Friday 3 January 2014

LIVERPOOL´S ICONIC PUB THE JACARANDA TO REOPEN IN 2014


The Jacaranda,Liverpool.




New video appears online showing refurbishment of historic venue made famous by The Beatles
Iconic city centre pub The Jacaranda reveals new look in video and pictures, ahead of 2014 reopening.
The Jacaranda, the iconic Liverpool bar, best known for being the first venue to hostThe Beatles, is to reopen this year.The Jacaranda closed down in mysterious surroundings on 31 October 2011, however, it has been revealed through the pub's  official Facebook page  the popular Slater Street venue is to return in spring/summer 2014.
Rumours concerning its reopening first started circulating in December, before Liverpool city bar Heebie Jeebies, run by Graham Clarke, who also owns the Jacaranda, leaked the news via its social media accounts.

The new look Jacaranda on Slater Street.


The Jacaranda, or the Jac as it is popularly known, has a rich history linked with The Beatles. It was founded in 1957 by Allan Williams, the Fab Four's first manager and "the man who gave them away". Williams leased an old watch repair shop which he converted into a coffee bar. He named the venue the Jacaranda after an exotic species of ornamental flowering tree.
The Jac, as it became known, opened a year later in September 1958 and John Lennon, Stuart Sutcliffe and Paul McCartney were frequent customers.
Asking for the chance to play at the club, Williams instead put them to work redecorating, with Lennon and Sutcliffe painting a mural for the Ladies room. The Beatles finally began playing at the Jac and in the summer of 1960, Williams secured a number of bookings for the group at other venues.
In 1961, Williams and The Beatles parted company over money and in 1962 he famously told their new manager Brian Epstein: "Don't touch them with a bargepole, they will let you down."
Prior to its closure, the Jacaranda was known for its basement vault booths, chandeliers and a belting Wurlitzer jukebox.
The walls were covered with pictures of The Beatles, Cilla Black and Epstein, alongside posters for seemingly every Beatles-related movie, play and revue.
Nestled among them is the celebrated 1956 school picture of pupils at the Liverpool Institute, in which can be seen McCartney and his brother Mike, George Harrison, newsreader Peter Sissons and various members of Gerry And The Pacemakers,Remo Four and The Quarrymen.

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