They were the biggest band in the world and she was their biggest
fan. "You were there in the beginning," George Harrison told her.
"You're there at the end." Freda Kelly was The Beatles' PA for more than
a decade. She ran their fan club and was a trusted member of their
inner circle. Yet her story has remained untold – until now.
Breaking her silence for the first time in 50 years, Ms Kelly gives a
unique insight into the band she idolised. Just 16 when she saw them
play at the Cavern in the early Sixties, a year later she was working
for the band and part of the extended Beatles family.
Ringo
Starr's mother, Elsie, "was the nearest to a mother figure for me. I
just adored her." Paul McCartney's dad, "Uncle Jim", took her drinking,
and George Harrison's father, Harry, taught her ballroom dancing.
As for John Lennon's aunt, Mimi: "It wasn't that you were frightened of Mimi: you just watched your p's and q's."
Freda Kelly was The Beatles’ PA for more than a decade
According
to Paul McCartney's stepmother, Angie McCartney: "The Beatles saw her
as a sister and the families saw her as a daughter."
Now a
grandmother in her late sixties, Ms Kelly beams as she remembers having
"crushes" on each of the Fab Four. But did things go any further than
that? Speaking in a new documentary, Good Ol' Freda, named after a
dedication by The Beatles on one of their records, she laughs: "No!"
Then she quickly adds: "Pass. There are stories but I don't want
anybody's hair falling out or turning curly. That's personal!" The film
has its world premiere at the SWSX festival in Austin, Texas, on
Saturday.
Regret at failing to answer her late son's questions
about The Beatles, and wanting to leave a legacy for her two-year-old
grandson, Niall, prompted Ms Kelly to speak up in the end. "I would like
him to be proud of me and see how exciting my life was in the Sixties
and the fun I had."
She could "visualise the devastation" after
the death of the band's manager, Brian Epstein, in 1967. "He was the
anchor for everything." Towards the end of the Sixties "the penny was
dropping with me that we haven't got any Beatles as a group any more".
At the age of 27, pregnant with her second child, she quit and lived "a normal life like everybody else".
Still
living in Liverpool, and working as a secretary, she is tearful
thinking about old times. "It is shocking how many people have gone that
I knew. Fame and money doesn't mean anything; all the wealth doesn't
cure cancer does it? I worked with a lot of good people, I did. I loved
them."
But her memories also bring a twinkle to her eyes as she
declares: "I'm still a Beatle fan. So although there's a 50-year gap
since I started it, I still like to think that I'm back where I was in
the beginning."
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