They were oh so shaggy and oh so loud, and nothing like our parents — if not we — had ever heard before. It may seem like yesterday, but the Beatles’ first appearance on Ed Sullivan — essentially ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Smooth and polished, the Beatles opened their U.S. tour in San Francisco, on August 20, 1964. Three of the four from left are Paul ...
On February 9, 1964, a group of four 20-something musicians from Liverpool made their debut on U.S. television and forever changed popular music. The Beatles’ appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show” that ...
You step into a moment that reshaped pop culture: on February 9, 1964, The Beatles’ appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show drew about 73 million viewers and signaled the start of the British Invasion.
The Beatles first performed on The Ed Sullivan Show on Feb. 9, 1964. The performance was the crowning moment in the group’s first tour of the U.S. It helped open the flood gates for the British ...
60 years ago today the Fab Four made their American TV debut on 'The Ed Sullivan Show.' The world would never be the same again But February 9 is more than just the night that Beatlemania finally ...
Noted filmmakers Margo Precht Speciale and Andrew Solt joined host Kenneth Womack to talk about how the Beatles really got booked on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” the lasting legacy of the television ...
Everyone knows The Beatles’ debut appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964 established the band in the United States. They matched their European fame in North America and became the most popular ...
Vince Calandra Sr., who as a longtime booker for CBS juggernaut The Ed Sullivan Show helped introduce The Beatles to America’s TV audience, has died. He was 91. According to a local mortuary’s obit, ...
Consider this an introduction to Beatlemania for millennials. For those who’ve seen this ’60s footage before, it’s a nostalgic blast from the past, but for others, it’s more likely a fascinating first ...
The Beatles arrived in America 60 years ago this week, changing American music and culture. And they caught Dennis Hodo's imagination. The Beatles — John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and ...