The Beatles at Shea Stadium

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The Beatles at Shea Stadium
NEMS Enterprises
Subafilms
StarringJohn Lennon
Paul McCartney
George Harrison
Ringo Starr
Ed Sullivan
CinematographyAndrew Laslo
Music byThe Beatles
Release date
  • 1 March 1966 (1966-03-01) (BBC Television)[1]
Running time
50 minutes
LanguageEnglish

The Beatles at Shea Stadium is a fifty-minute-long documentary of

Bob Precht (under the Sullivan Productions banner), NEMS Enterprises (which owns the 1965 copyright), and the Beatles company Subafilms. The project, placed under the direction of manager of production operations M. Clay Adams, was filmed by a large crew led by cinematographer Andrew Laszlo. Fourteen cameras were used to capture the euphoria and mass hysteria that was Beatlemania in America in 1965. The documentary first aired on BBC1 on 1 March 1966.[1] In West Germany, it aired on 2 August that year.[2] It aired in the United States on ABC on 10 January 1967.[3][4]

History

The film captures not only the concert, the attendance of which was 55,600,

Cousin Brucie Morrow are also featured. Mick Jagger and Keith Richards were also in attendance.[6] Marvin Gaye was introduced but did not perform.[7] The Young Rascals and Cannibal & the Headhunters also performed but were not featured in the documentary. The concert had been presented by promoter Sid Bernstein. Television host Ed Sullivan
introduced the band when they took the stage: "Now, ladies and gentlemen, honored by their country, decorated by their Queen, and loved here in America, here are The Beatles!"

The film is not a completely accurate representation of the actual concert performance. The songs "She's a Woman" and "Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby" are omitted from the film due to time and likely camera reel change issues (audio of the latter song was released on The Beatles Anthology Volume 2 CD). The audio for the songs that remained went through a heavy post-production process as well. Some songs were treated with overdubs, or even re-recorded entirely, by the Beatles at London's CTS Studios on 5 January 1966, to cover audio problems throughout the concert recording. In addition, the audio for "Twist and Shout" comes from a show at the Hollywood Bowl in 1964, and the audio for "Act Naturally" was simply replaced by the studio version of the song (released on the Help! LP in Britain and on the B-side of "Yesterday" in the US), sped up slightly and poorly edited to sync up to the film. [citation needed]

The Beatles at Shea Stadium was also shown in cinemas in the United States.[8] The band's friend from their years in Hamburg, Klaus Voormann, designed the advertisements used to promote the film.[8]

Although the film has not been officially available on DVD or VHS (except via a 1978 release by Media Home Entertainment that was successfully sued by Northern Songs),[9] it has been widely available on the bootleg circuit for decades, including in a "raw audio" form that restores the original Shea Stadium audio track. A thirty-minute 4K restoration of the concert was about to be issued simultaneously with the release of the Ron Howard film The Beatles: Eight Days a Week on 15 September 2016,[10] although added to the cinema showings of the film, it was absent in home video due to a lawsuit over the film rights.[11]

The band played a further concert at Shea Stadium on 23 August 1966.

Set list

Opening title credits for the 1966 concert documentary

All songs written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, except where noted.

  1. "
    Bert Russell
    )
  2. "She's a Woman" (not included in film. audio added to the end credits of 2016 release.)
  3. "I Feel Fine"
  4. "
    Dizzy Miss Lizzy" (Larry Williams
    )
  5. "Ticket to Ride"
  6. "Everybody's Trying to Be My Baby" (Carl Perkins) (not included in film)
  7. "Can't Buy Me Love"
  8. "Baby's in Black"
  9. "Act Naturally" (Voni Morrison, Johnny Russell)
  10. "A Hard Day's Night"
  11. "Help!"
  12. "I'm Down"[12]

Legacy

Although the Beatles had played stadium concerts previously, the Shea concert was a milestone in popular musical history as the first major stadium concert.[13]

In 1970, John Lennon recalled the show as a career highlight: "At Shea Stadium, I saw the top of the mountain." Ringo Starr described the concert in the 1995 documentary The Beatles Anthology, which featured extensive clips from the concert film: "What I remember most about the concert was that we were so far away from the audience. ... And screaming had become the thing to do. ... Everybody screamed. If you look at the footage, you can see how we reacted to the place. It was very big and very strange."

In 2008, Paul McCartney played the last concert at Shea Stadium with Billy Joel before the stadium was closed and demolished. The concert was documented in the film The Last Play at Shea. The following year, Paul McCartney played the song "I'm Down" at the inaugural concert for Citi Field, which replaced Shea. The DVD Good Evening New York City intersperses the 2009 performance with the original footage from 1965 concert.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Today's Programmes". Daily Mail. 1 March 1966. p. 18.
  2. ^ "The Beatles at Shea Stadium". IMDb. 10 January 1967. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  3. ^ "Television". The New York Times. 10 January 1967. p. 87.
  4. ^ "Tuesday's TV Programs". Los Angeles Times. 10 January 1967. part IV p.12.
  5. ^ Everett, Walter. The Beatles as Musicians: The Quarry Men through Rubber Soul. USA: Oxford University Press, 2001, p. 307.
  6. ^ Myers, Marc. "A Home Run for Rock." Wall Street Journal, August 12, 2015.
  7. ^ "The Beatles at Shea Stadium: An Interview with Dave Schwensen". 7 February 2014. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  8. ^ a b Miles 2001, p. 227.
  9. ^ "Beatles videos". Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  10. ^ "The Beatles to Release Shea Stadium Concert in Theaters With Ron Howard Film". Billboard.
  11. ^ "The Beatles' Apple Corps. Sued Over Use of Shea Stadium Footage in 'Eight Days a Week' Theatrical Run". Billboard.
  12. ^ "The Beatles Setlist at Shea Stadium, New York". setlist.fm. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  13. ^ Fleming, Colin. "Why the Beatles' Shea Stadium Show Was Even Greater Than You Knew." Rolling Stone, August 14, 2015.

Sources

External links