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February 1964: The Beatles fly into Miami, sparking Beatlemania as they prepare to perform on The Ed Sullivan Show.
Meanwhile
in a low-rent Miami gym, the underdog Cassius Clay trains to fight
reigning champion Sonny Liston for the world title. The pundits say Clay
hasn't a hope. Quite unexpectedly, the paths of these legendary figures
cross.
British photographer Harry Benson arranges for The
Beatles to visit Cassius Clay in the gym. Clay picks up Ringo and swings
him around the ring as if he's no heavier than a toddler, as the other
band-members lie at his feet. Clay pretends to knock all four Beatles
down with a single punch. The resulting images remain in the memory long
after this brief encounter.
The Beatles triumph on TV. Cassius
Clay amazes all the boxing writers by defeating Liston. They suddenly
both find themselves on the cusp of a new kind of stardom - they're
young, outspoken and able to capture the global imagination.
John
Wilson reports from Miami on the background to this unique encounter,
with the memories of three people who were there at the time:
photographer Harry Benson, who was travelling with the Beatles, writer
Robert Lipsyte, who was covering the fight for the New York Times as a
rookie reporter, and fight doctor Ferdie Pacheco, then working at the
gym in Miami. All witnessed the moment when Cassius met The Beatles.
John also taps the memories of Paul McCartney.
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