2009 was quite a super year for Beatles fans, the year Trivial
Pursuit released their informative version entirely about the Beatles with an
in-depth Q & A bundle of fascination. The same year Rock Band released the
Beatles game that proved clever enough to fully entertain even bystanders let
alone participants. The same year Apple released the mouth-watering 2009
Remastered Box Set of all the Fab Four albums.
However, something that may have slipped through the cracks highly
pursued by Beatles fans in 2009 was an insider biography to which the author
had plenty of knock your socks off privileges by which the rest of us can only
dream we, too, had enjoyed. The following is a sit-down discussion with this
lucky lady author recorded nine years ago. I hope you enjoy it.
Exclusive Interview with Chris O’Dell, former Beatles Apple
secretary.
by Marshall Terrill
Chris O’Dell is quick to point out that she was never famous, or
even almost famous, but she was there.
Indeed.
The former Apple secretary and one of rock’s first female tour
managers was in the studio when the Beatles recorded The White Album, Abbey
Road, and Let It Be, and sang in the chorus of the final cut for “Hey Jude.”
She was at Ringo’s kitchen table when George Harrison said, “You
know, Ringo, I’m in love with your wife.” And Ringo replied, “Better you than
someone we don’t know.”
She typed the lyrics to George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass and
was present when he read about the Beatles breaking up in a London newspaper.
She’s the subject of Leon Russell’s “Pisces Apple Lady,” a song he
wrote to woo her. Other rock legends with whom she was intimate include Ringo,
Mick Jagger, and Bob Dylan.
She’s “the woman down the hall” in Joni Mitchell’s song “Coyote”
about a love triangle on Bob Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue tour. She’s the
“mystery woman” pictured on the back of the Rolling Stones album Exile on Main
Street. She’s George Harrison’s “Miss O’Dell”, the famous B-side to “Give Me
Love,” his No.1 single from 1973.
Miss O’Dell: My Hard Days and Long Nights with the Beatles, The
Stones, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, and the Women They Loved (Touchstone Books) is
the remarkable story of an ordinary woman who became a part of rock royalty’s
trusted inner circle. Miss O’Dell is a backstage pass to some of the most
momentous events in rock history and is the ultimate fly-on-the-wall rock
memoir.
Now enjoying two decades of sobriety, O’Dell is a counselor and
hypnotherapist specializing in addiction recovery. In this exclusive interview
with Daytrippin’, O’Dell shares her memories of the Beatles, Apple’s glory
days, and why fame isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.
Q: Chris, it’s been more than 40 years since you were first
employed by Apple. You and Jack Oliver (President of Apple Records) seem to be
the last holdouts on writing a book, which leads me to ask why have you now
decided to publish Miss O’ Dell?
CO: I think the time was just right. I knew that I wouldn’t write
the book till I was older because of my loyalty to the Beatles. And there is
still so much interest in the Beatles, the Stones, Dylan and the other people I
worked with. I was in a unique position and I wanted to share it with people
who couldn’t be there.
Q: Let’s start at the beginning. Can you tell our readers how you
got the job at Apple?
CO: It was by chance, really. I met Derek Taylor, the Beatles
press agent and friend in LA, and he invited me to come to London to work
there. I write about this in the book in
some detail.
Q: It’s been said Apple was a crazy, never a dull moment, vibrant
place to work. Tell us in your own words a typical day in the life at Apple?
CO: It was never dull. I’d
arrive to the hustling and bustling of the offices on Savile Row and go to my
office in the rafters of Apple. I’d work with Peter Asher, answering mail and
booking studio time. There was always
the option to break for a few minutes and visit one of the other offices to soak
up their enthusiasm. When one of the
Beatles was in the house, the energy seemed even greater. And then we had
drop-ins by famous people like Lauren Bacall and Duane Eddy to mention just a
few. I’d often stay late as it was like
home.
Q: Can you give a brief thumbnail sketch of each Beatle’s
personality?
CO: Paul was the diplomat, the mediator, the marketer. George was
the quiet one, the intense one, the spiritual one. John was the cynic with a strong personality
and interest in world happenings. And
then there was Ringo, who wasn’t around a lot but was fun and easy to talk to.
Q: You seemed to have the deepest connection to George Harrison.
Why do you think that is?
CO: We’re both Pisces! Actually, it’s like any friendship – you
can meet a group of people but certain ones you just seem to bond with. That
was George. He liked my sense of humor and easy-going attitude. I liked his sense of humor and gentle ways.
Q: It appears you had the least connection to John Lennon and Yoko
Ono. From reading your book, one gets the feeling that once John met Yoko, that
being in the Beatles got in the way of his life.
CO: Well, actually, I hung out with them at the beginning of my
time in London. But they were so involved in their own things – like bed-in and
peace activism – that they weren’t really involved in the daily running of
Apple. Then they moved away. I think he just grew out of the Beatles in a
way.
Q: Who were some of the other key figures at Apple and give a
brief thumbnail sketch of them as well.
CO: Well, this depended on where you were sitting! Jack Oliver,
Tony Bramwell, Peter Asher, Ron Kass, Peter Brown, Derek Taylor were a few of
the key figures. Everyone was so different.
Jack Oliver, who had the most cynical and in-your-face approach, remains
one of my favorite friends to this day. Tony Bramwell was always off in his own
world of promotion and networking. And there were so many girls working there
that were loyal and hardworking like Barbara Bennett, Peter Asher and Neil
Aspinal’s personal assistant and Laurie McCaffrey the switchboard operator.
Q: You also developed strong friendships with Patti Harrison and
Maureen Starkey, but your take was that it was tough to be a Beatle wife. Tell us why in your opinion.
CO: They just didn’t know who to trust. They were slow to warming
up to women and once you were in they were as loyal as could be. The Beatles
world was a tight, closely watched and protected ‘family’. It took a lot to get
in and a little to get pushed out. These women trusted me after a while and
became dear friends.
Q: Substance abuse is a constant theme throughout Miss O’ Dell in
both your personal life and in the lives of the people you worked for. Why are
drugs and alcohol so prevalent in the music industry?
CO: I don’t know what it’s like today, but then it was just part
of the culture. No one knew it was a problem. It was fun, a way of escaping,
relaxing and just hanging out. I think
one of the reasons that it took so long for me to admit to having a problem and
finally getting clean and sober is that no one around me considered it a
problem. And, of course, there was the money to afford the drugs.
CO: One of the strengths of your memoir is that you don’t always
paint such a rosy picture of fame. Why was it important for you to underscore
that point?
CO: Because people idolize so many celebrities and see it as such
an elevated life when celebs are dealing with the same everyday problems
(except for money, usually). Then add to that a complete lack of privacy. Back
in those days the press was nothing like they are today. It’s totally out of
hand now. I’m also trying to paint a picture of what life was really like in
that world at that time.
Q: The good times at Apple seemed to fade quickly once Allen Klein
entered the picture. Can you explain what those days were like compared to when
you first started?
CO: I think I do this fairly well in the book but the most
important piece is that the Beatles were running the whole show and wanted it
to be different. We had fun, and the sky was the limit for creativity and
possibilities. Sadly, however, it cost them a lot of money. The party just had
to come to an end.
Q: You write that the Beatles were mostly upbeat and got along
quite well while groups like The Stones and CSN&Y worked on an almost
dysfunctional level. With that said, how did their breakup affect them on an
emotional level?
CO: I think being a Beatle became very difficult for them. They
had a different set of problems than the Stones and CSN&Y. They didn’t tour that much, they couldn’t go
out of their hotel rooms, and they lived in a bubble. I think breaking up for
them, and I can only guess, was a relief and very difficult at the same time.
Q: Are you amazed that four decades later we’re still talking
about the Beatles and they only seem to get bigger with the passage of time?
CO: This is truly amazing, isn’t it? Sometimes I notice when I get
into my car my son, Will, has borrowed it and John Lennon is playing on the CD
player. My friends tell me their kids love the Beatles and some of the other
artists of that time. I’ve had teenage clients tell me that they wished they’d
lived in the Sixties. I guess we were pretty lucky.
Q: Can you tell me briefly how George was inspired to write Miss
O’Dell and what was your initial reaction to the song?
CO: George wrote the song one night when I was supposed to go out
and visit him and I didn’t. When I
finally made it to his rented house in Malibu, he played me the song. I was
overwhelmed. The idea that he felt inspired to write a song with me in mind was
amazing.
Q: In Miss O’ Dell, you allude to having a conversation with
George as you got older but never really discussed his death in the book. When
was the last time you saw George?
CO: The last time I saw George was in the late eighties or early
nineties when I was in London. We were
at a party at the Dorchester Hotel, I think, after Ringo’s concert and had a
nice visit. I saw him for many years but after that we just lost contact. I
have spoken to Olivia in the past few years.
Q: You knew and worked with some amazing legends – the Beatles,
the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Led Zeppelin, Eric Clapton, CSN&Y, Leon
Russell and Queen to name but a few – during an artistic, cultural and social
renaissance (1960s & 1970s) that we’ll never see the likes of again. Do the times make the people or do the people
make the times?
CO: Ah, what a question. From a sociological point of view, I
believe the times made the people. We were the off-spring of the Great
Depression and World War II. My parents tried to give me everything they could
to make up for what they didn’t have. The music was in flux with black music
becoming more acceptable and seeping into the mostly white charts. And then,
here comes the Beatles with “I Want to Hold Your Hand.” We were caught between the sexuality of the
black music and the innocence of the Beatles. Amazing…
Q: Tell us about your life today?
CO: I am happily remarried to a wonderful man who supports me and
accepts me as I am. My twenty-three-year-old son is amazing and gives me some
credibility as a parent! I have a private practice in Tucson, specializing in
addiction and mental health counseling.
My two dogs are happy and life is just better than I would have
expected.
Please feel free to leave any comments or corrections and share
these articles plus the blog's website with your friends, especially Beatles’
fans. You and they might also enjoy knowing more about my Love Songs CD and my
novel, BEATLEMANIAC. Just click on the “My Shop” tab near the top of this page
for full details.
No comments:
Post a Comment