How ‘Beatles ’64’ captures the Fab Four charming a grieving nation – New York Daily News


In the new documentary “Beatles ‘64,” there’s footage of the band onstage giving a performance of “Long Tall Sally” so raucous that not only do the fans scream and shout, but a straight-laced security guard cranes his neck toward the stage to see what all the ruckus is about.

For David Tedeschi, director of the new Martin Scorsese-produced documentary about the Fab Four’s arrival in the U.S., that musical moment was profound.

“I always loved their early music, but I had never paid so much attention to their covers. And one of the performances at the Washington Coliseum is ‘Long Tall Sally.’ I mean, that’s just — it’s an unbelievable performance,” says Tedeschi.

“It’s like it grabbed me by the throat, and it brought me back into 1964,” he says, describing the band’s magic on a stage so rough and bare-bones you can see the untreated plywood on the floor. “They’re in the middle of essentially a boxing arena that is going around as they play — slowly. The monitors are terrible, it’s not like they’re very good conditions — and yet they’re really able to do something special.”

Fans crowded to see the Beatles during their visit to America in “Beatles ’64.” (Apple Corps; Ltd./TNS)

The film, which premieres on Disney+ on Friday, Nov. 29, explores the band’s arrival in the United States in February 1964 for appearances on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” and its effect on teens and a grieving nation still reeling from the assassination of President John F. Kennedy just months before.

The film incorporates new and archival interviews with the band members; with teens (both back then and as older adults) who waited outside the hotel or watched the band perform on TV; and with famous fans and performers like Ronnie Spector, Smokey Robinson, Ronald Isley and filmmaker David Lynch. There’s dynamic archival concert footage that has been digitally spruced up by Peter Jackson’s teams of tech wizards and there’s charming and illuminating behind-the-scenes footage shot by Albert and David Maysles, the sibling team who would go on to make documentaries such as “Grey Gardens” and “Gimme Shelter.”

“Beatles ‘64” is part of a 60th-anniversary celebration that includes a new vinyl mono release of the group’s seven American Beatles albums: “Meet The Beatles!” “The Beatles’ Second Album,” “A Hard Day’s Night (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack),” “Something New,” “The Beatles’ Story,” “Beatles ’65,” and “The Early Beatles” in a new vinyl box set titled “The Beatles: 1964 U.S. Albums In Mono,” with six of the titles also available individually.

The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Q: Can you describe what the film’s about for people who don’t know?

A: It’s really about two things: The film is about the Beatles’ first trip to the United States. Although Beatlemania had started in Europe, this is where it really hit an astronomical level — and unexpectedly. No one really expected them to be very successful in the United States.

But it’s about something else too, really. It’s about their music and the joy in their music and what an impact it had on young people. And it’s 1964, but it’s the very beginning of the 1960s and four years later, you have the anti-war movement and psychedelia. You know, it seems like everything has changed, but in this movie, you see the seeds of change.

Q: Martin Scorsese, who you’ve worked with before, is the producer. Can you talk a little bit about working with him?

A: Sure. Many years ago, I edited a film that Scorsese directed called “George Harrison: Living in the Material World” and we became very good friends with Olivia Harrison and we got to know the folks at Apple; we interviewed Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr for the documentary. So there was a relationship, and they knew they had this treasure trove of footage, and they reached out to me about two years ago.



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