The Avengers featuring Dr. Strange No. 66, week ending 21 December 1974. Marvel UK.

#ryland grace#phm#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers

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The Avengers featuring Dr. Strange No. 66, week ending 21 December 1974. Marvel UK.
Hi I don't know if this has been asked or bought up before but I read somewhere multiple times that apparently John and Pattie had an affair? I definitely remember reading it and I was wondering if you know anymore about this :) thanks
I couldnât resist using that fab expressionistic pic, but no, I donât think there was ever a love affair between John and Pattie. (I think there was an unwritten but respected rule about each others girlfriends/wives between the Beatles. âŚAt least while the band was togetherâŚ)Â
If you do have a source saying something different, please let me know, because Iâd love to read it! What I thought you might have read about was the events of 21st December 1967.
On the night of the 21st December 1967, the Beatles held a preview and wrap party for Magical Mystery Tour at the Westbourne Suite at the Royal Lancaster Hotel, London. The party was fancy dress. You might have seen the photos before:Â
Conspicuous in their absence from this photo are Cyn, Pattie and George, and maybe with good reason. For the party Ringo is dressed as a circus ringmaster, Maureen is an Indian squaw and Paul and Jane are a pearly king and queen. John is a teddy boy (and really, when did he ever stop being one?!) Hereâs the story from Johnâs best friend, Pete Shotton:Â
âI had originally planned to turn up as a Musketeer, but at the last minute, John suddenly exclaimed, âLetâs go as Teddy Boys, and dress the way we always wished we could when we were at school. Letâs do it properly this time.â We both made a terrific impression at the party, but were nonetheless eclipsed by such inspired impersonations as Peter Brownâs periwigged King Louis XIV of France, and Apple press officer Derek Taylorâs Nazi-uniformed Hitler. Cilla Black and her husband, Bobby Willis came as, respectively, a Cockney labourer, and a nun.Â
âThe most realistic impression of all, however, was achieved by Freddie Lennon, (with whom John was still on speaking terms), who appeared as a trash collector. That morning, I was told, Freddie had paid his dustman five pounds to swap clothes with him, and he hadnât even bothered to wash the uniform in the interim. As a result, Johnâs dad literally reeked of garbage, and all the other party-goers did their utmost to keep him at a safe distance.â
Thereâs a couple of extenuating circumstances surrounding the party though. One, it wasnât very long after Brianâs sudden and shocking death, and this was the first Christmas, as well as the first major Beatles project (MMT) without him. Also, Johnâs previously estranged father was invited to the party by John. (I donât think these two things were completely unrelated). Plus it was during the period John and Cynâs marriage was slowly falling apart.Â
âIt was an extravagant fancy-dress affair and I wore a crinoline dress, like something on a chocolate box, while John went as a greased-up, leather-clad teddy boy. He had invited his father, Alf, to come and they got very drunk together.â
[Cynthia Lennon]
âBy the time we were seated for the screening, John had, in best teddy boy style, got himself smashed on good old fashioned booze. Just as in the good old days, moreover, the alcohol seemed to accentuate the more aggressive aspects of Johnâs personality.âÂ
[Pete Shotton]
George and Pattie were also at the party of course. George had come as a swashbuckling Errol Flynn and Pattie as an exotic and scantily clad belly dancer.Â
âAnother unpleasant scene developed toward the end of the party, when a band took to the stage and most of the guests paired off to dance. Totally ignoring Cyn (who was decked out for the occasion as a fairy princess), John instead lavished all his attentions on Pattie Harrison - with whom he actually went as far as to âdanceâ, probably for the first time in five years. Though Pattie had undeniably made herself especially desirable as a scantily clad belly dancer, neither Cyn nor George were the least bit amused with Johnâs open flirtation with her.â
[Pete Shotton]
âI became more and more upset as John openly flirted with other women, including Pattie, who was seductively attired as a belly dancer.âÂ
[Cynthia Lennon]
âIn the end, however it was Cynâs close friend, the diminutive pop singer Lulu - impersonating Shirley Temple, complete with an oversized lillipop - who elected herself to give the inebriated Beatle-cum-Teddy boy a good talking to.â
[Pete Shotton]
âLulu was outraged on my behalf and shouted at John that he should be ashamed of himself. It made me smile, despite my wounded pride, to watch her, dressed as Shirley Temple, giving teddy boy John as dressing-down. The evening ended with John and Alf dancing drunkenly together, while I was thoroughly miserable. I had been about the only person John hadnât danced with.âÂ
[Cynthia Lennon]Â
âŚthough I would wager George didnât dance with John that night either.Â
This story is also absent from Pattieâs book, which seems to skip from Brianâs death to the trip to India in Feb â68, so we havenât got her take on it. Rumour is though, she wasnât particularly trying to put John off when he was flirting with her and George was not the least bit amused.Â
However, I think this is the extent of any love affair between John and Pattie. If anyone has more info, please do let us know!
Thank you for your question!Â
The Radio Times, the first Christmas edition from 1923.
Radio Times 21 December 1974 - 3 January 1975. Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em featuring on the cover of the Christmas and New Year double issue. This was the first of three Christmas specials and featured Frank Spencer desperately trying to star in his local Church nativity play.
Radio Times 21 December 1985 - 3 January 1986.
Only Fools and Horses, Christmas and New Year double issue. The first Only Fools feature length special 'To Hull and Back' was broadcast on Christmas Day, 25 December 1985.
Tammy and June dated 21 December 1974. Tammy ran from 1971 to 1984 and its first editor and creative force was Gerry Finley-Day. Treasury of British Comics.
The Wizard No. 254, dated 21 December 1974. Strongbow cover. DC Thomson.
The Hotspur No. 792, dated 21 December 1974. Nick Jolly, the Flying Highwayman cover by Ron Smith. DC Thomson.