Their cries were said to have been
deafening to the band with their tears having run from the eyes of the
first to witness the Beatles play in America.
Appearing
in newly released photos of the Beatles' first concert in the U.S. are
these adoring young women whose cries, tears and screams took their
passion to a never before seen new level.
Turning
the cameras from the Washington D.C. Coliseum's small island stage and
back on to their crowd are the googly eyed women showcasing the all-out
hysterics of Beatlemania.
Beyond adoring: Screaming and wailing, the first Beatle fans to witness the band perform in the U.S. in 1964 are pictured
Overwhelming affection: A young woman slaps her
hands to her face while screaming making up a room full of cries that
prevented the band from hearing themselves play
Taken by a rookie 18-year-old
photographer in February of 1964, the iconic images show the band at the
start of their American invasion, just two days after appearing on the
Ed Sullivan Show in New York.Ten days earlier the band had gone to number one for the first time stateside with 'I want to hold your hand' – the first of 59 weeks they would spend at the top over the next six and a half years.
Mike
Mitchell was there, shooting photos from just feet away and even jumping
onto the stage for the group's pre-concert press call.
Among the highlights is a backlit shot of the band that he took while standing directly behind them.
Auctioned off in July of 2011, that photo made $68,500. Its pre-sale estimate was $2,000 to $3,000.
Motivated: While dressed otherwise civil in
skirts, collared shirts and cardigans, the girls soon lose themselves
two days after seeing the band appear on the Ed Sullivan Show in New
York
Enthusiastic welcome: No use covering their
mouths, the girls' cries swamped the small island stage welcoming the
Fab Four to Washington, D.C.
An image of an animated Ringo Starr on the drums sold for $8,125. It was estimated to bring $3,000 to $5,000.
Auction
house Christie's said the shot depicts a rare moment where Starr was
both drummer and lead singer on a song written by Paul McCartney and
John Lennon, but made famous by The Rolling Stones, 'I Wanna Be Your
Man'.
Cathy Elkies, Christie's director of iconic collections, said she expected the bids to exceed the pre-sale estimates.
'Beatles fans are fierce. To uncover this trove of images that's never been published will really excite people,' she said.
Also included in the sale were photos of the band's September 13 1964, performance at the Baltimore Civic Center.
Mr Mitchell said he was given unrestricted access to the band's concert in Washington DC.
The start of something: Ringo Starr sings and
plays the drums at the concert, right, which came ten days after the
band's first number one hit in the U.S.
U.S. invasion: The photos capture a young Paul McCartney and John Lennon at the start of Beatlemania
Top dollar: A silhouette of the Fab Four
captures the Beatles at their start as part of a larger collection of
photos that sold at auction for $361,938 in July of 2011
'It
was a long time ago. Things weren't that way then,' said the
65-year-old, who now works as an art photographer in Washington.
'It
was as low-tech as the concert itself. The concert was in a sports
venue and the sound system was the sound system of a sports venue.'
Equally astonishing is how few other photographs from that first concert exist.
Simeon Lipman, Christie's pop culture consultant, said it's not clear why there weren't many other photos of the concert.
He said Mr Mitchell's black and white photographs were remarkable for their 'animated" and 'intimate' depiction of the Fab Four.
Mr
Mitchell stored the negatives for years in a box in his basement and
used digital technology to scan and restore the prints for the auction.
'They benefit from a historical perspective,' he said.
Me gustan mucho las fotos en blanco y negro, tienen magia, nos llevan al pasado.
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