Monday, April 20, 2026

Beatles Discovery (1969)

This photo from 1968 accompanied the article


 Beatles Discovery

No author listed

Courier Express

March 8, 1969


    If you want something that hasn't been invented ye,t ask Magic Alex. He is the inventor inrResidence of Apple Corp., the company founded by The Beatles. The company is now in financial trouble but that doesn't worry Magic Alex. He works in a laboratory that cost $250,000 to equip, where he turns out  ingenius and low cost items.

     It took him 16 days, for example, to devise a tape recorder without tapes or moving parts. It's the size of a cigarette pack and uses an electron beam and a plastic card to function.

     Alex has also invented a composing typewriter that automatically types the musical notation for any song that is played or sung to it.

     For the Beatles' new recording studio, he has created the machine of 10,000  echos, which makes any music sound as if it is echoing from any given place: a church, beach, mountains.

     Alex is also working on plans for a robot housewife, a machine shaped  like two tennis balls on top of each other and program to do all the housework.

     Magic Alex-- real name John Alexis Martas, came to London two years ago. His father is a former General of the Greek army.

     Alex says that American and Japanese companies have offered him huge sums to work for them, but he prefers Apple Corps., taking from the Beatles only a fraction of what he is worth.    

    The Beatles say they hope to make enough from his inventions to subsidize the handicapped and underprivileged.

John and Yoko visit Spain



John and Yoko autographed this matchbook on this date.

 

April 20, 1971 

Ringo Starr Doubly Sells Self to Actress (1981)


 

Ringo Starr Doubly Sells Self to Actress

By Robert Hilburn

LA Times - Washington Post

April 19, 1981


    The Hollywood actress Barbara Bach's dismay was understandable when she learned that Ringo Starr would be her co-star in the film comedy Caveman. Like most screen beauties, Bach considered herself restricted by her sex symbol image. She hoped a key role in a hit comedy would change that.

     Bach had high hopes for Up the Academy, the comedy she did a while back with director Robert Downey, but the film was far from a smash, so the actress, best known as James Bond's sexy colleague in  The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), next turned to Caveman.

     She liked the idea of a prehistoric comedy where the characters had to act out their intentions, aided only by a 15-word language. Besides, producers Lawrence Turman and David Foster promised they would sign a major comedy actor to play her leading man.

     "I was thinking of someone along the lines of Dudley Moore,"  Bach said, sitting in the huge den of a rented Beverly Hills home. "It was a real demanding part, because the actor would have to use so much pantomime. When they phoned and said they had signed Ringo Starr, I thought, 'Oh, boy. What have I got myself into?' It sounded to me like we were in trouble."

     Bach blushed as she told the story because she was seated next to Starr, the bearded ex-Beatle who was now her fiancĂ©. She added quickly that she only knew Ringo by his image when filming began last year on Caveman, and that he soon demonstrated on the set that he was a "real professional."

     Starr smiled. He is used to having people misjudge him. 17 years after "I Want to Hold Your Hand", he is still known as the happy-go-lucky clown.

     About his image, he said, "I've had to deal with it for so long, and I had to either try to understand it or go around depressed because it was always being hurled in my face. I've come to accept the fact that people don't turn loose of the first image you give them. They don't realize that a person changes. To millions of people, I'll always be remembered as the dummy. It's the same reason Paul will always be the charming one, and John was known for his rapier wit, and George was the mystic. 

    "That's why I'm excited about this movie. In the past, I've been guilty of letting people use me for marquee value, and there were scenes in the films you let go because you wanted to get home or whatever, but there's nothing in this film that I'm ashamed of. I'm hoping people will now realize this dummy can also act."

     Each of the Beatles has spoken about the difficult adjustment after the breakup of the most spectacularly successful pop group in history, but Starr faced the stiffest career challenge because he was neither a songwriter nor an experienced vocalist. He had little potential as a record maker. "I sat in the garden at home for a year after the split because it was hard for me to get started on my own," Starr said. "The others had something to fall back on, but I was starting from scratch. I didn't know what to do."

     He eventually recorded an album of pop standards and a country album, but neither sold well. His fortune changed in 1971 when he had a top 10 single with "It Don't Come Easy." Then came Ringo, an album with producer Richard Perry that went to number one. Star's LP sales dipped after the mid-70s, but he demonstrated he could hold his own when given viable material.

     The drummer's film career moved up and down through such movies as Candy, The Magic Christian, and a spaghetti western called Blind Man. Things picked up in 1974 when he landed a small but meaty part in That'll Be the Day, a stark, unsentimental look at a young would-be musician (played by David Essex) in pre-Beatles England. A hit in Britain, the film was a flop commercially in the United States, except with critics, a few of whom suggested that Starr deserved an Oscar nomination for his supporting role. 

    "That was a real important step for me," Starr said, speaking with the ease that always caused interviewers to describe him as the most affable Beatle. "It gave me the most scope. I had a chance to go from one attitude to another. It also gave me confidence." Despite a vow to be more careful about future roles, Star ended up with novelty bits in two films, Litztomania and Sextett, that he never even bothered to see. 

    Caveman was by far his biggest challenge. "What attracted me was the fact there were only 15 words in it," he explained.  "That meant I'd have a lot of opportunity to use mime. I think I'm better at that than going through 25 pages of dialogue. Also, I like the story. I'm this sort of weak thing at the start of the film, and I end up as the hero. It's sort of brain winning out over brawn."

     Besides Bach, Starr is joined in the United Artists release by Dennis Quaid, Shelley Long, Avery Schreiber, and six-foot-eight Oakland Raiders football star John Matuszak. 

    Was it love at first sight? "Oh, no," Starr shrugged. "Everyone in the cast would go out to dinner and spend time together, but nothing went on. It wasn't until just before we left Mexico that Barbara and I really said 'hello', but we've been together ever since."

Fundraising





 April 20, 2001 

Leaving Spain


 

Monty Python at the Hollywood Bowl


 April 20, 1976


50 years ago, George Harrison performed on stage at the Hollywood Bowl.  He dressed as a Canadian Mountie and sang with the Monty Python gang during the performance of "The Lumberjack Song."  If you didn't know he was on stage, you might not have even noticed.  

Sunday, April 19, 2026

George and the Jubers


 April 19, 1986 

Yoko's Marriage to Beatle Lennon Reinforced Each Others Creativity (1969)

 


Yoko's Marriage to Beatle Lennon Reinforced Each Others Creativty

By:  Earnest Leogrande

Niagara Falls Gazette

January 25, 1970


    John Lennon has become the outstanding member of The Beatles because of his diversity of talent as well as outspokenness. With Paul McCartney, he has composed most of the Beatles' songs. He has shown a James Joyce-like adroitness with words and in writing two humorous books (one letter adapted to the stage). He has been featured as a movie actor, apart from his fellow Beatles, in the anti-war How I Won the War. He has filmed an experimental movie with his wife, Yoko Ono, plus an anti-capital punishment TV documentary. He has drawn a series of erotic lithographs, which will be published by Avant-Garde magazine. 

    Yoko has made a reputation of her own as an offbeat artist making a taboo, challenging movie consisting of a succession of 364 bare bottoms and encouraging people to crawl into bags, where shut off from the outside environment, they can confront themselves. 

    When these two divorced their mates and married, they reinforced each other's exploratory creativity. "We were both doing things, but when we came together, I think the forces became naturally stronger," Yoko told me in her quiet, almost shy voice. "It was like meeting a mirror and knowing where you're at. Both of us sort of serve as each other's mirror."

     Their great peace campaign came naturally out of this union. "Both of us were peacenicks, you know," Yoko explained. "Alone, maybe we'd have been discouraged. We influenced each other. Peace was a very natural outcome of our work. If you remember, John wrote the song, 'All You Need Is Love'. And that was like a beautiful message. I was doing things in my own way, which was to stand in Trafalgar Square with a bag over me to protest."

     The couple having forsaken the bed as a place for interviews, were sitting on a couch in the living room of friend country western singer Ronnie Hawkins and his wife. The Lennon had just come in from a romp in the snow. The house is in the country, an hour's drive from Toronto, and both looked as cheery and healthy as a couple of youngsters after recess period. 

    Mr. and Mrs. Hawkins go for plain cooking, but the smell of macrobiotic cooking permeated the house. The Lennons follow this diet, which is related to Zen Buddhism, and they had brought in Mr. and Mrs. Martin Schlass, proprietors of the macrobiotic Cauldron restaurant in New York's East Village, to cook for them. 

    John's beard looked a bit short because he had shaved it off and now regrowing it. "It's growing fine, thank you," he said.

     Yoko assured me that she didn't object to John's beard. "That was just a reporter's story. We like to change our hairstyle, but because we are in a constant spotlight, the reporter played it up. We were wearing totally black yesterday, so that was an issue. We'd like some freedom too."

     There had been a report that Lennon was considered for the title role of Jesus Christ in a rock opera to be presented at St Paul's Cathedral next spring. Christ is referred to as a "Superstar" in the musical production. "I never got the offer," he told me. "I'm always reading. I've been offered these parts to play, but no one ever offers them to me. Then when, the press asks, 'Did you offer this to him?' They'd say 'We wouldn't offer it to that idiot.'

     Actually, the writers of the opera said they had decided it was better to give the role to an unknown. they may have been swayed by the recollection that Lennon was called a blasphemous egotist in 1966 when he said "The Beatles were more popular than Jesus. now." He later tried to explain by saying it was meant as a criticism of fans' distorted values. 

    I asked him if he agreed that the emphasis on material possessions prevented society from achieving peace after 1000s of years of war experience. "It hasn't helped," he said. "If you imagine material possessions as being a kind of drug, many people are hooked on it. That's why you get things like dropouts and hippies."

     How could he square this attitude, I asked, with the material wealth that being John Lennon Superstar has brought him? His ready response indicated he contemplated the question before. "As a result of having all the material wealth I could have and still not finding any satisfaction or peace or happiness or whatever, that made me think, well, what else is there in life?

    "Am I just going to sit here watching 20 TVs in 20 suites with 20 cars for the rest of my life? What shall I do after having achieved so-called success and fame that Western civilization says you should have? I'm finding out, it's nowhere. I'm them rather than giving them up."

     The early Beatles told us in song that you can't buy love, but John Lennon is trying to find out if his fame and wealth can buy peace. Yoko concluded the interview with a benediction "We should all try together." She said, "Peace to you."


Mills, McCartney and Powell





April 19, 2001 - Washington D.C. 
 

Message in a bottle



 

John in 1969 in stills from a home movie made by Yoko.   John has messages of peace in the bottle that he is trowing in to the ocean.    Much thanks (and love) to fellow Lennon lover,  Ingryd.