The Herald on Sunday

DJ Nightingal­e admits she ‘kept Lennon-Ono romance secret’

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THE DJ Annie Nightingal­e has revealed she knew about John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s relationsh­ip before it was made public but did not report the story for fear of breaking her bond of trust with the Beatles.

The broadcaste­r, the first female presenter on BBC Radio 1 and its longest-serving host, was a frequent guest at the band’s Apple Studios in London during the 1960s.

She had a front-row seat to one of the most creative periods in British popular music and was among the first to know about Lennon and Ono.

However, Nightingal­e said that while it would have been a huge story, she did not write about it in her newspaper column in case she upset the Beatles.

During an appearance on Desert Island Discs, she said: “I was accepted but also knew that they had a kind of code, one strike and you’re out.

“You let them down, you break that trust, and that’s it, it’s over.

“And I thought that was perfectly fair. I knew about John and Yoko before it was announced.”

Nightingal­e, 80, added: “If that story breaks then they’ll think ‘oh, it’s your fault’. And when they did go public it was a great relief because sometimes it’s not good to be in the right place at the right time.

“I wasn’t hanging out there the whole time but it was an extraordin­ary atmosphere. Lauren Bacall would come in there and Jimmy Webb, the songwriter. People would just appear.

“And I took my son to the Apple Christmas party and John Lennon was Father

Christmas and Yoko Ono was Mother Christmas. They did extraordin­ary things and I felt very privileged to be allowed in.

ennon and Ono’s L relationsh­ip is often blamed for breaking up the Beatles. They met in 1966 and were married in 1969, a year after Lennon’s divorce from Cynthia. They remained together until Lennon’s murder in New York in 1980.

Nightingal­e, whose Desert Island Discs included songs from Billie Eilish, Beyonce and Lennon, began her Radio 1 career in 1970, three years after the station was establishe­d.

She told host Lauren Laverne she asked for a job when it started but was turned down because she was a woman.

Nightingal­e said: “They came out with this wonderful line, they said ‘our disc jockeys are husband substitute­s’. Which I thought was an extraordin­ary thing to say.

“That set up a lot of ”assumption­s that all the women pop fans were housewives at home doing the ironing. And they would say, ‘why would a woman want to be a DJ?’ They were bewildered.”

When she did get her chance, Nightingal­e said her first show was a “complete disaster” after she made a mistake and brought the station to a halt.

And in her early days at the pop music-focused Radio 1, Nightingal­e said she encountere­d resistance from the engineers.

“I felt that the technical guys were waiting for me to fail,” she said.

Listen to Nightingal­e’s episode of Desert Island Discs on BBC Sounds and BBC Radio 4 on Sunday at 11am.

 ??  ?? Nightingal­e admitted she did not want to upset the Beatles
Nightingal­e admitted she did not want to upset the Beatles

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