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The upcoming issue (#215) of "Beatlefan" celebrates fifty years of Help! |
In the upcoming issue of Beatlefan, there is going to be a trivia competition where the winner will get a 16" x 16" print of the image used on the cover. The photo comes from the Vincent Vigil collection, and is one of the images which will be going into the permanent collection of the Rock'n'Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. The scene is from the performance of the title song "Help!", early on in the film. That part of the film is the only black and white portion of it, and it was also very probably filmed using black and white film stock. Luckily, photographers shooting colour film were also present, capturing images like this one. Filmed at Twickenham film studios, the mimed performance of "Help!" was also used as a promotional film (music video of the day) on TV.
A sample issue of Beatlefan costs $8 in the U.S. or $11 elsewhere. U.S. funds only. Be sure to specify #215. For more information, email goodypress@gmail.com.
Speaking of "Help!", remember what
we posted a few days ago about the shooting of the cover? As you know, the order in which the Beatles are standing from left to right is different in the USA and the UK. Also, there is the matter of whether or not some or all of the images have been presented mirror-flipped.
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UK positions: George, John, Paul, Ringo. |
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USA: Apart from being in black and white, only George keeps his position, but is mirror-flipped. |
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USA movie poster: Same as on the US album. |
So this brings us these questions: Why were the USA figures presented in black and white, why did they not appear in the same order as in the UK, and why was Georges image mirror-flipped?
WogBlog reader Stephen McGowan wrote to us about these issues, and presented us with the puzzle, which he also seemed to solve during our mail exchange.
The simplest answer (which often is the correct one, mind you), is perhaps that Capitol Records, who released the album in the US, did not have the colour photo negatives (or positives, for that matter), of those four individual shots of The Beatles which were going to be used on the British "Help!" album cover. What they did have were images from the film itself, and they presented those in a colourful gatefold cover. As for the four individual shots, which they used for the album sleeve and United Artists reused for their movie poster, they probably just had black and white negatives of those.
Adding to the confusion, there's also a book of sheet music from Northern Songs.
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UK edition of the "Souvenir film and song album" book. |
Inside this book are these four individual black and white shots, which upon close inspection reveal that George, John, Ringo and Paul are standing on a white platform for the photo shoot:
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George, as on the UK sleeve |
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John, as on the UK sleeve |
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Ringo, as on the UK sleeve |
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Paul, mirror-flipped compared to the UK sleeve |
The positioning of each Beatle on the cover seems to have been a last minute decision. In our
previous blog post about the royal world premiere of "Help!", we showed a photo of the outside of the London Pavilion. We would like to draw your attention to the large figures on display on the facade of the building:
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The "Help!" figures outside the theatre. |
George, Ringo, John and Paul. Exactly in the same order, not as on the UK album sleeve, but as on the US one. Did the Capitol executives see this photo and used it to position the four black and white photos for their album release? Or was it a coincidence? George is like he is on the US album (notice the light glare in his hat), but Ringo is mirror-flipped, hinting that it was perhaps the latter.
Another photo, taken inside the London Pavilion of Ringo, his wife Maureen and Paul reveals a bit of a "Help!" poster behind them.
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Note that Paul's image on the poster is like in the songbook, not like the sleeves and the facade of the theatre. |
The photo shows inconsistency between the figures on the facade outside the theatre and the poster in the lobby inside. As you can see, on this poster the Paul figure is mirror-flipped, just like in the songbook rendition.
Then it's the finished UK movie poster. Made by United Artists, it's probably not that surprising that they used the same order as they had done for the US poster - and once again presents the four figures in black and white.
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UK film poster |
The sum of all these discrepancies is evidence that the positioning of these four Beatles figures, and their appearance on the upcoming album sleeves had not yet been decided upon.
So who was flipped and who was not? During the photo shoot for the album cover, scenes for the film were still being, as it were, filmed. Still needed on the set in different clothes, the Beatles just changed to their Obertauern costumes for the "Help!" album cover.
GeorgeHere is a shot of The Beatles in their costumes, from Obertauern:
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Wearing the same costumes in Obertauern, earlier in the filming. |
If this black and white shot is correct, and going by signs behind it is, it means George is mirror-flipped on the UK "Help!" sleeve, as per the side of the buttons in his coat. That means he is correct on the US album sleeve.
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George, as per the US album sleeve, only in colour. |
RingoIf the film stills featuring Ringo are correct, which we know they are (we've all seen it enough times) then the large one on Pavillion is correct and all others are flipped, including both the UK and US sleeves. In the shooting of the cover, the ring is not on his right hand, but on left. Perhaps it was added afterwards, you might ask? Not according to this photo, taken during the photo shoot:
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Ringo at the photo shoot: ring on his right hand. |
This shows that the photo on the UK and US album covers was a mirror image. So here's what he really looked like in the photo:
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Flipped the correct way, blue colour removed. |
PaulIf Paul is flipped, then he would be wearing a watch on the wrong hand for a leftie. Though his fringe is most unPaul like, compared to this picture with Victor Spinetti, taken on the same occasion.
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Spinetti, in costume, seems to be omnipresent on this occasion. |
As you can see, Paul's costume for the album cover shoot is the same as he was wearing in Obertauern, a rather black, furry thing (before he became an animal lover) with a zipper.
Colour photos of Paul taken in Obertauern wearing the same costume reveal that it's really black, and has been coloured blue only for the UK "Help!" cover.
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Photographic evidence of the true colours of The Beatles' costumes. |
So, taking the wristwatch issue into consideration, Paul is probably correct on the album sleeves, but was flipped in the song book.
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Paul, what we assume is the correct way, blue colour removed. |
JohnWas John's image reversed? Once again we turn to a photo with Victor Spinetti on the occasion of the cover shoot at Cliveden House.
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John in cover shoot costume, Spinetti once again in a costume appropriate for the day's "Help!" scenes. |
If we use the same reasoning re buttons as we did with George, and if the photo with Victor Spinetti shown above is correct, (and Spinetti's buttons are consistent through all images), then yes - John is flipped on the album sleeves.
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John, flipped back and blue removed. |
We could really do with a contact sheet of the actual shoot to see whether or not we are correct in our assumptions. Photographer Robert Freeman's photo books "Yesterday" and "A Private View" do not contain these photos, so either he's not showing, or United Artists, EMI or Apple own them, or they may have been lost to time.
Since the pictures were individually taken, and furthermore not actually correct for the semaphore of spelling out H E L P, then a correct order is irrelevant - there is no correct order. However, eager as we are to please, here's a rendition of the UK "Help!" album front cover, with no Beatle reversed.
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The UK "Help!" album front cover, after restorations. |
Thanks to Stephen McGowan for all the photos he sent and the conclusions he came to. For the recent re-releases of the "Help!" film for the home video market (2007 on DVD, 2013 on Blu-ray), the box covers look like the UK album cover. In conclusion, some of the Beatles were reversed on both the UK and the US album sleeves. John, George and Ringo are reversed on the UK cover, only Paul is presented the right way around. John and Ringo are reversed on the US album cover, Paul and George appear as they were photographed.
An earlier discussion on this same theme can be found here, it eventually comes to the same conclusions.