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Although his surgery was successful, the results of his biopsies may not come until after the holidays.
The new Apple TV+ documentary “1964” depicts how the Beatles went from nobodies to messiahs practically overnight.
Elliot Mintz said Lennon once phoned him up at four in the morning asking for diet pills.
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John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s only child discusses the new box set he remixed and reveals that he believes The Beatles would have eventually reunited.
Starr, director Michael Lindsay-Hogg, and Giles Martin recall the fraught history of the band’s final film, which arrives on Disney+ this week in a newly restored format.
Even with John Lennon and Tim Blake Nelson, 2024’s batch of Oscar-nominated animated shorts is nearly unwatchable.
On Feb. 9, 1964, Americans witnessed the first truly seismic television event. What stands out most 60 years later, is just how ready The Beatles were for their invasion.
A new Apple TV+ docuseries, “John Lennon: Murder Without a Trial,” is the most harrowing and heartbreaking look yet at the rock icon’s death.
There’s a reason John Lennon never meant “Now and Then”—released this week alongside a short film and a Peter Jackson music video—to be a Beatles song.
“If [this] isn’t an important milestone in the history of modern music, then I don’t know what is,” Oliver Murray, director of “Now and Then: The Last Beatles Song,” tells us.
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