| John Lennon |

John
Lennon, circa 1969.
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
John Winston Lennon |
| Born |
9 October 1940(1940-10-09)
Liverpool,
England |
| Died |
8 December 1980 (aged 40)
New
York City, New
York, United
States |
| Genre(s) |
Rock, Pop |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer-songwriter,
Musician,
Poet, Artist, Activist |
| Instrument(s) |
Guitar, Harmonica, Piano, Bass, Melodica, Banjo |
| Years active |
1957 – 1975, 1980 |
| Label(s) |
Parlophone, Capitol,
Apple,
Vee-Jay, EMI, Geffen |
Associated
acts |
The
Beatles
Plastic Ono Band
The Dirty Mac |
| Website |
JohnLennon.com |
John Winston Ono Lennon, MBE (9 October 1940 – 8 December
1980), was an
Academy
Award and Grammy Award-winning English songwriter,
singer, musician, graphic
artist, author
and political
activist who gained worldwide fame as one of the founders of The
Beatles. Lennon and Paul McCartney formed a
critically acclaimed and commercially successful partnership
writing songs for The Beatles and other artists.
Lennon, with his cynical edge and knack for introspection, and
McCartney, with his storytelling optimism and gift for melody,
complemented each other uniquely.
In his solo career, Lennon wrote and recorded songs such as "Imagine"
and "Give Peace a Chance".
Lennon revealed his rebellious nature and irreverent wit on television,
in films
such as A Hard Day's Night
(1964), in books
such as In His Own Write,
and in press conferences and interviews. He channelled his fame and
penchant for controversy into his work as a peace
activist, artist,
and author.
He had two sons, Julian, with his first wife Cynthia,
and Sean, with his second wife, avant-garde
artist Yoko
Ono. Lennon was murdered by a deranged fan, Mark
David Chapman, in New York City on 8 December 1980 as he and Ono returned home from a
recording session.
In 2002, respondents to a BBC poll on the 100
Greatest Britons voted Lennon into eighth place. In 2004, Rolling
Stone ranked Lennon number 38 on their list of "The Immortals: The
Fifty Greatest Artists of All Time"
and ranked The Beatles at number 1.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
years: 1940-1957
- 2 1957-1960:
The Quarrymen and the Silver Beetles
- 3 1960-1970:
The Beatles
- 4 1970-1975:
Solo career
- 5 Personal
life
- 5.1 Cynthia
and Julian Lennon
- 5.2 Yoko
Ono
- 5.3 May
Pang and the 'lost weekend'
- 5.4 House-husband
- 5.5 Estrangement
from his father
- 6 Political
and lifestyle controversies
- 6.1 Christianity
- 6.2 Political
activism and the deportation battle
- 6.3 Recreational
drug use
- 6.4 Meditation
- 6.5 Primal
therapy
- 6.6 Humour
- 6.7 Writing
and art
- 7 Death
- 7.1 Memorials
and tributes
- 8 Pseudonyms
- 9 Awards
- 9.1 With
The Beatles
- 9.2 Solo
career
- 10 Discography
- 11 Documentaries
and films
- 12 See
also
- 13 Notes
- 14 References
- 15 External
links
|
Early years: 1940-1957
John Winston Lennon was born on 9 October 1940, in the Oxford
Street Maternity Hospital in Liverpool, to Julia
Lennon (née Stanley) and Alfred "Freddie" Lennon,
during the course of a German air raid in World
War II.
He was named after his paternal grandfather, John 'Jack' Lennon, and Winston
Churchill.
Both parents played the banjo and sang (Freddie specialised in
impersonating Al
Jolson) though neither pursued music professionally.
Freddie Lennon was not present at John's birth. He was a merchant
seaman during the war and sent regular pay cheques to
Julia, who was living with John in Newcastle Road, Liverpool. The
cheques stopped when Freddie went AWOL.
As Freddie was seldom in Liverpool, Julia started going out to dance halls
and met a Welsh soldier called 'Taffy' Williams
by whom she became pregnant in late 1944.
When Freddie Lennon eventually came home in 1944 he offered to look
after Julia, John, and the expected baby, but Julia rejected the idea.
On 19
June 1945
she gave birth to a daughter, Victoria,
who was given up for adoption after intense pressure from Julia's
family (the girl was later re-named Ingrid) .
Lennon was not told about his half-sister's birth and never knew of her
existence.
Julia later met John 'Bobby' Dykins and moved into a small flat with
him.
After comments on the still-married Julia 'living
in sin' with Dykins
and after considerable pressure from her sister, Mary
"Mimi" Smith — who contacted Liverpool's Social
Services and complained about John sleeping in the same bed as Julia
and Dykins — Julia reluctantly handed the care of John over to Mimi.
(Julia later had two daughters - Julia and Jackie - with Dykins.)
In July 1946, Freddie visited Mimi and took John to Blackpool
for a long 'holiday', secretly intending to emigrate to New
Zealand with him.
Julia and Dykins found out and followed them, and after a heated
argument Freddie made the five-year-old John choose between Julia or
him. John chose Freddie (twice) and then Julia walked away, but John,
crying, followed her.
Freddie then lost contact with the family until Beatlemania,
when father and son met again.
'Mendips' - Lennon's childhood home.
Throughout the rest of his childhood and adolescence, Lennon
lived with his 'Auntie Mimi' and her husband George Smith (who had no
children of their own) in a middle class area of Liverpool at
'Mendips' (251 Menlove Avenue). Family
friends described Mimi as stubborn, impatient, and unforgiving,
but she also had a sense of humour. Often, when she criticised Lennon
he would respond with a joke, and the two of them would be "rolling
around, laughing together".
Mimi confided to a relative that although she had never wanted
children, she had always wanted John.
Mimi and George gave Lennon all of their attention:
Mimi bought volumes of short stories, and George, who was a dairyman at a
local farm,
engaged John in solving crossword puzzles and bought him a
harmonica.
Julia Lennon visited 'Mendips' almost every day and John often visited
her; she taught John how to play the banjo and the piano.
She also played Elvis Presley's records to John, and
would dance around her kitchen with him.
Lennon was later inspired by Elvis Presley, Chuck
Berry, Buddy
Holly and Little Richard.
Lennon was raised as an Anglican,
and like much of the population of Liverpool, he had some Irish heritage.
Lennon attended Dovedale County
Primary School until he passed his Eleven-Plus exam. From September 1952 to
1957, he attended the Quarry Bank Grammar School in
Liverpool
where he was a "happy-go-lucky" pupil,
known for drawing comical cartoons and making fun of his teachers by mimicking
their odd characteristics.
Julia bought Lennon his first guitar, an inexpensive model
that was "guaranteed not to split", but insisted it be delivered to her
house and not Mimi's.
Mimi hoped that John would soon grow bored with it - she was sceptical
of Lennon's claim that he would be famous one day, and often told him,
"The guitar's all very well, John, but you'll never make a living out
of it." Years later, when The Beatles were successful, John presented
Mimi with a silver platter engraved with those words.
George Smith died in 1955
and on 15
July 1958
(when Lennon was 17) Julia was killed on Menlove Avenue by a car driven
by a drunken, off-duty police officer — close to Mimi's house.
Her death was one of the most traumatic events in John's life and one
of the factors that cemented his friendship with McCartney, who had
lost his own mother to breast cancer in 1956.
Lennon named his first-born son Julian after his mother, and later
wrote the song, "Julia".
Lennon failed all his GCE O-level
examinations by one grade. He was accepted into the Liverpool College of Art
with help from his school's headmaster and his Aunt Mimi, who was
insistent that John should have some sort of academic qualifications.
It was there that he met his future wife, Cynthia
Powell, when Lennon was a Teddy Boy.
Lennon failed his exams despite help from Powell, and was often
disruptive in class with most of the teachers refusing to take him on
in their classes.
He also picked on anyone that was in anyway different, using his quick
wit and sense of humour to bully them.He
dropped out before the last year of college.
1957-1960: The
Quarrymen and the Silver Beetles
-
Lennon started the Quarry Men skiffle band in March 1957
whilst attending Quarry Bank Grammar School.
Their first engagement was on 9 June 1957 at an audition for impresario Carroll
Lewsis, known as "Mr. Star-Maker."
A few weeks later, on 6 July 1957, Lennon and The
Quarrymen met guitarist Paul McCartney at the Woolton Garden
fête held at St. Peter's Church.
McCartney's father later allowed the Quarrymen to rehearse in his front
room at 20 Forthlin Road.
During their early friendship Lennon encouraged McCartney to steal
cigarettes, sweets,
or books from shops,
and they found a shared interest in playing jokes on the other
band members and on their teachers.
It was around this time that Lennon and McCartney started writing songs
with each other and separately. The first song that John completed was
"Hello Little Girl" when he was eighteen years old. This later became a
hit for the Fourmost.
McCartney convinced Lennon to allow George
Harrison to join the Quarrymen - although Lennon considered
Harrison to be too young - after Harrison played at a rehearsal in
March 1958.
Harrison joined the group as lead guitarist,
and Stuart Sutcliffe
(Lennon's art
school friend) later joined as bassist.
The band soon switched to playing rock 'n' roll, using the name 'Johnny
and the Moondogs', but Lennon found it too musically associated with
skiffle.
In mid-1958, the Quarrymen made their first recording: a cover of That'll
Be The Day by Buddy Holly and a McCartney-Harrison
original called In Spite Of All The
Danger.
In 1960, the band changed its name five times. Stuart Sutcliffe
suggested 'the Beetles' as a form of tribute to Buddy
Holly and The Crickets, which he and Lennon then
thought of changing to the 'Beatals'. They changed their name again to
the 'Silver Beats', The Silver Beetles, and the
'Silver Beatles', but Lennon shortened it to The Beatles, to avoid
being introduced as "Long John Silver of the Silver Beatles", which was
too similar to 'Johnny and the Moondogs'. After a tour with Johnny
Gentle in Scotland,
they changed their name to the 'Beatles'.
Lennon was considered the leader of The Beatles, as he founded
the original group. McCartney said, "We all looked up to John. He was
older and he was very much the leader - he was the quickest wit and the
smartest and all that kind of thing."
1960-1970: The Beatles
-
Lennon's guitars.
Allan Williams started to manage The
Beatles in May 1960 after they had played in his Jacaranda
club.A
few months later he booked them into Bruno
Koschmider's Indra club in Hamburg, Germany.
Mona
Best ran the Casbah
Club in the basement of her home in Liverpool,
where The Beatles often played in 1959,
and Mona's son Pete Best joined The Beatles on drums as
soon as their first Hamburg season was confirmed.
Aunt Mimi was horrified when Lennon told her about Hamburg. She pleaded
with him to continue his studies, but was ignored.
The Beatles first played at the Indra
club - sleeping in small, dirty rooms in the Bambi
Kino
- and after the closure of the Indra moved to the larger Kaiserkeller
In October 1960, they left Koschmider's club and worked at the "Top Ten
Club",
which was run by Peter Eckhorn.
Koschmider reported McCartney and Best for arson after the two attached
a condom
to a nail in the 'Bambi' and set fire to it.
They were deported, as was George Harrison for
working under-age.
Days later Lennon's work permit was revoked and he went home
by train, but Sutcliffe had tonsillitis and flew home.
When Lennon got back to 'Mendips', his Aunt Mimi threw a cooked chicken
(that Lennon had bought for her) and a hand-mirror at him for spending
money on a leather coat for Cynthia Powell (John's girlfriend,
and later, his wife) whom she referred to as, "a gangster's moll".
In December 1960, The Beatles reunited, and on 21 March 1961, they played
their first concert at Liverpool's Cavern club.
They went back to Hamburg in April 1961, and recorded 'My Bonnie'
with Tony Sheridan.
Sutcliffe stayed with Astrid Kirchherr when it was time
to go home, so McCartney took over bass.
When Lennon was nearly 21 in October 1961, his Aunt Mater (who lived in
Edinburgh)
gave him 100 pounds, which he spent on a holiday
to Paris
with McCartney.
Brian
Epstein first saw The Beatles in the Cavern Club on 9 November
1961, and
later signed them to a management contract.
The Beatles were driven to London by their road
manager, Neil Aspinall, on 31
December 1961
and auditioned the next day for Decca Records, who rejected them.
In April 1962 they returned to Hamburg to play at the Star-Club,
but they learned that Stuart Sutcliffe had died a few hours before they
arrived.
This was another shock for Lennon, after losing Uncle George and Julia.
They finally signed a record contract on 9 May 1962, with Parlophone
Records,
after having been turned down by many labels.
"Love
Me Do" was released on 5 October 1962,
featuring Lennon on harmonica and McCartney singing solo on
the chorus line.
All Lennon-McCartney songs on the first pressing of Please
Please Me album (recorded in one day on 11
February 1963)
as well as the single "From Me to You", and its B-side, "Thank
You Girl", are credited to "McCartney-Lennon", but this was later
changed to "Lennon-McCartney".
They usually needed an hour or two to finish a song, most of which were
written in hotel rooms after a concert, at Wimpole Street, at Cavendish
Avenue,
or at Kenwood (John Lennon's
house).
As recording technology improved, and they were doing more
work in the studio than live, overdubbing was used so that Lennon
might provide the harmony parts as well as the lead for his songs. The
"Beatles" sound was a three-part harmony with Lennon or McCartney
singing lead, and harmony provided by the others.
The group's decisions were democratic, with the rule that if
any member objected to an idea, the group wouldn't pursue it. The
Beatles decided to stop touring after their San Francisco concert in
1966, and never performed a scheduled concert again.
Lennon resented McCartney taking control of the band after Brian
Epstein's death in 1967, and disliked some of the resulting projects
such as Magical Mystery Tour
and particularly Let It Be ("That
film was set up by Paul, for Paul," as he said later to Rolling
Stone). He was the first to break the band's all-for-one
sensibility, and also the rule that no wives or girlfriends would
attend recording sessions, as he brought Yoko into the studio.
Lennon was also the first member to quit the group, which he
did in September 1969 (Starr had left during 1968, but was persuaded to
return; Harrison stated he was "leaving the band" on 10 January
1969 during
the rehearsal sessions for Let
It Be, but returned after negotiations at two
business meetings). Lennon agreed not to make an announcement while the
band renegotiated their recording contract, and blasted McCartney
months later (with the negotiations complete) for going public with his
own departure in April 1970. Phil Spector's involvement in trying to
revive the Let It Be material then drove a further
wedge between Lennon (who supported Spector) and McCartney (who opposed
him). With the public unaware of the details, McCartney appeared to be
the one who dissolved the group, depriving Lennon of the formalities.
Lennon told Rolling Stone, "I was a fool not to do
what Paul did, which was use it to sell a record," and later wrote, "I
started the band. I finished it."
Though the split would only become legal some time later, Lennon's and
McCartney's partnership had come to a bitter end. McCartney soon made a
press announcement, declaring he had quit The Beatles and promoting his
new solo record. McCartney later admitted Lennon had been the first to
quit, re-explaining the circumstances to CBS-TV's 48
Hours in 1989.
In 1970, Jann Wenner recorded an interview with
Lennon that was played on BBC
in 2005. The interview reveals his bitterness towards McCartney and the
hostility he felt that the other members held towards Yoko Ono. Lennon
said: "One of the main reasons The Beatles ended is because ... I
pretty well know, we got fed up with being sidemen for Paul. After Brian
Epstein died we collapsed. Paul took over and supposedly led us. But
what is leading us when we went round in circles? Paul had the
impression we should be thankful for what he did, for keeping The
Beatles going. But he kept it going for his own sake."
1970-1975: Solo career
- Further information: John Lennon discography
John Lennon in early 1970, after he cut his hair for charity
Lennon had a varied recording career. Whilst still a Beatle,
Lennon (along with Ono) recorded three albums of experimental music, Unfinished Music
No.1: Two Virgins, Unfinished
Music No.2: Life with the Lions, and Wedding
Album. His first 'solo' album of popular
music was Live Peace in Toronto 1969,
recorded prior to the breakup of The Beatles, at the Rock 'n' Roll
Festival in Toronto
with The Plastic Ono Band. He also
recorded three solo singles: the anti-war anthem "Give
Peace a Chance", the heroin withdrawal report "Cold
Turkey", and "Instant Karma!". Following The
Beatles' split in 1970 Lennon released the John Lennon/Plastic Ono
Band album. The song "God" lists people and things
Lennon no longer believed in - ending with "Beatles". The album also
included "Working Class Hero" which was
banned from the airwaves for its use of the word "fucking".
The album Imagine
followed in 1971, and its title song soon became an anthem for
anti-religion and anti-war movements. The song's video was filmed
during Lennon's "white period" (white clothes, white piano, white room,
and the like). He wrote "How Do You Sleep?" as an attack
against McCartney, with George Harrison on slide
guitar,
but later claimed that it was about himself.
Some Time in New York City
(1972) was loud, raucous, and explicitly political, with songs about
prison riots, racial and sexual relations, the British role in Northern
Ireland, and his own problems in obtaining a United States Green Card.
Lennon had been interested in left-wing politics since the late 1960s,
and was said to have given donations to the Trotskyist
Workers
Revolutionary Party.
In 1972 Lennon released "Woman Is the Nigger
of the World", which drew parallels between exploitation of
women and discrimination against blacks. Radio stations refused to
broadcast the song and it was banned nearly everywhere, though he
managed to play it to television viewers during his second appearance
on The Dick Cavett Show.
On 30
August 1972
Lennon and his backing band, Elephant's Memory, staged two benefit
concerts at Madison Square Garden in New
York. These were to be his last full-length concert appearances. Lennon
and Ono also did a week-long guest/co-hosting the Mike
Douglas Show.
Following Ono's second miscarriage, she and Lennon had an
argument that resulted in their separation. He moved to California and
embarked on a period he would later dub his "lost weekend" (despite the
fact that it lasted approximately eighteen months). Lennon released Mind Games
in 1973, which was credited to "the Plastic U.F.Ono Band". It was the
first solo album produced by Lennon with no input from Yoko. He wrote "I'm
the Greatest" for Ringo Starr's album Ringo,
and recorded his own version of the song (which appears on the John
Lennon Anthology). Lennon's behavior during this period was notoriously
bad, with many nights spent in a drunken stupor. The songs from this
period (appearing on Mind Games and Walls
and Bridges) took an apologetic tone that seem
to be directed at Ono. At Ono's suggestion he took May Pang along
as his assistant and his lover during this period.
Lennon released Walls and Bridges (1974),
which featured a duet with Elton John on the #1 hit "Whatever Gets You
Thru the Night". The album was released under the name "the Plastic Ono
Nuclear Band". Another hit from the album was "#9
Dream". Lennon also produced Nilsson's Pussy Cats
album during 1974.
Lennon made a surprise guest appearance at an Elton John
concert in Madison Square Garden where they performed "Lucy in the Sky with
Diamonds", "Whatever Gets You Thru the Night" and "I Saw Her Standing There"
together. It was to be his last-ever concert appearance in front of a
rock audience. Coincidentally, Yoko Ono happened to be present and the
concert, and after a backstage meeting, the two got back together.
Following the performance, Lennon travelled to Florida and
signed the papers legally breaking up The Beatles. After the Christmas
holidays he returned to live with Yoko Ono, and she soon became
pregnant with their first child.
In 1975, Lennon released the Rock 'n' Roll
album of cover versions. It had been conceived several years earlier,
but was complicated by the unpredictable Phil Spector's involvement as
producer and by several legal battles. The album garnered mostly
negative or indifferent reviews, but included a well-received cover of "Stand
by Me". David Bowie achieved his first
U.S. number one hit (in 1975) with "Fame", co-written with
Lennon (who contributed vocals and guitar) and Carlos
Alomar.
Lennon made his last public musical appearance on ATV's
18
April 1975
special A Salute to Lew Grade,
performing "Imagine" and "Slippin' and Slidin'" from his Rock
'n' Roll LP. Lennon's band was billed as "Etc." and the band
members were costumed in two-faced masks. The "two-faced" stunt, and
the line "don't want to be your fool no more" (from "Slippin' and
Slidin") were seen as digs at Grade, with whom Lennon and McCartney had
been in conflict over his previous control of The Beatles' publishing
concerns.
Dick
James had sold Lennon's and McCartney's publishing rights to Grade in
1969. During "Imagine" Lennon interjected the line "and no immigration
too" - a reference to his battle to remain in the United States.
On 9
October 1975
– Lennon's 35th birthday – his son Sean Ono Lennon was born, and Lennon
retired from the music business to care for him.
1980 - Starting over
Lennon's retirement came to an end in 1980, a year in which he
wrote an impressive amount of material during a lengthy vacation in Bermuda and
began to think about recording a new album. For this comeback, he and
Ono produced Double Fantasy,
a concept
album focusing on their relationship. The name came from a species of freesia Lennon
saw at the Bermuda Botanical Gardens;
he liked the name and thought it was a perfect description of his
marriage to Yoko.
The Lennons once again began a series of interviews and video
footage to promote the album. Although Lennon would say in interviews
for the album that he had not touched a guitar for five years, several
of the tunes, such as "I'm Losing You" and "Watching
the Wheels", had been worked on at home in The Dakota
in various stages with different lyrics from 1977 onward. "(Just Like) Starting Over"
began climbing the singles charts, and Lennon started thinking about a
brand new world tour. Lennon also commenced work on Milk
and Honey, which he would leave unfinished. It
was some time before Ono could bring herself to complete it.
Towards the end of his life, Lennon expressed his displeasure
with the scant credit he was given as an influence on George
Harrison in the latter's autobiography, I Me Mine.
According to Ono, he was also unhappy that McCartney's Beatles songs,
such as "Yesterday", "Hey Jude" and "Let
It Be" were more covered than his own contributions.
In a 1980 Playboy interview Lennon claimed
that some of his Beatles songs were subconsciously sabotaged, and that
the group put more work into and paid more attention to McCartney's
songs, whereas with his, they tended to experiment.
In the same interview, Lennon was ambivalent about his time with The
Beatles and the group's legacy and was not interested in talking about
them any more than he would about old high school buddies.
He was prompted that there was considerable speculation about whether
The Beatles were now "dreaded enemies or the best of friends." He
replied that they were neither, and that he hadn't seen any of The
Beatles for "I don't know how much time."
He also said that the last time he had seen McCartney they had watched
the episode of Saturday Night Live
where Lorne Michaels made his $3200 cash
offer to get The Beatles to reunite on the show. The two had seriously
considered going to the studio to appear on the show for a joke, but
were too tired.
Personal life
In one of the last major interviews of his life conducted in
September 1980, three months before his death,
Lennon said that he'd always been very macho and had never questioned
his chauvinistic
attitudes towards women until he met Ono. Lennon was always distant
with his first son (Julian) but was very close to his second son
(Sean), and called him "my pride". Near the end of his life, he had
embraced the role of househusband and even said that he had
taken on the role of wife
and mother in their relationship.
Cynthia and Julian
Lennon
Cynthia Powell met Lennon at the Liverpool
Art College in 1957.
After hearing Lennon comment favourably about another girl who looked
like Brigitte Bardot,
Powell changed the colour of her hair to blonde.
Their relationship started after a college party before the summer
holidays when Lennon asked Cynthia to go a pub with him and some friends.
At this point Cynthia was already engaged to another man, a fact which
she brought up when Lennon asked her to dance. Lennon replied, "I
didn't ask you to fucking marry me, did I?" and stormed off.Although
Lennon ignored her for the rest of the party, he talked to her as she
was ready to leave, and then grabbed her hand and took her to a room
Stuart Sutcliffe was renting,
where they had sex.
If Sutcliffe's room was not available, they often had sex in alleyways
or shop doorways, but Cynthia didn't enjoy those "snatched encounters".
Lennon's jealousy could manifest itself in cruel and aggressive
behaviour towards Cynthia,
as when Lennon slapped her across the face (knocking her head against
the wall) the day after he saw her dancing with Stuart Sutcliffe.
Cynthia broke up with Lennon for three months, but resumed their
relationship after Lennon's profuse apology.
Cynthia visited Lennon in Hamburg for two weeks in 1960, but in 1961
Lennon left her at home and went to Paris with McCartney for a holiday.
In mid-1962, Cynthia discovered she was pregnant.
Lennon proposed marriage, but when he told Mimi she screamed and raged
at Lennon to stop him from going through with it.
Lennon and Cynthia were married on 23 August at the Mount Pleasant Register
office in Liverpool. Mimi did not attend.
On April
8, 1963,
John Charles Julian Lennon was born in Sefton General Hospital. John
did not see Julian until a week after he was born because of
commitments with The Beatles. The birth of John's son and his marriage
to Cynthia was kept secret from the public, due to Brian Epstein's
insistence that it would harm John's image with The Beatles' female
fans.
According to Cynthia, in a 1995 interview, there were problems
throughout their marriage because of the pressures of The Beatles' fame
and rigorous touring, and because of Lennon's increasing use of drugs.
Their marriage all but came to an end when Cynthia came back from a
holiday in Greece
with friends to find that John and Yoko had been in bed together. John
did not deny the fact but when Cynthia left for a while he phoned her
and said "I can't understand why you went off".
Cynthia found out about the definite end of their marriage when John
refused to go on a family holiday with them and was later shown in a
newspaper making his affair with Yoko public. To make matters worse
Lennon sent a mutual friend to Italy to inform her that he was going to
take their child and force her to leave their home. He also arranged
for divorce, stating that she was the one who had committed adultery,
not him..
In the ensuing court case Lennon refused to give his wife anymore than
£75,000, telling her "What have you done to deserve it? Christ, it's
like winning the bloody pools".
In the end, she got £100,000 plus £2,400 a year, custody of Julian and
the house.
Lennon was distant to his son, Julian, who felt closer to
McCartney than to him. The younger Lennon later said, "I've never
really wanted to know the truth about how dad was with me. There was
some very negative stuff talked about me ... like when he said I'd come
out of a whiskey bottle on a Saturday night. Stuff like that. You
think, where's the love in that? Paul and I used to hang about quite a
bit ... more than dad and I did. We had a great friendship going and
there seems to be far more pictures of me and Paul playing together at
that age than there are pictures of me and my dad." When Lennon moved
to New York in 1971, Julian did not see him until 1973. After
encouragement from May Pang, it was finally arranged for Julian to
visit John and her in Los Angeles. Lennon was said to be very nervous
beforehand but the visit went well. After this point, Julian started to
see his father more regularly, and played drums on "Ya Ya" from
Lennon's 1974 album, Walls and Bridges. Lennon also bought Julian a Gibson
Les Paul guitar for his eleventh birthday in 1974 and encouraged his
growing interest in music.
Lennon was quoted as saying: "Sean was
a planned child, and therein lies the difference. I don't love Julian
any less as a child. He's still my son, whether he came from a bottle
of whiskey or because they didn't have pills in those days. He's here,
he belongs to me, and he always will."
According to Cynthia, after the break-up with John, McCartney
visited Cynthia and jokingly suggested marriage, reportedly saying,
"How's about you and me, Cyn?"
In an interview shortly before his death, Lennon said he was
trying to re-establish a connection with the then 17-year-old Julian,
and confidently predicted that "Julian and I will have a relationship
in the future."
Both Julian and Sean Lennon went on to have recording careers
years after their father's death.
Yoko Ono
John Lennon and Yoko Ono with Canadian Prime Minister Pierre
Trudeau, 22
December 1969
Ottawa, Ontario
On 9
November 1966,
after The Beatles' final tour and just after he had finished filming How
I Won the War, Lennon visited an art exhibit of
Yoko Ono's at the Indica gallery in Mason's Yard,
London. Lennon began his relationship with Ono in May 1968 after
returning from India.
Cynthia filed for divorce
later that year, on the grounds of John's adultery with Ono which was
evidenced by the latter's pregnancy and miscarriage of their
son. Lennon and Ono became inseparable, even during Beatles sessions.
The press was unkind to Ono — writing unflattering articles
about her, with frequently racist overtones — and one called her
"ugly". This angered Lennon, who said that there was no John and Yoko,
but they were one person; "JohnandYoko". Yoko's constant presence in
the studio led to tension within The Beatles during the White
Album recordings in 1968.
At the end of 1968, Lennon and Ono performed as Dirty Mac on
the Rolling Stones Rock
and Roll Circus. During Lennon's last two years
in The Beatles, he spent much of his time with Ono partaking in public
protests against the Vietnam War. Lennon sent back his MBE
medal, which Queen Elizabeth
bestowed during the height of Beatlemania, "in protest against
Britain's involvement in the Nigeria-Biafra thing [a reference to the Nigerian
civil war of 1967-70], its support of America in Vietnam, and 'Cold
Turkey' slipping down the charts." (Return of the medal did not
formally negate his appointment to the Order.)
John Lennon and Yoko Ono in late 1969. Photo: Howard Frank Archives.
This image has an uncertain copyright status and is pending
deletion. You can comment on the
removal.
On 14
March, as Lennon and Ono were being driven to Mimi's house, in Poole, Dorset, they asked
if it was possible to get "married at sea".
On 20
March 1969,
they were married in Gibraltar, and spent their honeymoon in Amsterdam in
a "Bed-In"
for peace. Behind their bed were posters that displayed the words "Hair
Peace. Bed Peace." They held another "Bed-In", in Montreal, at
the Queen Elizabeth Hotel, where
they recorded "Give Peace a Chance", which
became an anthem for the peace movement. They were mainly
patronised as a couple of eccentrics by the media, yet they did a great
deal for the peace movement, as well as for feminism and
racial harmony. Lennon and Ono often combined advocacy with performance
art, as in their "Bagism"
introduced during a Vienna press conference. Shortly after, Lennon
changed his name to John Ono Lennon. Lennon wrote "The Ballad of John and
Yoko" about his marriage and the subsequent press coverage it generated.
The failed Get Back/Let
It Be recording/filming sessions did nothing to
improve relations within the band. After both Lennon and Ono were
injured in the summer of 1969 in a car accident in Scotland, Lennon
arranged for Ono to be constantly with him in the studio (including
having a full-sized bed rolled in) as he worked on The Beatles' last
album, Abbey Road.
While the group managed to hang together to produce one last acclaimed
musical work, soon thereafter business issues related to Apple
Corps came between them.
May Pang and the 'lost
weekend'
In 1973, Yoko approached May Pang (their personal assistant)
with a proposal. Ono, who thought May Pang would be an "ideal
companion" for Lennon, asked her to "be with John, help him, and see
that he gets whatever he wants."
Yoko then kicked Lennon out of the house. Lennon and Pang moved to Los
Angeles - a period which has been dubbed the "lost weekend", though it
lasted until the beginning of 1975. During their time together, Pang
encouraged Lennon to spend time with his son, Julian Lennon, and she
became friends with Cynthia Lennon.
After arriving in Hollywood, Lennon reunited with producer
Phil Spector and began work on recording and some of their efforts were
eventually released as part of his 'farewell' LP Rock 'n' Roll.
However their work together was ended by interpersonal conflict -- some
sources blame this on Spector while others cite Lennon's increasingly
out-of-control behaviour in the studio, which led to Lennon being
banned from A&M Studios
in Hollywood after the studio was repeatedly vandalised.
During this time Lennon often caroused with an assortment of
his drinking/drug buddies including singer/songwriter Harry
Nilsson, Keith
Moon, Ringo Starr, Alice Cooper, Micky
Dolenz and others, who dubbed themselves the 'Hollywood Vampires'. One
of the most oft-repeated incidents was that in which Lennon and Nilsson
were ejected from The Troubadour club after repeatedly
heckling comedians The Smothers Brothers during
their act. During the evening, a drunken Lennon was also reported to
have gone into the women's toilet and emerged with a sanitary napkin on
his head; when challenged by a waitress, he yelled "Don't you know who
I am?" -- to which the waitress famously replied, "Yeah, you're an
asshole with a Kotex on your head!".
Though Lennon's public drunkenness had been the subject of
gossip during 1974, Pang said that he was usually sober in his private
life and recorded a large body of work. One notable session, captured
on the bootleg recording A Toot and a Snore in '74,
had Lennon and his friends jamming with Paul McCartney. Others included
on the session were Harry Nilsson, Stevie
Wonder, Jesse Ed Davis, and Bobby Keys.
House-husband
On 9
October 1975
— John Lennon's 35th birthday — Yoko Ono gave birth to a son, Sean Ono
Lennon, after having suffered three miscarriages
of babies fathered by John. Regretful of the limited relationship he
had with first son, Julian, Lennon decided to retire from music so he
could dedicate himself to family life: he thus became a house
husband. Deeply aware, after his experience of Primal
therapy, of the crucial importance of the parent-child
bond, he devoted his energies to nurturing young Sean in every possible
way. He also made a point of learning how to bake a loaf of bread, an
accomplishment which he proudly showed off to visitors.
In 1976, Lennon's U.S.
immigration status was finally resolved favourably, after a years-long
battle with the Nixon administration that included an FBI investigation — a
full-scale effort involving surveillance, wiretaps,
and agents following Lennon around as he travelled. Lennon insisted
that the investigation was politically motivated, a claim that was
later proven true. With the departure of Nixon from the White House,
the administration of his successor, Gerald Ford, showed little interest in
continuing the battle.
When Jimmy Carter was inaugurated as
President on 20 January 1977, Lennon and Ono were invited to attend the
Inaugural Ball, signalling the end of hostilities between the U.S.
government and Lennon. After that appearance, Lennon was rarely seen in
public for the next 3½ years, until his 1980 comeback.
Estrangement from his
father
At the time that Beatlemania took off, John had not seen or
heard from his father, Freddie Lennon, since he was five
years old. When Freddie realised that his son was the famous John
Lennon of The Beatles, he pursued John until finally meeting him during
a film shoot. John did not receive this visit well and told Freddie to
leave him alone. John later warmed a bit to Freddie and they continued
to see each other occasionally for the next few years, until 1969 when
John ordered Freddie to get out of his house in a storming rage. John
did not talk to his father again until 1976, when he heard that Freddie
was dying. John telephoned Freddie on his deathbed, and they reconciled.
Political and
lifestyle controversies
Lennon's humour was often quoted during his time with The
Beatles, but he later rejected the idea of being a "lovable mop-top"
and concerned himself with drug experimentation, meditation, therapy
cures, world peace, and was active for a range of anti-government
causes.
Christianity
On 4
March 1966,
Lennon was interviewed for the London
Evening Standard by his friend Maureen
Cleave and made an off-the-cuff remark regarding Christianity.
- "Christianity will go. It will vanish
and shrink.... I don't know what will go first, rock 'n' roll or
Christianity. We're more popular than Jesus now. Jesus was all right, but his disciples were thick and
ordinary. It's them twisting it that ruins it for me."
The article was printed and nothing came of it — until five
months later, when an American teen magazine called Datebook
reprinted part of the quote on its front cover.
A firestorm of protest erupted across the American Bible Belt
in the South and Midwest, as conservative
groups staged public burnings of Beatles records and memorabilia.
(The Beatles at first viewed this in a wry way, saying, "They've got to
buy them first before they burn 'em.") Many radio stations banned
Beatles music, and some concert venues cancelled performances.
A 1967 portrait of Lennon by Richard Avedon.
On 11
August 1966,
The Beatles held a press conference in Chicago, in order to address the growing
controversy.
- Lennon: I suppose if I had said television was more popular
than Jesus, I would have got away with it, but I just happened to be
talking to a journalist friend, and I used the words "Beatles" as a
remote thing, not as what I think — as Beatles, as those other Beatles,
like other people see us. I just said "they" are having more influence
on kids and things than anything else, including Jesus. But I said it
in that way, which is the wrong way.
- Reporter: Some teenagers have repeated your
statements — "I like The Beatles more than Jesus
Christ." What do you think about that?
- Lennon: Well, originally I pointed out that fact in
reference to England.
That we meant more to kids than Jesus did, or religion at that time. I
wasn't knocking it or putting it down. I was just saying it as a fact,
and it's true more for England than here. I'm not saying that we're
better or greater, or comparing us with Jesus Christ as a person or God
as a thing, or whatever it is. I just said what I said and it was
wrong. Or it was taken wrong. And now it's all this.
- Reporter: But are you prepared to apologise?
- Lennon: I wasn't saying whatever they're saying I was
saying. I'm sorry I said it really. I never meant it to be a lousy
anti-religious thing. I apologise if that will make you happy. I still
don't know quite what I've done. I've tried to tell you what I did do,
but if you want me to apologise, if that will make you happy, then OK,
I'm sorry.
The Vatican accepted his apology, but the Southern Baptist
Convention (the predominant religion in the U.S. Bible Belt) did not.
Lennon wrote later, "I always remember to thank Jesus for the end of my
touring days; if I hadn't said that The Beatles were 'bigger than
Jesus' and upset the very Christian Ku Klux Klan, well, Lord, I might still
be up there with all the other performing fleas! God bless America.
Thank you, Jesus."
Political activism and
the deportation battle
Recording "Give Peace A Chance", by Roy Kerwood
"Give Peace a Chance", recorded
in 1969 at the height of the Vietnam War, marked Lennon’s
transformation from mop-top to anti-war activist, and began a process that
culminated in 1972, when the Nixon Administration sought to silence him
by ordering him deported from the US.
The Vietnam War mobilised a great many young people to take a
stand opposing US government
policy, but few pop stars joined them: antiwar protest was more
common among folk musicians like Phil Ochs, Joan Baez
and Bob
Dylan (the British musician Donovan was a notable exception).
Lennon, however, was determined to use his power as a superstar to
help end the war, especially after he left The Beatles and teamed up
with Yoko. The couple declared their honeymoon at the Amsterdam Hilton,
in March 1969, a "bed-in for peace," winning world-wide media
coverage. At a second "bed-in" in Montreal, in June 1969, they recorded
"Give Peace a Chance" in their hotel room.
The song quickly became the anthem of the anti-war
movement, and was sung by as many as half a million demonstrators in Washington,
D.C. at the second Vietnam
Moratorium Day, in November 1969. They were led by the renowned folk
singer Pete
Seeger, who interspersed phrases like, "Are you listening, Nixon?" and
"Are you listening, Agnew?", between the choruses of
protesters singing, "All we are saying ... is give peace a chance".
When Lennon and Ono moved to New York City in August 1971,
they became friends with antiwar leaders Jerry
Rubin, Abbie Hoffman, and others, and planned
a national concert tour to coincide with the 1972 presidential
election. It would have been the first U.S. tour by any of the
ex-Beatles since the lads had waved farewell at Candlestick
Park in San Francisco at the end of their 1966
tour. But it would not have been the usual rock tour. 1972 was the
first year 18-year-olds had been given the right
to vote in the U.S., and Lennon wanted to help persuade young people to
register to vote and to vote against the war — which meant voting
against Nixon. Thus, the planned tour was to combine rock music with
anti-war organising and voter registration.
The Nixon Administration found out
about Lennon's plans from an unlikely source: Republican Senator Strom
Thurmond, who suggested in a February 1972 memo that "deportation would
be a strategic counter-measure." The next month the Immigration
and Naturalization Service began deportation proceedings against
Lennon, arguing that his 1968 misdemeanour conviction for cannabis
possession in London had made him ineligible for admission to the U.S.
Lennon spent the next two years in and out of deportation hearings and
constantly under a 60-day order to leave the country, which his
attorney managed to get extended repeatedly.
The 1972 concert tour never happened, but Lennon and his
friends did put on the "Free John
Sinclair" concert in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in December 1971. Sinclair was a
local antiwar activist and poet who was serving ten years in state
prison for selling two joints of marijuana
to an undercover cop. Lennon and Ono appeared on stage (in his first
live appearance since The Beatles' breakup) along with Phil Ochs,
Stevie Wonder and other musicians, plus antiwar radical
Jerry Rubin and Bobby Seale of the Black
Panthers. Lennon performed the song, "John Sinclair", which he had just
written, calling on the authorities to "Let him be, set him
free, let him be like you and me." Some 20,000 people
attended the rally, and two days after the concert, the State of
Michigan released Sinclair from prison. (A bootleg
recording of the live performance circulated for years, but was later
released on the 2-CD John Lennon Anthology [1998], and the album, Acoustic [2004]).
Lennon performed the song on the David Frost Show accompanied by Ono and
Jerry Rubin.
While his deportation battle was going on, Lennon spoke out
against the Vietnam War - appearing at rallies in New York City and on
TV shows, including a week hosting the Mike Douglas Show in February
1972, where Jerry Rubin and Bobby Seale appeared as his guests. He was
tailed by a team of FBI agents, who concluded, "Lennon appears to be
radically oriented however he does not give the impression he is a true
revolutionist since he is constantly under the influence of narcotics."
Nixon left the White House after the Watergate
scandal, and Lennon won his green card in 1975. After Lennon’s
murder, historian Jon Wiener filed a Freedom of Information
request for FBI files on Lennon. The FBI admitted it had 281 pages of
files on Lennon, but refused to release most of them, claiming they
were national security documents. In 1983, Wiener sued the FBI with the
help of the American Civil
Liberties Union of Southern California. The case went to the Supreme
Court before the FBI settled in 1997 — releasing all but ten of the
contested documents.
The story is told in the documentary The U.S. vs. John Lennon,
by David Leaf and John Scheinfeld, released in theatres in September
2006 and on DVD in February 2007. The final ten documents in Lennon's
FBI file were finally released in December 2006.
and are available on the web.
Recreational drug use
Perforated blotting paper for use with LSD.
Although drinking beer was commonplace in Liverpool, Lennon
was first given drugs in Hamburg, Germany.
The Beatles had to play long sets, and were often given "Prellies" (Preludin)
(slimming pills) by customers or by Astrid
Kirchherr, whose mother bought them for her.
McCartney would usually take one, but Lennon would often take four or
five.
He later took amphetamines called 'Black Bombers' and
'Purple Hearts'.
After having smoked cannabis with Bob Dylan in
New York in 1964,
McCartney remembered all of The Beatles being "very high" and laughing
a lot.
Lennon largely abandoned his leadership
role under the influence of LSD and Timothy Leary's book The
Psychedelic Experience, believing he needed to "lose his ego"
to become enlightened.
His drug experiences, which his first wife Cynthia did not want to join
him in were also a major factor in their divorce. He later dabbled in
heroin and wrote about its effects in the song Cold
Turkey.