For two weeks starting tomorrow June 13, visitors to the Lyndon B. Johnson
Presidential Library will be able to see John Lennon's guitar and
hundreds of other Beatles memorabilia.
On Wednesday, curators
wearing surgical gloves carefully take John Lennon's guitar out of the
case and display it in its glass home until June 29.
John used the Gibson J-160E to compose hits like "She Loves You," and "I Want To Hold Your Hand."
GRAMMY
Museum Executive Director Bob Santelli said John bought the guitar in
1962, but it disappeared a year later. Santelli said the guitar
resurfaced last year but won't say how it was found. It will go up for
auction in a few weeks and Santelli says it should fetch more than $1
million.
Other items going on display range from Ringo's drum
head to hand written set notes by a teenage Paul in 1960, a
time before the Beatles became The Beatles.
The note lists
American songs they used to sing, including "Tutti Frutti" by Little
Richard and "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" by Jerry Lee Lewis, proof of
the American invasion in England before Beatlemania hit the U.S. The
point of the exhibit is to show when, how and why it happened for Baby
Boomers and younger generations.
When asked what Beatlemania meant to him, Santelli said Ringo still couldn't explain it after all these years.
"There
are only four people in the world that didn't experience Beatlemania
like everyone else. It was the four Beatles," said Santelli.
While
it may seem odd for the "Ladies and Gentleman...the Beatles!" exhibit
to be housed at the LBJ Library, organizers said it's actually an
appropriate home for the exhibit.
"
The Beatles come in 1964, just
after LBJ takes office as the nation is trying to get over Kennedy
assassination. The Beatles really help us to move on in some respects,
they give us a little bit of frivolity in a really tragic time," said
Mark Upegrove, director of the LBJ Library.
The exhibit wraps up
with a life-size display of the Abbey Road crosswalk, allowing fans to
replicate the iconic Beatles album cover.
The public can see John's guitar June 13 to 29. Opening day is free to the public.
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