Showing posts with label San Diego. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Diego. Show all posts

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Pandemonium Breaks Loose (San Diego 1965)





  

Pandemonium Breaks Loose

By Susan and Jeanee Wheeler and Carman Sandoval

Imperial Beach Star News

September 2, 1965

 

One girl to the left suddenly burst into hysterical screams, rocking back and forth. To the right, a girl sat quietly, moaning and biting her fingernails. The scene at Balboa Stadium looked as though a reliable source had just announced the end of the world, and in a sense, it was.

The Beatles, the biggest entertainment group in the world, dressed in beige army jackets and tight black pants, were performing for an audience of 25,000.

 Earlier, while Brenda Holloway, King Curtis, Sounds Inc., Cannibal, and the Headhunters (minus two heads) performed, and while vendors hawked their goods and fans threw Beatle buttons, the British four held a press conference in their dressing room, crowded with people.

 The Beatles were relaxed and calm. The only trouble they had was seeing through their hair. Screams filtered in from outside.

 Earlier, the Beatles had given their fans a chance to see them close up. Their bus had stopped 10 feet from the fence while they unloaded. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr happily waved to the crowd.

 Some of the first questions ventured were about Ringo Starr's marriage. A reporter asked if the drummer minded girls chasing after him now that he's married, Ringo answered, “No, I don't, because now there are two of me, Ringo and Richie.” (His real name is Richard Starkey.) In good humor, John and Paul promptly called in high voices,” Hi there. Richie!”

 John Lennon said his voice was holding out fine after a brief sore throat. The Beatles laughed and admitted their phenomenal fame was a joke.

 When they marched across the turf to the stage, pandemonium broke loose. Through the screams, fans heard strains of I Feel Fine, Dizzy Miss Lizzie, Boys,  Can't Buy Me Love, " " I Want to Be Your Man, Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby, Ticket to Ride and a few other songs could be heard.

 Confetti, Beatle buttons and paper was were thrown onto the field. When the Beatles began to sing the title song from their new movie Help, they weren't kidding. Girls were jumping the fence and charging the stage. The tackles made by the policemen would have put the Chargers to shame.

 Only one fan even made it near the stage before the show was stopped. She approached tentatively, then bit the arm of a guard who escorted her out.

 The Beatles and their guitars left San Diego via bus. The audience was imprisoned in the stadium until the bus left. Then we poured out, leaving the walls of the Chargers' home still trembling.

 

 

 

29 Oasis (San Diego 1965)






  

29 Oasis

By Barbara Fiske

Hi-Desert Star

September 16, 1965

“If you don't mind pretending you're my mother, I can get you into a news conference with the Beatles. They're performing in San Diego tonight.” The invitation to be her mother was given me by my friend Martha Garvin of San Diego soon after I had checked into the hotel for a vacation along the cooling Pacific Ocean.  Ordinarily, my own HI-Desert Star press pass would have sufficed, but it seems getting to a news conference with the Beatles required security clearance almost as drastic as the one required to get into the White House.  At least so, I was told.

 There wasn't time, Martha explained, for so much red tape. But her mother, editor and publisher of The California Senior Citizen News wasn't going to use her pass, and so I could have it, if I would pretend to be her Mother. Tired as I was after the trip, a news conference with the Beatles would be a once-in-a-lifetime experience which could not be denied.

Within an hour, I met Martha, her editor and photographer of the Senior Citizen News, and we were on our way. The Beatles program which was being held at Balboa Stadium at the San Diego High School.

The news conference was to precede the program for which we also had press passes.  The streets near the stadium were clogged with cars and kids. Finally finding a place to park a half a mile away. We climbed the steep hill by the school and discovered neighbors were hanging out of windows and sitting on porches and along the sidewalk to watch the crowds go by. “The people going to see the Beatles are odder looking than the Beatles themselves,” one spectator informed us.

Policemen directed traffic, hawkers sold Beatles pennants, Beatles buttons, Beatles cushions, Beatles programs. A mass of teenagers converged on the area. Some were singing and some were waving pennants.

We reached the high school building where the conference was to be held and pushed our way through the crowd to the head manager. After being thoroughly checked off a list, we were allowed to climb over the chain to the door, and then, after further orders were given, we were allowed inside the conference area.

 A group of teenagers broke through the police lines and ran into the conference room. Police came rushing after them. I heard one remark as a policeman started pushing her out. “Okay, I'll go, but it was at least a good try.”

 About 30 of us, privileged persons, were inside the area when the Beatles were brought in. The Beatles' very British manager informed us that we had five minutes to take pictures, and then questions would be in order. But order was not exactly the way to describe the conference. Trying to take a picture involved pushing harder than the next guy and punching yourself a spot with your elbows. Some photographers stood on the chairs. I haven’t seen my pictures yet, but I can bet I got more rear views of reporters' heads than I did of the Beatles.

 And all this time, from the stadium outside, there was a constant squealing. Squealing that rose and fell, but it was always in the background, and singing, “We love you. Beatles, oh yes, we do” or something like that.

The news conference didn't last too long. It was hard to hear everything the Beatles said. Television cameras were grinding. People were jumping up and down. Flashes were firing. John, I believe it was did most of the talking.  Ringo displayed his rings.

 I do remember someone asked the Beatles how they felt about the decoration, or whatever it was that Queen Elizabeth bestowed upon them. The reply was to the fact that they had thought they deserved the honor just as much as some of the others to whom it had been given.

They looked just like any other male would look with long hair. And there were so many long hairs around in the conference room that I was confused at first as to which ones were the Beatles.

 After the conference, we made our way through policemen and hundreds, it seemed, of Pinkerton men into the stadium. The squealing was constant. I'd never heard the Beatles, and I didn't hear much of them this time. The squealing never stopped, not even when the Beatles were performing.

 On television the next day, a psychiatrist tried to explain the squealing by saying that teenagers had a culture of their own, and part of their behavior was to revolt against the hypocrisies of adult culture.

 People asked me what I thought of the Beatles. An expert I cannot pretend to be, but they seem during the news conference to be very sensible and likable fellows who had a good thing going and knew it. After all, it said they take in about $25,000 each performance. How many of us would turn down a chance like that, even if it did call for a far-out hairdo? Personally, I wouldn't have missed the experience of a news conference with The Beatles, even if I had to be my own grandma. 

Beatle Watching Can Be Fun (San Diego 1965)



 Beatle Watching Can Be Fun

By Jim McLain

Record Searchlight (Redding, California)

September 4, 1965

Jim McLean, a Record Searchlight reporter, attended a performance of The Beatles in San Diego during his vacation. Here are his impressions.

 

It was what was happening, baby, or at least that's what all of us had been told. “Everyone who was anyone was going to be there,” the men on the radio kept saying, and how could we even think of missing it?

And it was one of those great Southern California evenings that are so typical of this city. It was neither too hot nor too cold. A thin, misty fog hung low over the horizon of the ocean, and the stars were out above, but they didn't seem to matter to the people I saw here that night. The stars that were on the ground were the only ones who counted. They were John Lennon, Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, and George Harrison. They are the Beatles.

The Beatles, various columnists and writers have reported, make movies, records, and money, not necessarily in that order. They are a phenomenon. And a college journalism instructor once told me that every young reporter should see a phenomenon if he gets the chance.

I had the chance, but I was a bit dubious about it: phenomenon or no phenomenon. The Beatles have somehow lacked appeal where I have been concerned. And then there are all those stories you see in the papers: rioting and overselling of outrageous price tickets, so that the audience is crushed together. The teenage girls scream so loud that you can't hear anything.  The traffic jams are a mess.

 Well, not all of those things were true at the group's San Diego concert. Concert is the word the promoters used. It was held in the city's spacious Balboa Stadium. Only about 80% of the seats were filled, so there was plenty of room for everybody, and the screaming girls weren't so loud that you couldn't hear what was going on on the stage if you wanted.

Actually, a Beatles performance can be kind of fun if you pay more attention to the people around you than you do to the Beatles. This one started out with a rock and roll combo, somewhat sour and shaky rendition of the Star Spangled Banner. It would have brought tears to the eyes of any member of the John Birch Society.

 It ended with the Beatles doing something called “Help”, the title of their latest movie and their most recent record release. In between, there was a parade of radio station disc jockeys. Southern California teenagers idolize them, and several more or less minor groups with names like Sounds Incorporated (they're guaranteed to make it big someday, because they were discovered by Brian Epstein, the man who found the Beatles) and Cannibal and the Headhunters.

 And there was the shrieking, teary eyed girls.  Most of them were clad in bell-bottom trousers and brightly colored blouses. The thing to wear to a Beatles show.

We got the most inexpensive seats we could at $3.50 each, and found ourselves in the end zone of what is usually the San Diego Chargers football field. The performers were on a stage set up at what was about the 20 year line near the other end of the field. From that distance, the Beatles looked like bed bugs. They were on stage for only about 30 minutes, probably because that's all some of the young ladies could take.

“Hello”, said one of the mop tops after the group took the stage, and it seemed as though the screaming might begin to subside. A high-pitched roar filled the big bowl all over. Girls were frantically waving signs to proclaim their love and lifelong devotion to the British stars.

And the vendors, doing their best to shout loudly enough about the wonders of their wares so they could be heard over the crowd, were having a field day. What they said were autographed pictures of Ringo were going quickly at $2 each, and there were programs, Beatle buttons, cheap binoculars and other souvenirs that were being snatched up by the enthusiastic crowd.

The disc jockeys, who were running the show, repeatedly said they would stop it if anyone tried to get on the field, but they didn't hold true to their promise. Several young boys scampered out to the grass and were immediately tackled football style by the fleet-footed San Diego police. You could hear mutterings of police brutality.

If the Beatles return to San Diego someday, they will probably hope for a more successful show. Not all the tickets available for this one were sold, and something else was wrong. There was no tossing of jellybeans. Why people would want to throw jellybeans at anyone seems a little beyond comprehension. But that is supposed to be the custom at a Beatles show, the singers say that they like it. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

A First Date






 


A First Date

By Pattie Pourade

The Harrison Alliance

November 1972

 

To paraphrase Tony Barrow, it began by his simple instructions that when The Beatles sat down the photographers would be given five minutes after which they would all remain seated during the press conference.  Their procedure for asking questions was orderly and simple.  After being called on, please stand up and speak loudly.

I was a shy 14-year-old and in those last minutes before the Balboa Stadium dressing lockers gave the Beatles to the San Diego press, I didn’t clutch my friend's hand but I needed to.  He was as excited as I was.  Driving into the city we’d ranted and raved over them, although he admitted he’d much rather look at their wives and girlfriends.

So August 28, 1965, was about to come to a climax that had begun to build several weeks earlier when the city was added to the series of concert dates The Beatles would play.  My girlfriend and I bought tickets and sat the summer away on the beach waiting for “B-day.”  “August 28 is Beatle Day” said the buttons KCBQ announced daily that the KG-Beatles were San Diego bound.

On August 25th, my dad, a printer at one of the smaller papers in town, asked me how would I like to go to a Beatles press conference as a reporter.  OH MY GOD, YES!  That was Wednesday, and by Saturday night at 7:00, I was not ready to face The Beatles.  My friends were in the stadium now.  I was alone, 4 years younger than the minimum age The Beatles had agreed could come in.  They had also requested 4 televisions, several cots, and a bathtub of fried chicken, but this had no bearing on the press conference.

Neil dressed almost identical to George, had been wandering around the basketball court where we sat in folding chairs along with several members of the entourage and many traveling D.J.s.  An oblong table sat in front of us, one side laden with A Spaniard In The Works, a cake, and a gift wrapped in white tissue with red ribbons.  John would sit here next to the protecting figure of Mr. Barrow.  Ringo would sit between John and Paul, looking much smaller than his companions, and on the opposite end, a grim, cigarette-sucking Harrison.

He was my first in-person glimpse of a Beatle I had as a photographer lifted his arm and I caught sight of his narrow face shrouded by dark very bushy coarse looking hair.  I said to Pat, “I just saw George.”  And he told me he’d seen John sitting directly in front of us. When the photographers backed away, I saw The Beatles sitting behind the table certainly not an iota as interested in us as we were in them. 

Two trench-coated Teen Screeners walked up next to John and he mutter “Ah Teen Screen” in a mocking way.  Anyone who had seen the California Beatle press conferences will know Paul had a knack for getting the bum microphone – that night was no exception.  He leaned forward over the table to see the wires at his feet, obliging to a “hello hello…” until the microphone sputtered to life.

“Hey, Paul, do ya have a cigarette?” a fellow sitting directly behind me yelled.  Remember Paul used to be the pushover for fans?  Even though Paul wasn't smoking at the time and George was, giving his press barely a bored bunk of his eyes, he asked Paul, who I admit looked like Santa Claus next to grim George.  Paul took a rumpled soft pack from his back pocket.  “Throw it here,” from behind me he yelled unaware Pat and I were already making hasty plans to grab the sailing pack as it flew past us.  Paul tipped his head and said like a boy being caught at the cookie jar, “But it’s me last one.”

“Ah, come on Paul!” several people shouted but he put the cigarette up.  Maybe he thought George might run out. I don’t know what George would have done without them that night.  His was a monumental habit.  John was trading comments with Ringo (“Ah, little Richie”) and one man about being away from Maureen.

I was in a state of catatonic shock.  They were real, just a matter of 5 feet from where I sat.  John’s hair glowed golden red in the late-day sunlight.  He looked hefty in a white suit and black shirt.  I was overwhelmed by Ringo’s small statue and, of course, Paul’s eyes.  His hair glistened almost black and along with his mates, he showed no hint of having been in the sun even though Paul said later he did have a tan.  George flanked his left side leaning against one elbow with his chin resting on his fist for the most part.  His jacket was black, his eyes as bitter and brooding as the sarcastic way he responded to the questions.  A reporter said of him, “to the unpracticed eye, George seems the most egotistical Beatle. He seems to improve on that description of his attitude that night.”

John and Paul, at that time more the talking Beatles, answered most of the questions.  I wrote down answers fast and furious – and only later did I realize I hadn’t bothered to write a question to accompany any answers.  How did the Beatles answer questions 7 years ago?

Q:  Do you have any advice for teenagers?

John: Don’t get pimples. 

Is he putting us on? Everyone laughed dutifully, although a pimple-faced teenager thinks it’s no laughing matter.  Most of the questions were asinine, from mindless reporters who still doubted The Beatles were anything more than a spinning record.  They answered questions about their hair, Ringo’s’ rings, county and west songs (Act Naturally).  George pointed out with a you-dumb-ass attitude that several Beatle records were country if he’d taken the time to listen.  Paul really taxed his memory to tell us, “yea yea yea” He did like “Man From Uncle” and shot at us with his machine gun arm.

Q:  Do you have any ambitions?

John:  No.

George:  I’d like to race the Indianapolis 500.   Paul turned his head sideways and said, “Yes – on a horse.” And George even smiled.  We laughed at that witty McCartney.

I waited at least 10 minutes before I musted the guts to raise my hand, and as luck goes Tony Barrow pointed straight at me.  I pointed at myself and squeaked, “me?” and my life began to pass in front of me.  He nodded.  I stood on legs Jell-O products would have gladly packaged and whispered my question.  John looked at Tony and said, “I can’t hear her.”  Had I been prone to swearing, then my thought would have been, “Oh shit.”  I repeated it, “What was your reaction to Sukarno’s burning of anything by or about The Beatles?”  I thought it was a great question from a 14-year-old who would much rather have known how George’s mother was.  John said, “It was stupid.”  George raised his head and sneered, “We took it bitterly,” and my self-esteem took a hurling crash to my feet.  At the time, it hurt me that George would take that angry attitude with me.  Paul bashed on in with a lengthy reply telling me they should have sent it back so they could resell it.  I think, knowing I was dumbstruck with them all, he gave me a nod and a wink and a smile.  My legs melted, and I sat down, blushing purple I suspect in trembling.

Someone asked them what they did when they got to their hotel rooms.  Paul offered, “We shower, have a cup of tea, and brush our teeth after every meal,” in his best Crest toothpaste voice.  Questions about the MBE - John later returned – as to whether they thought they deserved them.   John replied, “A lot more than some who’ve got it.”  Everyone applauded him, and rightly so.  Making money by music will always be more positive than murdering in the name of any government.

A beach-minded California asked them did they like surfing.  It looks like great fun but very difficult and they didn’t have the time to learn, Paul answered.  He added with a twinkle they did have boards though, the ones with the little wheels that they ride in their hotel rooms.

One determined, hardened reporter asked George what he’d seen of San Diego.  Not too astonished at all at being questioned directly, he answered honestly with a slight grin, “I saw the freeways.”  John popped in, “I saw the sea.”  Someone ought to tell the boy that the large expanse of blue saltwater is the Pacific Ocean.  Seven years ago, he might have denied it, though.

John thought it was important since they were powerless to stop them, that we fans know that rubbish in magazines was all “trash and just printed to sell.”  (I can remember George tersely telling a D.J. that Pattie did not write that column in 16 Magazine and they didn’t even know the Ad Lib was not THE place anymore).

To the question of the Beatles being part of a communist plot to demoralize American youth, Paul laughed and said, “That’s a bunch of rubbish.  We’re not communists!  We’re filthy capitalists!”  Right on.

My date inquired after John’s reported sore throat which he said was fine now and then asked were they saving their money.  John told him that was easy because they didn’t have time to spend it.  Then George said ever so seriously in his clear but Liverpool mumble, “ I spent all mine on cigarettes.”

It had lasted no more than a half hour when Tony said that was all, and three Beatles beat a hasty retreat to their fried chicken, cots, and telly.  Paul stood and signed several autographs.  He looked to be enjoying the attention, and as always, in those days, we were enjoying him.  I stood next to him, amazed that he seemed so tall when my father, at the same height, had never struck me that way.  Even after this close in-person glimpse at the professional part of George, John, Paul, and Ringo, they were still bigger than life.  It took me months to come off this cloud.  I was struck most profoundly by George’s ill temper and Paul’s oppositely amicable replies, and John’s beautiful hair.

Pat and I both floated out.  We passed a sobbing girl near one of the gates who wept, “I saw Paul.”  I wish I could have wept and screamed and hugged my closest friend.  I was just 14 – I’d been near them – close enough to hear a cough and a striking match.  Over an hour later, the Beatles crossed the grassy field to the stage amid screams from thousands.  “I just saw them…” was all I could think and basically is the clearest memory I carry from the concert itself. 

It was a day like any other, except I was there.  What more could I ask for my first date?

Friday, August 28, 2015

Fans remember the Beatles at Balboa




I was at Balboa stadium that night !!! $5.50 for a 5th row seat !!! My parents dropped me off, all alone.. Bell bottom pants , crop top and Beatle boots.. Wow, what a night to remember.. the beginning of the Beatles Revolution !!! –Suzanne

I was there with my older sister and family friends.  I was only 8 years old.  I remember being over a football field away and the screaming girls pulling up grass like it was walked on by the Fab Four.  I may have been the youngest fan there! Crazy!!  -- John

I was there! Won tickets on the radio and mom said no! You can't go! I snuck out and it was definately worth the 2 weeks restriction I got, ha ha!  -anonymous

I was there I was only 14 years old I do remember them I couldn't hear them sing because all the screaming and I remember the tickets were only $5 apiece – Ruben

I was 11 years old when I saw the concert. My father insured KGB radio, and the station manager gave him 1 comp. ticket. We drove down to Balboa Stadium, and my dad stayed in the car and read his newspaper while I went in by myself. I remember the crowd booing the deejay who introduced each act. Finally, the Beatles came out, and I had to stand the whole the time with my fingers in my ears, which helped filter out the screaming. It seemed like 10 minutes to me, and then they were gone from the stage. On my way back to the car, I saw my first "hippie" with long hair, who was being handcuffed by the police. It was quite a night. – Larry


Beatles at Balboa

There are some Beatles concerts that have hundreds and hundreds of photos available and there are others that only have a small amount.   Sadly The Beatles' concert in San Diego in 1965 is one of those concerts where a lot of photos haven't surfaced over the years.   



Backstage at Balboa?

Not sure if this is from this date or not---but Paul seems to be wearing that same striped jacket.

Pressed for time











Some lovely photos of the Beatles at the press conference in San Diego, California on August 28, 1965.    I have posted a wonderful story of some fans that met the Beatles during this visit and gave them the key to the city several years ago on this blog and it is worth mentioning again today.

http://www.meetthebeatlesforreal.com/2012/06/giving-beatles-keys-of-city-of-san.html

Beatles Quip at fast clip







ADVERTISING
'AUDIENCE' FOR PRESS: Beatles Quip At a Fast Clip
By Beverly Beyette
 The San Diego Union, August 29, 1965, Page A-27

First came Ringo, the nervous one in the black velvet vest and Paul the friendly one in the gold and gray striped coat.

"We'll just grab the best seat," quipped Paul. Then he and Ringo laughed. Just because they like to laugh.

Ringo puffed nervously on his cigarette, squinted out of the blue eyes that just show under the Beatle bob, and laid his skinny sun glasses on the table.  George, wearing a black poplin jacket over a white crocheted shirt, and puffing on a cigarette, took his place to the right of Paul.  John, wearing a pale blue cotton jacket over a black T-shirt, took his place at Ringo's right and wrapped his feet in their pointy-toe boots around the rungs of his chair.  He tilted his head back a bit to see out from under the light brown hair that looks almost like a comic wig.  The Beatles were meeting the press. The Beatles don't have press conferences exactly - they hold audiences. It would be easier to get invited to tea at Buckingham Palace.

A Beatle audience goes something like this:
Q. John - What were you really trying to say in your book? Why don't people understand it?
A. I understand it. If I wrote in normal spelling there would be no point in writing. I'm not saying anything. There's no message.
(The high-pitched shrieks from inside Balboa Stadium can be heard just a few hundred yards away.)
The BeatIes shrugged. "We expect that!" they say, unconcerned.
Q. Do you think you are playing a joke on American kids?
John answers. John does most of the talking.
A. "We look on this as more of a joke than anything. But we wouldn't make music if we didn't like it. You'll find us playing in our hotel rooms."
Q. Where did you find your sound?
George answers. "We don't find sounds. We make them."
Q. How much longer do you think you will last?
George, wryly, “About 30 years.”
Q. Do you think you deserve to be made members of the Order of the British Empire?
"A lot more than a lot of people that get it," says John.
Q. About the Rolling Stones and the Dave Clark Five and the others ... do you consider them a threat to your popularity?
Paul: "But we've got our little skate boards for our hotel rooms."
Q. You've admitted to being agnostics. Are you also irreverent, as has been said?
Paul: "We are agnostics, so there is no point in being irreverent.”
Q. Why do you wear your hair so long?
John: "You like yours short, we like ours long."
"Da-da-da-da-da-da!" sings out Paul. He and Ringo tap their feet and do a little ditty over that one.
The press conference is over. The shrieks grow louder. The irreverent ones are gone.

The Beatles Conquer America (again)!