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#george and pattie
inholyfluxx · 4 months
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-`♡´-
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nightisthenotion · 5 months
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Pattie Boyd and George Harrison at London Airport on their way to the Cannes film festival, 16th May, 1968
📸 George Stroud
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rockandrollsgroupie · 28 days
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Pattie Boyd modelling, mid 60s
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scrambleddd-eggs · 5 months
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Pattie and george <33
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harrisonarchive · 8 months
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Photo by Max Scheler.
“[I feel] more fragile when it comes to music [these days]. If a car comes past me in a traffic jam with a boom box going, I jump out of my skin. Those big booming basses. I’m just more sensitive to noise these days.” - George Harrison, AP, February 2001
“George was never very comfortable with that level of fame. The Beatles had experiences where they realized, on tour, that they were trapped in their hotel room. They couldn’t go anywhere. That’s when George realized what fame had done to them, and he didn’t like it. He didn’t understand why HE was famous. Why him and not somebody else?” - Pattie Boyd, American Photo, July/August 2008
“He was shell-shocked from the whole Beatle experience. Literally shell-shocked. He hated loud noises. And imagine if all day, every day, for five or six years, people were screaming at you when you opened your door, jumping on the hood of your car, looking in your window. And then there were the death threats. He wanted to be far away. And he wanted sunshine.” - Olivia Harrison, Architectural Digest, August 2007
“If you had 2 million people screaming at you, I think it would take a long time to stop hearing that in your head. George was not suited to it. […] George talked a lot about his nervous system, that he just didn’t want to hear loud noise anymore. He didn’t want to be startled. He didn’t want to be stressed.” - Olivia Harrison, Rolling Stone, September 15, 2011 (x)
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hordebreaker · 2 months
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I heard about his death from Alan Rogan, who rang me early in the morning at Rod’s flat. I burst into tears, I felt completely bereft. I couldn’t bear the thought of a world without George.
When I left him for Eric, he had said that if things didn’t work out, ever, I could always come to him and he would look after me. It was such a selfless, loving, generous thing to say and it had always been tucked away at the back of my mind. Now that sense of security had gone. I was devastated. I’d known that his death was inevitable, but I’d kept hoping that, with all his money, they would find a cure for him. At the end I hadn’t grasped how ill he was as I hadn’t seen him for a few months. The last time had been at my cottage: he had phoned to say he was coming to Sussex to visit Ringo and Barbara and wanted to see me—I think he was curious to know where I was living. I was so glad we’d had that last meeting.
Danae Brook, a Daily Mail journalist whom I had known slightly, on and off, for some years, was due to come to the flat at ten o’clock on the morning George died. She wanted a photograph I had of somebody she was writing about. I was walking about like a zombie when, suddenly, she was there and wanting to interview me. I didn’t say anything to her but when her piece appeared it was all about how we had modeled together and been chums, and she had been with me soon after I received the news that George had died. I felt exploited.
His funeral was in Los Angeles. I didn’t go, but I was invited to the memorial concert, which took place a year later in the Royal Albert Hall, organized by Eric. I couldn’t go: I had booked a spiritual holiday in Peru. Instead, I watched it on video. On the day, I took myself away from the rest of the group and spent the day high in the mountains, thinking of George, the tears trickling down my face. I was happy to mourn him alone and in my own way.
You never know with grief how long it will last, but I think I’ll miss him for the rest of my life. We shared so much and grew up spiritually together and there are so many things that no one else knows about that we did together; and for many years there were so many questions I wanted to ask him and so many things I needed to speak to him about. And then there were the dreams. I would dream he was alive and I would say to him, “Oh George, it’s so wonderful that you are alive after all, this is so fabulous; I knew they had all made a mistake.” Some dreams can be incredibly vivid and so very real and then I would wake up and within the first couple of seconds I would think he was alive, and then that wave of reality would wash over me as I became more conscious. - Pattie Boyd, "Wonderful Today".
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milexa2000 · 2 months
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Me when I see George Harrison:
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(Ok but Pattie looks so adorable in this scene😭🤍)
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thebeatlelove · 2 months
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November 1964 Teen-ville magazine
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famousmyth · 4 months
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george & pattie ★
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George Harrison with Pattie Boyd by Henry Grossman, 1965🌸🌸🌸
Via @bewareofharrison on Instagram🌸
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applescruffsworld · 2 months
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Idk if it’s just me being dramatic but anytime I see someone make a post about Pattie and George and they say something like oh they should’ve stayed together… like bro get over it!!!! He married Olivia he loved her!!!! And it’s like idk it feels so biased in a way. I love Pattie don’t get me wrong but like c’mon. How come no one is like that with other wives? I will always always defend my girls because none of the Beatles were faithful. But saying George and Pattie were meant to be together like gurl 😭 like do you not read the things about george and Olivia ???? THEY ARE SO IN LOVE ALL THOSE SONGS ABOUT OLIVIA AND DHANI???!!! HE LOVED THEM SMMM. I’m not saying you can’t like Pattie and George because I do too but to say that they were meant to be together and say you’d rather him stay with her than Olivia 😬.. yeah no
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harrisongslimited · 7 months
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George Picture of the Day 9-26-23
Pattie's Diary Entry The Newlyweds
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George signing the Marriage Register. The Honeymoon
thank you to owners of photos, diary and registry.
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rockandrollsgroupie · 1 month
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October 18th, 1967, Pattie Boyd and George Harrison at the premier of “How I Won The War”
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mashunstranichka · 9 days
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imagine-mokey · 1 month
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George with Patty!
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harrisonarchive · 2 months
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On March 2, 1964, The Beatles began filming A Hard Day’s Night. Photo credits as known: by Harry Benson, Astrid Kirchherr.
Later that month (on March 19th), George interviewed Paul for BBC Radio; an excerpt follows: George: “How are you enjoying filming? This is your first film, isn’t it, Paul?” Paul: (laughs) “Yes. The first film we ever made, and uh, we’re having a good time. We’re not very good actors, but we’re trying hard. That’s the most important thing, really, having a try, isn’t it?” George: (mock seriousness) “Yes. I suppose it is, Paul. Well, are you having any trouble learning your lines, or anything like that?” Paul: “Well, actually, George, I’m a bit lazy about that. I normally learn them about, uh, ten minutes before we do the scene, actually. (jokingly) I feel it gives an air of impromptuity.” On that first day of filming, George and Pattie met. “[George was] delicious, he really was. He looked great. Beautiful dark, velvety-brown eyes, just cute, I mean, just adorable. And handsome too.” - Pattie Boyd, BBC Radio 2, September 2019 “We were so different, from completely different backgrounds. He came from the north of England, Liverpool, and I suppose I felt more sophisticated than him. But we grew up together spiritually. It’s something you never lose. […] He was my first love and the most important influence in my life.” - Pattie Boyd, Hello!, August 31, 2004 (x)
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