Rare Beatles photos to be auctioned
They were taken during the Fab Four’s triumphant summer 1964 visit to the US, when most early photos of the band, and even films, were in black and white.
Colour was expensive and seen as too extravagant for a pop group from Liverpool, who many felt were just a passing fad.
After breaking TV viewing records with their historic appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show in February 1964, the band returned to the States in August, playing sell-out concerts.
The collection of 65 slides contains many stage shots, including George Harrison with his red Rickenbacker, first used in the film A Hard Day’s Night.
There are also close-up portraits from the Las Vegas Sahara Hotel press conference, the Las Vegas Convention Centre gig and from a private party at the Beverly Hills mansion of Alan Livingston, then president of Capitol Records.
“New photographs that emerge of The Beatles are always of interest to the fans, but with the majority of photographs from this tour in black and white, it is a delight to see colour photographs from that historic tour,” said Ernie Sutton from the British Beatles Fan Club. The images were taken by Dr Robert “Bob” Beck, an award-winning research physicist and inventor who died in 2002 and left them among a huge archive of photographs and slides in his Hollywood home.
The lot will go on sale on Mar 22, 50 years to the day in 1963 after The Beatles released their first album, Please Please Me.
Auctioneer Paul Fairweather of Omega Auctions in Stockport, Cheshire, said: “This is a fabulous collection, particularly given that all the slides are in colour.
“We are expecting worldwide interest and estimate that they will achieve in the region of £10,000-£15,000.”

 
                     
                     
                     
  
  
  
  
  
 



