Showing posts with label Detroit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2016

300 Greet Beatles





300 Greet Beatles
Windsor Star
August 13, 1966

Religion seems to be the cure for the teen disease of Beatlemania which has been sweeping the country the past three years.

No more than 300 teenagers took the trouble to travel the 25 miles to Metropolitan Airport in Detroit to greet the British quartet compared with screaming thousands who swarmed the airport when the Beatles arrived in September 1964.

An American Airlines flight form Chicago arrived at 11:12am. 

The popularity of the Beatles appears to be declining a bit and many attribute it to the recent remarks made by John Lennon about religion.  The distance to the airport, the arrival time and place of the plane carrying the Beatles may also have been factors contributing to the relatively small group of fans who turned up to welcome the group.

The four were greeted with loud screams by the fans that lined the fence beside the runway.  They were able to stop for about four minutes between the plane and a Greyhound bus to talk with reporters.  They then boarded the waiting bus and were rushed off by police escorts to Olympia Stadium.

A large chauffeur-driven black Cadillac was used as a decoy as the procession left the terminal.

Arthur Schurgin, promotion manager for the Beatles said they would be dropped off at the stadium to prepare for their 2pm performance today.  A second performance will be held at 7pm.

There was some confusion as to where the famed group’s instruments were at the time of their departure by bus.   An American Airlines spokesman said later the instruments would be brought by special flight form Chicago at 1pm.

After their tonight’s performance the Beatles will be taken by Greyhound bus to Cleveland, Ohio for a show Sunday evening.  The airline spokesman was unable to say why the group will not travel as they normally do by plane.

The driver of the bus that took the Beatles from the airport to Olympia said he will always remember this experience to his children and grandchildren.  Alex Patterson said, “Today was just like any other day.  I got to work at 9:00 and then found out I would be chauffeuring the Beatles around Detroit.  My kids went wild when I told them.  I still can’t believe it. “The bus driver says he has always been a great fan of the Beatles.

The group will leave Cleveland early Monday enroute to Washington D.C. where they will give an evening performance at the Washington Stadium.  On August 14, Toronto Maple Leaf Garden will host the stars for two performances at 4pm and 8pm.

Toronto is the only Canadian appearance of the 15 day tour.  They were not accompanied with their wives.



Thursday, May 26, 2016

Beatles and Beauties




Here was a reason to try to be the winner of a beauty contest in your area---it would help your chances of meeting the Beatles!

Monday, April 4, 2016

Take better care of your photos



When I see a photo like this, I feel very sad because someone did not take proper care of this photo of the Beatles' press conference in Detroit on September 6, 1964.    However, the good news is that enough of the photograph has survived that we can see see Ringo, John, George and Paul.  

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Never been a beauty queen



Poor George got covered over by a group of beauty queens---but Lennon---he made sure to get in between two of them.  

Monday, July 27, 2015

Guarding the boys







Much thanks to Cara for sharing these photos that co-worker shared with her!   Great fan snaps from Detroit in 1964!

Saturday, September 6, 2014

The Beatles slept here

After every stop along the Beatles tour, souvenir hunters were on the prowl to get a hold of anything the Beatles touched.    Bedsheets that the Beatles slept on were the most popular item to cut up and sell.   Here is an example from Detroit.  Notice how tiny the piece of the bed sheet is!  


Beatles an another press conference

Photographs from the Beatles 1964 press conference in Detroit, Michigan.....another day...another time to meet the press....






Concert memories of the Beatles in Detroit



photo by Tony Spania






Memories of fans who attended the concert in Detroit, Michigan (collected through various places online)

I was at this concert and saw Paul McCartney again at Comerica Park July 24, 2011. He mentioned that you could not hear songs for all the screaming. So true. I was bummed because you could not hear at all. Girl next to me fainted and missed entire concert. Did enjoy Jackie DeShannon but don’t remember the other acts. I have never run into anyone who was at that concert and everyone is always impressed that I saw them in 1964—Gayle

I also attended the 1964 concert. The event was so influential in my life that it is etched in my mind forever. Interestingly, I don’t remember any other bands performing at the concert. I remember that they only played for about 20 minutes and were set up at one end of what was normally the Olympia ice hockey surface. The screaming was constant and deafening and as fate had it, I was seated to the band’s right and just slightly behind them, but up in the second or third tier so I had a great view and could actually hear them play and sing, (except when Ringo sang the song “Boys”). Thoughtfully, they all turned around and acknowledged the fans seated behind them after every song. Another image that has stuck with me is all the jelly beans that fans threw at them during the performance. After the concert, two rows of cops with arms interlocked surrounded the stage, barely stopping some and dragging others off who had leapt over them to grab the jelly beans they stepped on during the concert. An absolutely, unbelievably amazing Beatlemania scene! Afterwards, on the way out, people were breathing so hard from 20 minutes of screaming, that the walls of the exit corridors were literally dripping with exhaled moisture! –Mark C. 

My sister was at that concert. She still has a couple of the jelly beans that the Beatles stepped on and threw back at the crowd. I went with my dad to pick her up from the concert. She was 17 at the time and came out of Olympia with her girlfriends hoarse and drenched in sweat. –Bob P.

I was also there…up in the Press Box with the son of my Dad’s boss and his fiancee’. I remember a girl fainting and all the screaming. Though I had no idea what this word meant at the time, I can now describe it all as “surreal”…like I was almost dreaming it. I was 8 and it’s one of the best things I can ever say I’ve gotten to do in my life. –Barbara H.

I was there with two sisters and my mom. Yes, etched in my memory, John or Paul were only heard as the girls calmed down to hear them mention what song was next. One cord maybe, then couldn’t hear any of the songs the Beatles played but the screaming, the jelly beans the Beatles had to dodge. One girl kept jumping up and down screaming in front of us. My mother beat her with her purse cause she was blocking her view. The energy, the pandemonium. All worth to live a moment in the history of the Beatles. Heard they grossed more in Detroit than any other city that tour. I now live in Singapore, and yes, there is a bit of reverence, when you tell the world “you saw the Beatles live.” -Mike Griffin

I was at the 1964 concert. My family lived in Ann Arbor. My dad got tickets from one of the Red Wings hockey players he knew through his job at Ford and he took me since I was only 12. This was a very special occasion since I was one of six children at this time. We were seated up and to the left of the stage and had a very good view. I was timid in the midst of all the screaming. When I finally worked up enough courage to scream, the woman in front of me turned and gave me a strange look. I stayed pretty quiet but was elated. If I covered my ears, I could actually hear the songs through all the noise. My dad wore airport ear gear! Funny! I was motivated to learn to play the guitar and I was convinced I would someday marry Paul McCartney. My best friend was going to marry John Lennon. What a childhood memory! I still have the original program from this concert. –Robyn


I was there , I lived in Detroit at the time. I don’t remember hearing much of anything because of the screaming and I think I was doing quite a bit of it myself. But, it was great fun, and I will always have that memory as I was only 12 at the time. The father of a friend of mine said they would never last and bet her a 6 pack of colt 45 that they would be gone in a year. Don’t know if she ever collected it or not! –Mary Lou S.

My Dad, a Probate Judge, scored 4 tickets in ’64. He was to take my three older brothers; one who loved hockey didn’t care to go so I did. At 10 years old I recall hearing only one bit of music through all the screaming. I remember a girl behind me, the veins in her neck bulging as she screamed. As Ringo walked off stage I think a woman leaned over a railing and swung her purse to hit him over the head, likely so she could say her purse touched a Beatle. Amazing night and, yes, people have that reverence when I mention that I was there. –Dave S.


Remembering a Beatle meeting


Back in February of this year, I found this interview with a Detroit fan who met the Beatles at the Detroit '64 press conference on the Detroit CBS station's website.  The interview with Nancy Cain was conducted by  Nagsheen Nassif.  I am excited to share it with those of you who might have missed it the first time around today on the 50th anniversary of when the Beatles were in Detroit. 



 
Ever wondered what it would be like to be up front and center at a Beatles concert? Well, Nancy Cain, the Public Relations Director at AAA Michigan, was there when the Beatles first came to America 50 years ago. She also got to meet them, ask a question at a press conference, and write a story for the Associated Press – and she was only 14 at the time.  I had the opportunity to interview her and she described her experience as “a thrill she will always remember.”

How did you have the opportunity to do something like this?
“The Beatles flew to Detroit on Sept. 6, 1964 as the 14th stop of their 1964 North American Tour. My dad, Charlie Cain, was a veteran Associated Press writer/editor with the Detroit Bureau. When he took the assignment to cover the Beatles’ first ever visit to Detroit- — at the famed Olympia Stadium — he suggested to the AP that it might be fun to have a teenage girl write about the experience first-hand as well. Of course, he had listened to my countless “it would be so great to meet the Beatles” comments for weeks. Thanks to my dad, I was lucky enough to be that teenage girl.”

What was the experience like?
“I can close my eyes even now — 50 years later — and I can still see the Beatles onstage. You couldn’t hear their music — all you could hear was one long loud scream that came up from the audience of mostly young teen girls … and they screamed throughout the entire concert. No one at Olympia Stadium had ever heard a louder, longer, happier, and more exuberant delighted scream than that one. I was exactly at the right moment in time for this concert. As a 14-year-old Detroiter, I was among the countless fans who loved the Beatles from the moment we heard their first records played on the radio and cheered their first American national TV appearance on the Ed Sullivan show.”

What was the most interesting part of this experience?
“My dad and I were right next to the stage, standing just a few feet from the Beatles. As singer Jackie DeShannon, who was the act before the Beatles, finished her last song, the crowd of some 15,000 teens began screaming louder and louder for the Beatles. By the time she left and the Beatles assembled on stage, all you hear was that one long scream of joy. Some of the young crowd rushed the stage for a closer look. They were hustled off by security guards as the Beatles played one hit song after another, smiling all the time. The crowd threw jelly beans at the stage — for some reason, this had become a popular way to pay homage to the Beatles. I scooped up lots of jelly beans — some that had actually bounced off one or another of the Beatles — and proudly gave them away to friends at school the following day.”

How would you describe the energy at this concert?
“This was a moment in time — girls screaming in joy, Beatles playing music that could barely be heard over the screams and applause, and the spotlights shining on the four musicians. Olympia Stadium almost shook to its foundation from the excitement. I have been to concerts since — but none can touch this for the pure joy and energy. I am certain everyone in that crowd shared the same feeling. This was historic — and the beginning of a new era in music. The Beatles were rock stars, and their fame only continued to grow. The concert was even better than anyone could have imagined.”

Did you have a chance to interview the Beatles after the concert?
“After the concert, we were hustled backstage for a brief news conference.  I was lucky enough to stand right behind the Beatles, closest to Ringo. He shook my hand.  Questions flew from reporters who had quickly assembled.  I had my reporter’s notebook and pen in hand, ready to take notes. As one of the youngest people in that room, several Beatles smiled at me and said hello, I smiled and said hello back.  I asked how the Beatles like Detroit—someone else asked the same question.   I remembered the questions and answers — and wrote a story for the AP.”

Have you ever sat in on a news conference before?
“This was my first news conference. As a reporter and public relations director, I have attended or organized many news conferences — but none quite like this brief exchange –almost banter — between the Beatles and media on hand. When the Beatles left the room, everyone stood around for a few moments, almost in awe and some just smiling. What a great assignment!”

What was the drive home like for you and your father after this concert?
“As my dad and I drove home, we both commented simultaneously that we couldn’t hear very well… we were still slightly deaf from the screaming crowd. A security guard told us the same thing — he thought he lost his hearing; it was a day unlike any other at Olympia Stadium. Our ears rang for several days.”

Who was your favorite Beatle and song?
“At the time, Paul McCartney was my favorite Beatle — but over the years, I’ve grown to appreciate all of them for their extraordinary talent. That day at Olympia Stadium, one of my favorite Beatle song was “I want to hold your hand,” but today, it’s hard to pick a favorite — the Beatles have contributed so much that it is hard to single out a favorite. One of my favorites is “The Long and Winding Road.”

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Meet Miss Michigan 1964






I recently received an email from Marina Pombar, who was Miss Michigan 1964 and had the amazing experience of meeting the Beatles during their Detroit press conference. Several photos were taken that day (one of which Marina shared with this blog) of her with the boys. Here is what she says about that day,
It was a moment where I represented Michigan and I did not think the people would react as they did!! I was more in tune with the Motown sound. I was surprised by the jelly beans,the screams, noise, and all of a sudden taken away by the police.The police protected all of us. We were taken away in different cars.I did not get a chance to talk to them after the event.


Marina currently is a sculptress who lives in Mexico City. She still has the photo that she shared with us hanging on the wall and often looks at in in ah! To check out her artwork, please see her webpage. Thank you Marina for sharing your photograph and memories of when you met the Beatles.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Detroit '66



Continuing on with my own celebration of the 45th anniversary of the Beatles 1966 North American tour, here are some colored photos from the Detroit show.


Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Detroit 1964


This is a fan photo taken by a Beatles fan that stood on the side of the road waiting for the Beatles car to drive by. It was taken in Detroit in 1964 and you can clearly see Paul. John is behind the police officer and you can see a little bit of him.