Tuesday, March 9, 1965
Last updated on May 14, 2026
Article Mar 08, 1965 • The Beatles receive a Carl Alan Award
Article Mar 08, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 14
Article Mar 09, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 15
Article March 10-11, 1965 • The Beatles travel from the Bahamas to London
Article Mar 13, 1965 • The Beatles travel from London to Austria
Feb 22, 1965 • The Beatles fly to the Bahamas to film "'Help!"
Feb 23, 1965 • Filming "Help!" in the Bahamas • Day 1
Feb 24, 1965 • Filming "Help!" in the Bahamas • Day 2
Feb 25, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 3
Feb 26, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 4
Feb 27, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 5
Feb 28, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 6
Mar 01, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 7
Mar 02, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 8
Mar 03, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 9
Mar 04, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 10
Mar 05, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 11
Mar 06, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 12
Mar 07, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 13
Mar 08, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 14
Mar 09, 1965 • Filming “Help!” in the Bahamas • Day 15
March 10-11, 1965 • The Beatles travel from the Bahamas to London
1965 • For The Beatles • Directed by Richard Lester
The fifteenth day of production on “Help!” brought The Beatles back to Paradise Island for pick-up shots — the reshoots and scene adjustments needed to complete the Bahamas filming sequence.
The Beatles and crew left the Bahamas the following day.
Living with Beatles
DEAR PAM, BETH, JANE, DEB: See, girls? We’re not so square or soft, after all. We can Beatle, too. (Did you ever realize that if the word were in the dictionary, it would come right after beatitude?) If our bliss is more controlled than yours, if we creak when we rock and ricochet when we roll, it’s just because we’re older. And if we frown on the incessant decibels of the Mersey sound, and wonder a bit about the antics and the faint hint of foppishness, it’s because we feel you’re pretty fab, too, and we’d like you to stay that way. But if we didn’t think Beatles were tops, and news, they wouldn’t be in McCALL’s. We hope we’ve made you happy. But please! We cannot get you tickets to their new movie, or autographs. We will not answer letters asking us for locks of hair, or anything like that. Okay? Now turn to page 78. DO NOT TEAR THESE PAGES OUT OF THE MAGAZINE UNLESS IT’S YOUR VERY OWN COPY. Say—isn’t anyone listening? What’s happening? Where did everyone go?
DEAR PAM’S MOTHER, ETC.: The four young men who turn up in our beauty feature this month are named George Harrison, Ringo Starr, John Lennon, and Paul McCartney. They are noisy, nutty, and absolutely joyous. There are many sober, industrious adults who agree that the phenomenon of their unprecedented international success is not based on sheer hysteria, but on real, original talent. Why, of all things, did we choose to use these Liverpool lads in a beauty feature? Because it’s summer and because women everywhere are seeking just the kind of lighthearted exuberance the Beatles seem to enkindle. Because they’re headed for the U.S. next month. And because, as you can see starting on page 78—if your daughter hasn’t clipped these six pages already — they’re fun. Before you write us a protesting letter, we’ll let you in on a secret. We thought of having the boys on our cover, too. But then we realized that the kids would probably walk off with the entire magazine!
NASSAU WAS AT ITS BAHAMIAN BEST — sunny, balmy, crystal-watered. But the resort island’s usual invincible British aplomb crumbled under the Beatle invasion. The Beatle Group was there, shooting scenes for their next United Artists’ film (final title, after a few changes: HELP!), and even twelve of the Nassau police took small roles in the picture. Our Group flew down to photograph McCALL’s July beauty story, while the rest of us back home sulked in envy. Our Group was headed by Otto Storch, our award-winning art director, who also is an award-winning photographer. (He just won the coveted New York Art Directors’ Gold Medal.) Others on the Beatle mission were associate beauty editor Norma Craig, senior editor Herbert Bleiweiss, models Sondra Peterson and Deborah Dixon, hairdresser Enrico Caruso and cosmetician Marie Irvine. What did Our Group think of the Beatles? “Terrific! Kooky, but so bright and quick-witted, you find them hard to resist. No matter what you say, they have a punch line. Then they turn it into a song. John is the funniest, the zingiest. Ringo makes the sharpest comments. George is the youngest but, in some ways, the most adult. Paul is the best-looking, the most dapper — he’s the only one who showed up for dinner in a suit and tie.” The Beatles were staying at the posh Balmoral Club for their fifteen days in Nassau, but Otto and Herb report that they actually lived quite simply. Running gag between Our Group and theirs: Otto and Herb (the Beatles called them Oscar and Jerry) were born in Brooklyn, and the Beatles made much of their supposedly recognizable Brooklyn accent. In return, the Liverpool tones were twitted. Actually, everybody pronounced it “bath,” with a sat-on “a,” rather than “bawth.” Norma says the most touching incident occurred on a boat offshore. Autograph hunters went out to catch the boat, and when John leaned over the side to give a small girl his autograph, the ten-year-old burst into tears and almost fell out of her parents’ craft. Who’s who above? That’s Maestro Storch on the bottom step in top picture. Herb Bleiweiss is having his hair done on the left. The two girls with hats on in the Group-Group shot are Norma and Marie, and the man behind Herb is Enrico Caruso. Final note: The Beatles, live, will be touring the U.S. from August 15 to 31.
From McCall – July 1965








Remembering a Few Days in the Life of John Lennon
My first meeting with the Beatles took place in Nassau on their second film, which at that time was called Eight Arms to Hold You. When I arrived, Shenson said that he would do the introductions.
John Lennon, my first Beatles, started to sing a new song he had composed in honor of the occasion. It was entitled, “What is a Jerry Pam?” The group refused to believe a fellow Englishman could have such a moniker.
I really thought that I would now be famous, which is not what a good press agent should be. But alas, the song was never published. Perhaps someone, an archivist, will rescue me from obscurity.
George Harrison and Paul McCartney then came over, and were charming and asked loads of questions about Hollywood and their idol, Elvis Presley. Two years later, Colonel Parker would come to the rented house where the Beatles were staying in Benedict Canyon during one of the two concerts here, and invite the famed four to meet Elvis. This started a one-hour discussion as to what location should be used for this rock summit. After much wrangling, Paul ended the stalemate by saying, “While we are in the States, we go to his house, and when he comes to England, he can come to ours.” And so it was.
The shooting of Help! on the Balmoral Island in the Bahamas was smooth but tense. Henry Grossman of Life magazine came in, and the group wouldn’t pose at all. But Shenson and I established, after collective evidence, that Grossman was John F Kennedy’s favorite lenser, and the stills were accomplished.
The night before the company departed the Bahamas, a dinner party was given by the Beatles. And I sat with Lennon and Derek Taylor, who at one time was their PR representative. Taylor was taping for La radio station KRLA. During the party, Lennon told me that he was writing a second book, A Spaniard in the Works, and hoped that somebody would publish it. He seemed to protect himself with a sincere innocence of his clout, while another part of him knew or sensed how to use that clout adroitly. […]
By Jerry Pam – From Variety, December 12, 1980 – From Meet the Beatles for Real: Remembering a few days in the life of John Lennon (1980)
If we modestly consider the Paul McCartney Project to be the premier online resource for all things Paul McCartney, it is undeniable that The Beatles Bible stands as the definitive online site dedicated to the Beatles. While there is some overlap in content between the two sites, they differ significantly in their approach.
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