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Expenses:
•John paid £200 and wrote a letter of apology to Bob
Wooler for a physical altercation for which John was responsible.
The telegram of apology to Wooler was later sold at Sotheby's for
£500.
•When John had trouble driving Pete Shotton's car, John
was driving so poorly that Pete told John that he was going to break
it. John replied, "I'll buy you another half dozen" (Shotton).
•In 1961 Jorgen Vollmer went to a flea market where John
purchased a green corduroy jacket (Harry. JL Encyclopedia, p. 949).
•At some point in the early 60's John paid for a subscription
to Mersey Beat for Jorgen Vollmer (Harry. JL Encyclopedia, p. 949).
•John's guitar that he played on 'You Can't Do That' was
a Rickenbacker model no. 1996 and cost 159 guineas. Quite a lot
for 1964 (Coleman).
•In late '62 John and George purchase a couple of Gibson
Jumbo Body guitars as spares (Schultheiss 41).
•The Lennon’s visited Robert Freeman, Beatle photographer,
when looking for an apartment to move to London. Upon hearing that
the apartment above the Freeman’s was vacant, John rented
it sight unseen (Brown, p. 113).
•Brian bought a round, then I stumped for another. We were
just finishing these drinks when John tapped on my knee. I leaned
across to him and he whispered into my ear, "Can you lend us
a couple of quid, Al?" The Beatles are broke! I discreetly
slipped two pounds under the table to him and he winked his thanks.
It's alright for Brian to buy clothes and pay for all the traveling,
but drinking's different. No one likes to not be able to stand a
round, especially as independent as John (Taylor, A. p. 22).
•When The Beatles' career exploded in 1963, the star put
his "secret wife and baby in a London flat: 'Top floor, £15
a week... (Meet the Wife article).
•After a short break in Liverpool, John returned to Hamburg
where he made enough money to help his Aunt Mimi out with expenses
(Lennon, Cynthia. Twist p.61).
Income:
•Aunt Mimi gave John £10 to purchase the wedding ring
(gold band) for Cynthia.
•John removed a mouth organ from a music store in Holland
without paying for it. Alan Williams stated later that he would
have bought John one if he had known John was going to just take
it (Williams).
•For a few days in April 1960 John and Paul worked behind
the bar at Paul's cousin's pub. They then played as the Nerk Twins
at night and the next afternoon (Miles).
•John's letter to Mimi did not state that he was making
£15 per week. He originally told her he'd be making £100
per week.
•Brian paid the bill at Hessy's music by personal check
for John's Hofner Club-40 guitar.
•When John came back from Hamburg the first time he borrowed
1/2 crown from Pete Shotton the next day (Shotton).
•Schultheiss reports that Lennon and McCartney were commissioned
to write the music for a ballet called 'Mods and Rockers' on page
71 of The Beatles: A Day in the Life, A Perigee Book.
•John received a gift of £100 from his Aunt Elizabeth
in Sutherland, Scotland just before his 21st birthday (Lewisohn.
Chronicle p. 34).
•John and Paul were planning to go to Spain with John's
£40 gift from his aunt in Scotland, but he and Paul spent
the money in Paris and never continued to Spain (Flippo, p. 139).
•Cynthia applied for Social Security in 1962 while pregnant
with Julian (Flippo, p. 168).
•Little Richard: We spent two months together in Hamburg.
John, Paul, George, and Pete. They would stay in my room every night.
So hadn't any money, so I paid for their food. I used to buy steaks
for John (Giuliano. Lost Int. p. 363).
Financial Assistance for Others:
•Early in his Beatle days John asked Pete Shotton how he
was doing. Pete responded that he was barely getting by financially.
John pulled out a brown envelope, and placed it in Shotton's hand.
When asked what the envelope was John replied, "just me pay
packet". Shotton wondered for a moment why John hadn't taken
out £10 for himself, but then realized it was typical of John
to have given him the whole thing and worry about where his money
would come from later. The Pay packet that John gave Shotton was
still sealed when Shotton received it. Shotton at the time was earning
£12 per week. Inside the envelope were ten crisp £5
notes (Shotton).
•After seeing a program about Autistic children on the BBC
John instructed the accountants to donate £1000 to an Autism
Fund.
•Geoffrey: Tell me about these wild shopping sprees John
and Cynthia took you on. Julia Baird: We had whatever we wanted.
Jacqui got a pair of leather trousers. It was just clothes beyond
what you would normally be able to afford. Expensive, jumpers, records,
and things (Giuliano. Lost Int. p. 317).
General Statements:
•Patricia Daniels (original Liverpool Beatles fan): John
was always the hard one-he'd say, "Come on, you've got a shilling
for my bus fare, don't you luv?" or something like that. And
of course I'd always give it to him (Giuliano, Glass Onion, p. 259).
•John once told a reporter that his ambition was to become
rich and famous.
John commented that he began attending art college because he
thought "it was better than working" (Martin, Goldsmith.
The Beatles Come to America, p. 24).
•John: "Once I heard it and got into it, that was my
life, there was no other thing. I thought of nothing else but rock
n' roll, apart from sex and food and money-but that's all the same
thing really. (Goldsmith, Martin. The Beatles Come to America, p.
20).
•...the line about "spending someone's hard-earned
pay" recalls the "working-class glee" that Paul said
he and John felt when they first realized that their songwriting
could make them rich(Hertsgaard, M. A Day in the Life. The Music
and Artistry of the Beatles. p. 270).
•In November 1959 John did not have a guitar. "John
must have sold or bust his guitar"(The Beatles Video Anthology
Vol. I).
•Lennon: The press around with you want you to carry on
because they want the free drinks and the free whores and the fun...We
were the Caesars. Who was going to knock us when there was a million
pounds to be made? (Hertsgaard, M. A Day in the Life. The Music
and Artistry of the Beatles. p. 93).
•John referring to one of his early apartments in London:
Christ Cyn, we'll have to get out of this death trap before they
kill me. I had no idea it was going to be like this. It's like a
bloody madhouse out there, we deserve every penny we get (Lennon,
Cynthia. Twist p. 98).
•Geoffrey: How did John change when he got money? Julia
Baird: He was still very family-minded. Geoffrey: People have told
me he never really cared much about the money. Julia Baird: I think
anyone who asked for it got it. Which prevented a lot of people
who maybe would have done from asking (Giuliano. Lost Int. p. 314).
•Cynthia circa late '63 on vacation with John: Our hotel
in Paris was the Hotel George Cinque. We felt totally out of our
depth but it didn't bother us too much. At least we could pay our
bills and maybe even buy and sell some of them. Anyway, we had each
other (Lennon, Cynthia. Twist p. 91).
•Reporter: "What will you do when Beatlemania subsides?".
John: "Count the money".
•Songwriting credits on records change from McCartney/Lennon
to Lennon/McCartney in November of '63 (Schultheiss 64).
•When Brian sent the telegram about "signing"
with Parlophone Records John wired back: "When are we going
to be millionaires?".
•In reference to early Skiffle: The performers were generally
poor, without conventional instruments they sought out any common
household object that could be blown, tapped,brushed or converted
to make a series of note-like sounds (Porter, A. Before They Were
Beatles, p. 17).
•Geoffrey: When he first got money what did he do? Did he
run out and buy a big car? Julia Baird: He couldn't drive until
he lived at Kenwood. He didn't have a license so he didn't buy a
car. I don't know when he bought his Mini. but I know that Harry
borrowed it for a time because John couldn't yet drive (Giuliano.
Lost Int. p. 315).
•They was some tension with Rory Storm when Storm reneged
on a promise to lend John some money in Hamburg to buy a new guitar
(Clayson, p 38).
•Reporter: Would you ever have your own record company?
John: We would never start our own label. It's too much trouble
you know.
Larry Parnes booked the Beatles for October 1960 on a two-week tour
with Johnny Gentle. Mr. Parnes stated that he got a call from John
on the opening day of the tour asking, "Where's the bloody
money?".
•On an early questionnaire: John wrote "money and everything"
under Ambition.
•In the early years, at least, the Beatles were in the 94%
tax bracket (Brown, p. 110).
•After they returned from Hamburg Paul took a delivery job
for 7 pounds a week to earn extra money for Christmas and John stayed
in bed all day and slept (Brown, p. 48).
•Peter Brown discussing on night in the late 50’s:
John arrived home in the middle of the night and had to throw stones
at Mimi’s bedroom window to wake her. When she answered the
door, John just pushed in right past her and said, “Pay the
taxi, Mimi”. “Where’s your hundred pounds a week!”
she shouted at him. John had promised her savings at the end of
the Hamburg trip. He turned and sighed, exhausted. “Just like
you, Mimi,” he said, “to go on about one hundred pounds
a week when you know I’m tired”.
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