him. But to go to a museum or see a movie that depicts his life, it just hurts. Watching a show about him on Broadway for me was like going naked through the flames of Hell. Because those memories that I have of my childhood are so important to me. To see them co-opted to make a diorama in a museum or a Broadway show makes me feel like I’m being violated.”

  He accepts it is his duty to support Yoko in administering and protecting the Lennon legacy. “If I owe it to my mom to do it, I’ll do it, because I love her the most. But on a spiritual level, it doesn’t enrich my life to do interviews, to do tributes and museums and have my experience of my father turned into media. I don’t read books about him, I don’t need to see movies or shows about him. I don’t need to prove to the world that he did all these things.

  “And I don’t think he’d be all that bothered that I’ve inherited his streak of rebelliousness. I have the music and I have the memories and that’s what is precious to me. I have him in my heart.”

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  In September 2003, I suggested to John’s widow, Yoko Ono, that I should become his biographer. I felt thoroughly qualified for the task: my book Shout! was regarded as the definitive work on the Beatles and I had known Yoko personally since 1981, when she invited me to the Dakota Building just five months after John’s murder. Since then, surprisingly, there had been only two full-scale biographies of the man and his music, both published in the 1980s, neither doing him justice. Ray Coleman’s Lennon was an honorable attempt but one that never quite brought John alive on the page, while Albert Goldman’s malevolent, risibly ignorant The Lives of John Lennon could be totally discounted.

  Yoko agreed to my suggestion, with the proviso that it should not be called an “authorized” biography. Over the next three years, in a series of interviews in New York and London, she spoke with remarkable honesty and passion about the life she and John had shared. She also made it possible for me to talk to others close to John, in particular their son Sean and her daughter, Kyoko. The only other condition was that she should read the manuscript for factual accuracy. I assumed she would approve of what I had written since it was in the same spirit as Shout!: candid about John’s many flaws, but portraying him as both a massive influence on twentieth-century culture and an ultimately adorable human being. Part of my mission, too, was to correct some of the myths about Yoko herself, which after these years still make her a figure of hatred and ridicule for so many. I was amazed therefore when, in late 2007, she told me she was upset by the book and would not endorse it. Her reasons were various but the principal one was that I had been “mean to John.” I hope that in time she may revise this judgment, for I do not think any other reader will share it.

  As a journalist during the Sixties, I met John only twice: first in 1965, during what turned out to be the Beatles’ last UK tour, and again in mid-1969, while he and Yoko were orchestrating their peace campaign from the Apple house in Savile Row. For his view of the world I have inevitably had to rely on quotes he gave to other people, collated from famously forthright sessions with magazines like Rolling Stone and Playboy and innumerable other sources, major and minor—for here was, perhaps, the only celebrity in history who never did a dull or dishonest interview. Otherwise, my aim was to reconstruct his life completely afresh, writing for a hypothetical reader who has never heard of him or listened to a note of his music, ignoring all preconceptions, including my own. Indeed, I would frequently find myself correcting inaccuracies and misjudgments which had been in every edition of Shout!

  Biographers rely greatly on luck, and with this project my share was exceptional. Despite the widespread (and untrue) perception that I am “anti-Paul,” Sir Paul McCartney agreed to answer questions of fact by e-mail, and did so promptly and in generous detail. Notwithstanding a conviction that he had nothing new left to say, the Beatles’ nonpareil record producer Sir George Martin saw me at his AIR studios—situated fortuitously just a couple of streets from my London home—and said much that was fascinatingly new. The late Neil Aspinall, the Beatles’ closest and most loyal associate, broke a forty-year rule not to talk to writers, granting me several interviews and also checking part of the manuscript. John’s cousins Mike Cadwallader and Liela Harvey were both unstinting in their help, as was his stepmother, Pauline Stone, who showed me documents which cast somewhat different light on his much maligned father, Freddie. John’s two closest friends from the New York years, Elliot Mintz and Bob Gruen, shared intimate memories and checked relevant portions of the text, I also received invaluable guidance from Leon Wildes, the lawyer who masterminded his fight against deportation from the United States.

  Peter Trollope proved a brilliant researcher, tracking down lost links in John’s life with an indefatigability worthy of Sherlock Holmes. For fact-checking and advice I am deeply indebted to Bill Harry, John’s friend at art college, later founder-editor of Mersey Beat and author of the John Lennon Encyclopedia. Invaluable editorial help from my old Sunday Times colleague, Nick Mason, slimmed down the first draft from its original 360,000 words. Allan Kozinn of the New York Times provided CDs of John’s lesser-known American radio interviews and took immense pains in weeding out errors from the manuscript—as did my fellow biographer Johnny Rogan during a six-hour session at London’s Groucho Club. In Liverpool, many old friends made through Shout! were kind and hospitable all over again, notably Brian Epstein’s old friend and adviser Joe Flannery, and former Quarrymen Colin Hanton and Len Garry. New ones also emerged, like Bill Heckle of Cavern City Tours, who gave me the run of his contacts book, and Colin Hall, the custodian of John’s childhood home in Woolton, now run by the National Trust.

  Although every care has been with fact-checking, a work of this size cannot hope to be 100 percent error-free. Few subjects generate experts like the Beatles and I am aware how many will be combing my text for the smallest slips. For these I apologize in advance and promise that as many as possible will be rectified in future editions.

  Grateful acknowledgment is made to Sir Paul McCartney for the quotation from Many Years from Now, his authorized biography by Barry Miles (Secker & Warburg, 1997); to Pauline Stone for the unpublished writings and deposition of Freddie Lennon; to Michael Cadwallader for Mimi Smith’s letters; and to Bill Harry for material from Mersey Beat.

  Special thanks to Michael Sissons and Peter Matson for unfailing support and friendship; to Dan Halpern of Ecco, a rock throughout the long and often fraught composition process; to Trevor Dolby who commissioned the book for HarperCollins UK and Carole Tonkinson who took it over; to Carol MacArthur and Fiona Petheram at PFD, and Sam Edenborough and Nicki Kennedy at the Intercontinental Literary Agency for taking the book so enthusiastically to its non–English language publishers; to Tariq Mazid for ever reliable technical support; to Gordon Smith and Stephen Simou of Citroen Wells; and to François and Danièle Roux for giving me a summer sanctuary at La Colombe d’Or in St. Paul de Vence.

  Grateful thanks also to: Helen Anderson, Les Anthony, David Ashton, Andrew Bailey, Tony Barrow, Dot Becker, Sid Bernstein, Cilla Black, Tony Bramwell, Peter Brown, James Burrows, Tony Calder, Ronnie Carroll, James Chads, Maureen Cleave, Tyler Coneys, John O’Connor, Wendy Cook, Ray Connolly, Celia Crighto
n, Rod Davis, Sheridon Davis, Jeff Dexter, Sonny Freeman Drane, John Dunbar, Ron Ellis, Royston Ellis, Horst Fascher, Yankel Feather, Colin Fellows, Michael Fishwick, Ray Foulk, June Furlong, Johnny Gentle, Olwen Gillespie, Harry Gooseman, Bob Green, Sam Green, Frances Greenhous, the late Eric Griffiths, John Gustafson, Rolf Harris, Jon Hendricks, Kevin Hewlett, Simon Hilton, Peter Hodgson, the late Nicholas Horsfield, Thomas Hoving, Peter Howard, Maurice Hyams, Patricia Inder, Arthur Janov, Vivian Janov, Tim and Joyce Jeal, Iris Keitel, Jim Keltner, Jonathan King, Astrid Kirchherr, Cosmo Landesman, Sharon Lawrence, Sam Leach, Caroline Lee, Spencer Leigh, Joyce Lennon, Richard Lester, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Kenny Lynch, Barbara McKie, Laurie Mansfield, Gerry Marsden, Ann Mason, Albert Maysles, Barry Miles, Lee Montague, Colin Morris, Rod Murray, Paul du Noyer, Geoff Nugent, Andrew Oldham, Simon Osborne, William Pobjoy, Sir Cliff Richard, Dan Richter, Cynthia Riley, Charles Roberts, Craig Sams, Gregory Sams, Sandy Sams, Robert Sandall, Art Schreiber, Jackie de Shannon Tony Sheridan, Victor Spinetti, Peter Stockton, Ursula Stone, Peter Suchet, Jimmy Tarbuck, Joan Taylor, Klaus Voormann, Nigel Walley, Michael Ward, and Jane Wirgman.

  Finally to my wife Sue, who suggested I should write this book, go all my love and gratitude.

  PHILIP NORMAN

  LONDON, 2008

  SEARCHABLE TERMS

  Note: Entries in this index, carried over verbatim from the print edition of this title, are unlikely to correspond to the pagination of any given e-book reader. However, entries in this index, and other terms, may be easily located by using the search feature of your e-book reader.

  Abbey Road, 608–609, 611–614, 625, 719

  ABKCO Industries, 600, 709 Acorn Event, 542–543

  Acorns, burying for peace, 602, 604 Ad Lib club, 325, 423

  Adler, Lou, 715, 721

  Aftermath, 480

  Alchemical Wedding, 593

  Aldridge, Alan, 560, 575

  Ali, Tariq, 661–662

  “All My Loving,” 349

  All Things Must Pass, 655, 657, 669–670

  “All Together Now,” 561

  “All You Need Is Love,” 499–500, 561

  Allsop, Ken, 417

  Alpert, Richard, 430

  Amaya, Mario, 476

  “And Your Bird Can Sing,” 433

  Anderson, Helen, 115, 154, 155–156, 164

  Anderson, Jim, 669, 670–671

  “Angela,” 699, 700

  Animals, 412, 415

  Anthony, Les, 388, 466, 545–546, 609, 675

  Alf Lennon and, 510, 511

  hired, 384–385

  How I Won the War and, 459

  JL and Yoko Ono’s wedding and, 594, 595

  on marijuana use, 396–397

  at Tittenhurst Park, 616

  Apotheosis (film), 620, 668

  Apple Corps, 588, 589, 600–601

  Bag Productions and, 601–602

  JL and, 559, 560

  projects of, 514, 515–516, 542, 559–562, 563–565, 584–585, 661

  “Western Communism” and, 539, 564, 583–584

  Arden, Don, 283

  Aronowitz, Al, 351, 660

  Dylan meeting and, 374, 375, 376

  Asher, Jane, 310, 324, 429, 434

  breaks engagement to McCartney, 546

  Transcendental Meditation and, 533, 536

  Asher, Peter, 324, 429–430

  Apple Corps management, 560, 584, 601

  Ashton, David, 46, 52, 76

  “Ask Me Why,” 270–271, 296

  Aspinall, Neil, 223, 230, 243, 683, 773

  Apple Corps and, 585, 661, 756–757

  Beatles’ drug use and, 396, 492, 573

  on Beatles’ performance, 293

  Best and, 272, 275

  Dylan meeting, 375, 376

  Epstein and, 254, 507

  Get Back/Let It Be project and, 587

  How I Won the War and, 458–459

  “Imagine” and, 776

  on JL and Dylan, 415

  JL and Yoko Ono’s wedding and, 594

  LSD and, 426

  on Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, 504

  Presley meeting and, 405

  as road manager, 332–334, 431

  on rumored reunion, 786

  Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and, 487

  Transcendental Meditation and, 534, 536

  world tour, 1964, 364–365

  world tour, 1966, 441, 442

  “Yellow Submarine” and, 434

  Astaire, Fred, 682

  “Attica State,” 699

  ATV company, 603–604, 630, 665, 700

  “Baby It’s You,” 295

  “Baby You’re a Rich Man,” 503

  “Baby’s in Black,” 393, 397–398

  “Back in the USSR,” 576

  Bag One, 633–634

  Bag Productions, 601–602, 626

  “Bagism,” 593

  Bailey, R. F., 60

  Bainbridge, Beryl, 172

  Baker, Barbara, 45, 75–76, 93, 111, 146

  “Ballad of John and Yoko, The,” 598–599, 699

  Ballard, Arthur, 128–129, 134, 136, 153, 161, 190

  Band on the Run, 729–730

  Barber, Chris, 86

  Bardot, Brigitte

  Cynthia and look of, 166, 203, 302, 457

  fantasies about, 73, 131, 521, 525, 550

  Inder and, 272

  JL meets, 563

  Barrow, Tony

  on Beatles in 1965, 403

  hired, 284

  on JL and Cynthia, 344

  on JL’s singing, 317

  Julian’s birth and, 306

  keeps JL’s marriage secret, 301

  Presley meeting and, 405

  public relations work of, 297–298, 331, 431

  US tour, 1966, 451–452, 453

  Wooler fight and, 311

  world tour, 1966, 441, 442

  Bart, Lionel, 496

  Bassanini, Roberto, 544–545, 572, 578, 609, 722

  BBC Light Programme

  Beatles on, 292, 300, 309

  JL listens to as youth, 42

  “Be Bop-a-Lula,” 746, 750

  Beach Boys, 413, 480, 538

  Beatals, 171–178

  Beatlemania

  in UK, 222, 315–322

  in US, 343–348, 369–370

  Beatles, 192, 308. See also specific albums, films, individuals, and songs

  answers to questions about name, 322

  appearance of, 288, 293, 403–404

  audition for Decca, 253–254

  audition for Parlophone, 259

  as Beatals, 171–178

  breakup of, 622–625, 645–646

  business interests after Epstein’s death, 513–515

  at Cavern, 225–232, 258

  “comeback film,” proposed, 580–583, 586–588

  comedy of, 231

  competitors and rivals, 340, 412–415, 479–481

  end of touring and, 454–462

  Epstein signs to manage, 251–253

  first LP of, 294–296

  first professional film footage of, 275–276

  first single of, 281

  friendships among, 333–334

  Hamburg trips and, 189–225, 232–240, 265–269