Showing posts with label Robert Freeman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Freeman. Show all posts

Sunday, November 10, 2019

Remembering Robert Freeman

Robert Freeman and John photographed by Ringo Starr

I had Robert Freeman sign my copy of one of his books in 2002 at Beatlefest in Chicago


Paul photo taken by Robert Freeman for a Hard Day's Night





Mal E




Sadly, the famed Beatles photograph, Robert Freeman passed away over the weekend.  Freeman will most likely be remembered as being the man that photographed the cover of the "Meet (or With) the Beatles" album as well as the Rubber Soul album cover.    Freeman took so many great Beatles photographs from 1963-1965.    He was able to capture each of the Beatles' individual personality traits.   He took photos that made the Beatles look sexy in an innocent way.   Millions of girls would hang photos taken by Freeman on their bedroom walls. 

I met him in 2002 and got him to sign one of his books for me.   Tonight I want to honor the great photographer with some of my personal photographs he took over the years. 

Thanks Bob!


Thursday, December 22, 2016

A Christmas card from George and Pattie




George thought this photograph of him was so funny that he decided to turn it into a Christmas card!  Here is the card that was sent out to Robert and Sonny Freeman from George and Pattie.  

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Fun on the Boat

©ImageCollect.com/Globe photos



photo taken by Ringo Starr

photo taken by Ringo Starr

*Please note that the top photo of Paul McCartney has been licensed by ImageCollect.com and it is ILLEGAL to post this photo on social media.  So PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE do not post it on facebook, tumblr, reddit, blogger, flickr, etc.    Thank you for understanding. 

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Beatles are wanted

Letter written to photographer, Robert Freeman from Linda Burrowes on January 1, 1989.

The three girls in your photograph are myself, my sister, Norma, and our friend Ruth.  I've spoken to my sister to refresh the memories for your Beatles book because it's very hard to put into words what we remember from the period as fans.  So here they are!
First the sweaters.  The essential thing was that they had to be dark and crew-necked-as like the Beatles' own gear as possible.  Since we were penniless schoolgirls this called for some ingenuity.  Mine was a white sweater belonging to my father, dyed black, a very messy procedure achieved when my mother was out of the house.  Norma's sweater also belonged to my father and was his words issue sweater.  The WANTED-BEATLES slogan was embroidered on, based loosely on Western movie "wanted" designs.  We like to think they were the first slogan sweaters of their kind.  Unfortunately they don't exist any more.  Norma had ot have the design unpicked and the sweater given back to Dad to wear to work.  When you consider we wore those hot, hair sweaters for a whole week sitting outside the Palace Court Hotel, Bournemouth, in the August sunshine, it says much for our devotion.

I suppose that week in August is something we'll always remember.  We'd been fans since hearing "Love me Do", had seen the Beatles with Roy Orbison at the Gaumont, Southampton in February 1963, and in the Spring had seen them at Salisbury City Hall.  This was a small place where we'd been able to stand right at the front of the stage.  Incidentally, we'd arrived and queued at 3'oclock in the afternoon - the only fans to get there so early.  We were questioned by a policewoman who couldn't understand why we were hanging around so early!

when we found out that they were appearing for a week in Bournemouth in the summer holidays we were thrilled.  We could only afford to see the show once, but we had front row seats and we planned, with the help of a British Rail cheapie weekly ticket, to spend the week in Bournemouth, looking for them during the day.  We lived near Southampton, twenty miles away, and traveled to Bournemouth every day.    I think we imagined we might bump into them on the beach.  In fact we discovered they were staying at the hotel right next to the theatre and so consequently spent the whole week patiently waiting on a park bench opposite the hotel.  Our reward, apart from being photographed by you, were several sightings of the Beatles when they wandered out onto their balconies, a conversation with Paul when he left the hotel with his father, I think, and obtaining autographs of all but John when they set off for their appearance on local television.  They only thing to hand was the box which contained our small transistor radio. I still have it, though the autographs are becoming fainter.
 I find it hard to put into words our devotion to them at that time and the intensity of our fan worship.  In fact if my children behaved like we did!  Perversely, by the end of the year, when Beatlemania had overtaken the whole teenage population, we were much cooler.  I think the thrill was that we were a gorup of the earliest, keenest fans.