Beatles
We look back at key moments from 30 years of The Beatles Story
4 years ago
Co-founder Mike Byrne never dreamed The Beatles Story would still be going strong more than three decades later.
But its amazing success mirrors that of the four lads who shook the world and who itâs paid homage to since May 1990.
A staggering 315,000 visitors walked through its doors in 2019, itâs tripled in size since it was launched, and the immersive experience which canât wait to Get Back and re-open on May 17 has become the biggest Beatles exhibition in the world.
So we love it? Yeah, yeah, yeah!
Diane Glover, marketing manager for the Britannia Pavilion attraction at the Albert Dock, says. âItâs that rags to riches story, four lads who came from humble beginnings, who loved music and were great at it, and who became famous throughout the world.
âItâs a story that transcends the generations and itâs told at The Beatles Story in a way thatâs totally immersive. It takes visitors back in time so they feel theyâre actually in the 60s; you see it, you hear it and you smell it.
âIt makes it as authentic as it can possibly be.
âAnd itâs constantly changing,â she adds. âEveryone has a story about The Beatles, either their own or handed down from parents and grandparents. We had one guy in 2018 whoâd attended a musical opening in Broadway and John Lennon was there.
âHe took photos which had been lying in his loft and these made a new exhibition last year to mark what would have been Johnâs 80th. Thereâs always new memorabilia. Like the band itself, the legacy goes on.â
The Beatles Story was 30 last year and, while Covid brought the celebrations to a standstill, itâs determined to mark its special milestone this year with new exhibitions and fascinating items, including t-shirts designed by Ringo Starr, and George Harrisonâs set list from his last tour in Japan.
So itâll be Happy Birthday Beatles Story â just one year on!
It cost Mike and Bernie Byrne just ÂŁ750,000 to set up The Beatles Story âwith a little help from friendsâ because they felt the city needed an exhibition where people could learn about John, Paul, George and Ringo, and immerse themselves in everything from the music they created to the styles they adopted and the fashions they wore.
Itâs changed and got better year on year with the biggest change in 2008 with the Capital of Culture, when The Beatles Story grew, the shop was given its own unit and the Fab Four CafĂ© was established.
One of latest additions is the upgraded Discovery Zone, the family friendly space where young people can find out more about the band and is linked to the national curriculum.
âWeâve got our own NEMS Record Shop (the family business of Beatlesâ manager Brian Epstein), kids can dress up in outfits from the 60s, we show them how music was played then, they can do their own pop art and thereâs an interactive quiz about key historical events that happened.
âWe have a replica Cavern Club in the central exhibition but thereâs a mini one in the Discovery Zone with a small stage and karaoke so they can sing a Beatles song.â
Key items of memorabilia include the last piano John Lennon played on. Diane says: âIt was from Record Plant Studios in New York where John had been rehearsing on the day he was sadly shot. Itâs been played on by Elton John, Aerosmith, and David Bowie penned âFameâ on it!â
Other star exhibits include George Harrisonâs first guitar, Ringoâs drum kit, the original âHelpâ notes and John Lennonâs glasses.
âWhat we do is storytelling, but we are doing it in the most theatrical way possible. It works well and thatâs why people really love it.
âIf you havenât been, come. If you have, still come, because chances are thereâll be things you havenât seen and with UK visitors only able to visit at the moment, itâs quieter ⊠like having your own magical â not so mystery â tour.
âYou donât have to be a fan to enjoy The Beatles Story, but when you leave you probably will be.â