The New York Times
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Beatles’ first visit to New York, and the “Ed Sullivan Show” appearances that lit the fuse on Beatlemania in America, the New York Public Library and the Grammy Museum are collaborating on a multimedia exhibition, “Ladies and Gentlemen … The Beatles!”
It will run from Feb. 6 through May 10 at the Donald and Mary Oenslager Gallery of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts,
at Lincoln Center, and will include tour memorabilia, historic film
clips, video interviews with musicians, as well as interactive exhibits.
The installation is primarily a traveling
exhibition assembled by the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles. But it is
having its debut in New York — other cities have not yet been determined
— and Bob Santelli, the Grammy Museum’s executive director, said that
it would draw on the library’s archival holdings for material about the
group’s stay in New York.
The Beatles landed at the newly renamed
Kennedy Airport on Feb. 7, and besides the first Ed Sullivan
performance, on Feb. 9 (another was taped the same day for broadcast on
Feb. 23, after they returned to England), the highlights of their New
York visit included two concerts at Carnegie Hall on Feb. 12.
The exhibition, Mr. Santelli said, will look
beyond New York to include material from their three summer tours of
North America, from 1964 through 1966.
“We are exploring the Beatles’ arrival and
the results of it,” Mr. Santelli said, “meaning everything from their
impact on American music to the commodification of rock ‘n’ roll. To
illustrate what we mean by commodification, we’ll have a recreation of a
teenager’s bedroom and a Woolworth’s window, with T-shirts, Beatle
wigs, lunchboxes and all the Beatles items you could buy at the time.”
Other memorabilia on display will include
handwritten lyrics and ticket stubs, but Mr. Santelli notes that the
Beatles’ personal items are not the thrust of the exhibition — partly
because he wanted to explore a different theme, but also because the
more personal items the museum has access to, like stage suits and
instruments, are currently on display at the museum’s own Ringo Starr
exhibition, “Ringo: Peace & Love,” which runs through March 30.
“It’s more of a cultural and musical
exhibition,” Mr. Santelli said. “We have a section devoted to American
musical artists and forms that influenced the Beatles in their
development as songwriters, pieces from Buddy Holly, Carl Perkins and
Little Richard, for example, that show how their sound came about and
why it’s exciting. We have an exclusive interview with Ringo,
remembering the time, and we’re hoping to get one with Paul McCartney.
And we have interviews with about a dozen American musicians the Beatles
influenced, including members of the Rascals, Rick Nielsen from Cheap
Trick and John Fogerty.”
Mr. Santelli said that the exhibition would
also include an interactive exhibit for young music fans — “We pride
ourselves on creating things for younger viewers,” he said — as well as
an oral history booth, where visitors can record their memories of the
Beatles era.
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