On tour and backstage with the best of Harry Benson’s Beatles portfolio
“These photos convey a really happy period for them and for me. It all comes down to music, they were without a doubt the greatest band of the 20th century, and that’s why these photographs are so important.” —Harry Benson, 2012
In early 1964,
Harry Benson was getting on a plane for a foreign assignment in Africa, when he got a call from the photo editor of London newspaper
The Daily Express. He was now going
with The Beatles to Paris to document French Beatlemania and what followed was the biggest (ticket to) ride of his life.
Benson was warmly welcomed into The Beatles’ inner sanctum, resulting in some of
the most intimate photographs ever taken of the band, then on the cusp of world domination. In Paris, he took the famous photograph of the Fab Four having a pillow fight at the George V Hotel; he shot their groundbreaking first visit to the United States, the full impact of New York hysteria, their famous appearance on
The Ed Sullivan show, the band in Florida, including their surprising encounter with Cassius Clay; as well as on the set of
A Hard Day’s Night. The relationship continued in 1966, including George’s honeymoon in Barbados and their notorious US tour, under the shadow cast by Lennon’s comment that the Beatles were “bigger than Jesus Christ.”
Benson’s
luminous black and white photographs show at close quarters
The Beatles composing, performing, encountering their fans, relaxing, and engaging with each other, while trying to cope with their increasingly isolating fame. In addition to
hundreds of photographs, many previously unseen, there is an introductory essay by Benson as well as quotes and newspaper clippings from the period.
Collector’s Edition of 1,764 numbered copies, signed by the photographer. Also available in two Art Editions of 100 copies each coming with a silver gelatin print.