Peter Goldman -
My Crazy Week's with The Beatles
(based on an article in the Swedish magazine Vecko-Revyn)
| Peter Goldman - A Swedish pop film maker, that worked for the
Swedish Television during the 60's and 70's tells his story behind the making of 'Penny
Lane' and 'Strawberry Fields Forever' -films. "Everything went so fast. It wasn't until I sat on the plane for London I realised what I was up to. I felt the nervousity and the excitement crawling under the skin. How in the world should I be able to make something enough funny-bizzard-cleaver-crazy-sofisticated to satisfy The Beatles. It was there in the plane that I came up with the idea of the horses. - What do you like horses? I asked The Beatles when I told them about my ideas before the filming of the promotion picture for 'Penny Lane'. - Oh yeah! Horses. Our friends on the countryside have horses. |
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All four thought that they might be able to ride a horse, if the they (the
horses) were of the calm type.
Nothing worked at the first attempt of the shootings
The filming started in East End in London. The point was that John, Paul, George and
Ringo should ride their horse through a narrow street. But the sight of the four horses
became too much for the crowd of people that had been gathering to look at it all. They
called and yelled so that the horses were scared and the boys had to flee to a pub in the
neighbourhood.
Naturally it became a great success when The Beatles and the whole film team rushed
into the pub. When the whole situation was cooled down a photographer was asked to take
some pictures of the solemn occasion.
The pub owner, employees, wife's, kids, everyone was lined up. Old
grandma was waken up, the youngest baby was taken up from the cradle. Everybody should be
present on the family portrait along with The Beatles. The picture was supposed to hand on
the wall on the pub and to increase the sale.
The Beatles never said no to this kind of situations. Patiently they shaked hands with
everyone, lend out their clothes, discussed cameras and movies and since long dead film
stars.
The second day
| The next day the horse scenes were going to be retaken in a park,
but there wasn't any success. It was lucky that Paul was the best rider of the four, when
suddenly the horse, for some reason, got scared and his horse bolted away over the big
field in the park. Finally four horses stood shaking at the wrong end of the park refusing to move. |
One of the horses kicked on a field gate as if he wanted to get away from the whole thing. The horse keeper, who had brought with him four calm and gentle horses looked ashamed and suspected what he had done.
There was, however, a short sequence made. The Beatles bare headed in red coats on the horseback. The boys were glad that the shooting was over and done.
- It was during the takings with the horses in the park that I for the first time
saw The Beatles' enormous catering bus. John, Paul, George and Ringo liked good food and
they did loose the temper if they didn't get their special food even during the shootings.
So, their big metal coloured catering bus followed them wherever they went. Containing
a staff of cooks made the tables with their favourite food, baked in a gratin-disk with
parsley over it or the special chicken that they liked of something else that they
ordered.
-The food was served in a special order. First John, Paul, George and Ringo were
served, then me, the head director, and after me my assistant and then the other
assistants and so on.
- Ringo had a dog named 'Tiger' that he was very proud of. Tiger wasn't the most
terrifying dog in his class, not the least of all. It was the smallest and the most taken
cared of little white puddle I've ever seen. Paul had a dog that looked like a little
pony; named Martha.
The films were, to the most parts, filmed on an estate in Kent. The surroundings were incredible English with a great old castle and hundreds of half tamed deer's that was strolling around in a giant park. Strawberry Fields
Forever
For the film 'Strawberry Fields Forever' we built a giant instrument that actually was
an old teared apart piano with strings up in the air. The wind played on the strings that
kept falling all the time and made a mess.
In Johns special built Rolls Royce the fab four had a real big laugh. Through a
microphone and a loudspeaker they tried to shear me up with comments and advises that made
an echo out over the neighbourhood.
This gave an unexpected result. A lot of truant boys from an boarding school nearby
came to see what it was all about. Boys in all ages dressed in uniforms and straw hats
hunting for autographs and souvenirs. A piece of a cigarette or an autograph by Peter
Goldman was good enough. Peter could just establish the fact that the Beatles fever seemed
to get higher for every year.
The Beatles talked to the arriving fans and John took his film camera and filmed the
crowd. The truant boys from the boarding school wasn't as keen as The Beatles to listen to
their director.
- Jump! said John. I want everybody to jump!
Nobody jumped so John didn't get the scene he wanted on film. Instead he had to satisfy
with filming trees, the piano strings and other things that he felt that he should
immortalise.
| All four of The Beatles have excellent equipment for film at their
houses. Ringo showed proudly his 16 mm equipment for Peter. The Beatles was very patient actors in front of the camera. They was very interested and competent in all the technical things. |
There was cold winds blowing at the estate, but The Beatles kept the whole team in a good mood. In spite of frozen noses they fooled around and always had encouragement things to say.
In 'Strawberry Fields Forever' there are seven changes of clothes. Nearly all the
clothes came from John, Paul, George and Ringo's own wardrobes. Four red coats was all
that they had to buy specially for the film, the rest came from the wardrobes.
Peculiar combinations occurred. Ringo loved an old uniform coat. John changed between a
knee long beige jersey, a scarf and a preachers coat that he originally had hired for
masquerade, but not been able to divorce.
They often bought small things in stores that they passed to and from the shootings. At one occasion they found an old antique shop where all four looked at every single thing. A couple of wind instruments was tested and the owner of the shop mumbled something about a tape recorder and a fortune. George bought a small lamp there.
The filming of the two films (we know now that they made three. The third one was 'A Day In The Life') took three weeks. Three crazy, funny and unforgettable weeks. Everything could have been done a lot faster but the arrangements didn't always work out as they was supposed to do - but we had a such a pleasant time.
| When everything was settled we celebrated it with a giant party in
the new EMI studio at St. James's Wood. The guests was dressed up in coloured clothes.
Rolling Stones, Donovan, a member of the Monkees and many more pop stars where there.
Paul conducted a big symphony orchestra dressed up in a loose nose and sunglasses. Ringo took pictures of it all and in a pause a strange recording took place; The Rolling Stones sang the background singing to one of the tracks on the new coming Beatles album. |
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| Ewa Aulin, a blond Swedish girl who became Miss World Teenager in 1967,
later known as an actress who made her movie début in the 1967 film 'Candy' in which Ringo appeared in a cameo role as Emmanuel, a
Mexican gardener who, like the rest of the male cast, manages to seduce the heroine. Ewa
gave Ringo his first screen kiss, filmed Wednesday, 13th December 1967 in Rome.
- What about that? Ringo. Did you like it? |
Back To the Top
The man who created John Lennon
| It was the Swedish designer Reije who formed John Lennon!
It's true! Without Reije Andersson the statue of John Lennon never would have been there, in front of the City Hall in Los Angeles. It wouldn't have been casted, it's as simple as that. The artist, Brett-Livingstone Strongbehind, is the man who
designed the statue. Reije is born and raised in Lerum by the Swedish West Coast. He was 15 years old
when he and his family moved to Los Angeles. After school he did study graphic design for
PR purposes. It ended up more into the art than PR. By the time he created the John Lennon
statue he had worked at The West Coast Sculptors Foundry for about five years. |
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The Beatles pages
are constructed by Lasse Bengtsson.