The Beatles and Hitler

11 Responses

  1. Teddy Salad says:

    In the "behind the door" shot, George is looking at the Hitler cutout. Then came "Behind That Locked Door." It all fits!

  2. Shad Radna says:

    Of course, John's middle name was Winston, so he might have struggled to become the Nazi leader.

  3. Unknown says:

    Hitler also gets a mention in Lennon's song God on the JLPOB LP. John sings 'I don't believe in Hitler'. Amongst other things, including The Beatles themselves.

  4. Ariel C says:

    More than a few rock stars, even other type of celebrities would mock the salute in the 60s. Doesn't mean they were fascinated by the Nazis. Check the link to this footage in '64. John Says "Stamp them out!"
    youtube.com/watch?v=QoSsjNmzplE

  5. Martin says:

    Absolute crap that any Beatle was pro-Nazi. As Ariel says, many mocked the Nazis and that daft salute. Everyone from the Beatles, Spike Milligan, Keith Moon, right up to Fawlty Towers. Even Rodney does a 'Sieg Heil' gesture at Del Boy's horrible girlfriend in Only Fools & Horses. Not forgetting Stan and Jack constantly taunting Blakey over his Hitler moustache in On The Buses.Paul McCartney also showed his dislike of Hitler in the 1968 BBC documentary 'All My Loving'.

    Also, to say someone is pro-Hitler because they are interested or well read on him is absurd. I have read several books on the Kray Twins. But that doesn't mean I agree with what they did or admire them as people.

  6. Unknown says:

    I think George's reference to Hitler largely emanated from his love of the Mel Brooks film, "The Producers", which his friend Peter Sellars introduced him to. If you don't know the film, the plot is about Broadway producers trying to raise more money than they need to produce a play that they are certain will be so awful and offensive that it will close after the first night. Therefore, no profits to pay to the multitude of defrauded investors and they keep the the $Million they collected to produce a $60K flop. Of course, it all goes wrong as the Nazis are accidentally portrayed as the buffoons that they were and the show turns into the comedy sensation of the year. Hardly something anyone who admired the Nazis would enjoy, I imagine.

  7. James Peet says:

    Geoffrey Guiliano was and is a self-publicist. His books about the Beatles and the individual members are not the best, especially placed alongside Mark Lewisohn's books that are wonderful works of scholarly research and writing.

    Obviously, I don't keep Geoffrey Guiliano's books next to Mark Lewisohn's books. That would be daft.

  8. Unknown says:

    Thanks

  9. Stepford-On-Hudson says:

    When the Beatles were playing in Berlin and in front of German crowds they wholeheartedly gave the Roman salute and the German women went wild. Of course they liked Hitler of course they loved the German people. Many English were German nationalists. If George said he didn't like Hitler, he was lying. Even John Lennon stated that"the music business is an extension of the Jewish religion"

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