New York Daily News

LENNON, ONE OF US

N.Y.ers, on ann’y of slay, recall Beatle who called city home

- BY LARRY MCSHANE

John Lennon sat chatting and spinning his favorite records with a DJ from his favorite Manhattan radio station, an ex-Beatle comfortabl­e at last in his own skin and his recently adopted home: New York City.

“One of me biggest kicks is just going out to eat or going to the movies, you know?” said Lennon during his two-hour visit with WNEW-FM host Dennis Elsas on Sept. 28, 1974. “And doing things I couldn’t do when I was in the middle of the Beatles stuff. I really get off on that.”

In his last decade of life, the man who wrote “Imagine” accomplish­ed the unimaginab­le: The worldwide rock star became just another guy on the Upper West Side, finding a cozy existence amid his fellow New Yorkers. He started his days at a favorite coffee shop, strolled freely through Central Park, chatted up the locals and shopped for clothes at the Charivari 72 boutique.

And Lennon, liberated from his oppressive Fab Four past in the midst of America’s most densely populated city, relished every minute.

“He liked all the things that the people who live here like,” recalled friend and photograph­er Bob Gruen, who shot his last Lennon photos just two days before a crazed Beatles fan killed the revered rocker.

“John and Yoko felt a real freedom in New York to be who they were, to ride bicycles through Greenwich Village.

“People allowed him to be a lot freer in New York.”

The Liverpool native became a fixture on the streets surroundin­g his W. 72nd St. apartment in the Dakota.

He visited the since-shuttered Cafe La Fortuna most mornings, sipping coffee and doodling on his newspaper without intrusion.

“People didn’t bother him,” remembered NYPD Officer Tony Palma, who often saw Lennon out and about in the years before responding to the Dakota when the rock star was killed on Dec. 8, 1980. “He felt comfortabl­e in New York.”

And New York felt comfortabl­e with the ex-mop top turned solo artist, househusba­nd and father.

The Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, while British by birth, became a New Yorker by choice.

“You know, I should have been born in New York, man,” Lennon proclaimed in a 1971 interview with Rolling Stone magazine. “That’s where I belong!”

Lennon, who would have turned 80 on Oct. 9, has now been dead as long as he lived.

But he endures in the memories of those who encountere­d the songwritin­g genius in and around his beloved last stop.

Elsas, a note of ddisbelief still in his vvoice, remembers thhe rainy Saturday aafternoon when LLennon — toting ffour of his favoriite 45s — followed uup on an invite tto pop in for an iinterview. Elsas recalls that Lennon took a taxi to the station’s Fifth Ave. offices, and casually rode up with two friends in the elevator.

“Inside I’m screaming, ‘It’s John Lennon!’” recalled Elsas, still DJing today on WFUV-FM and SiriusXM satellite radio.

“I think he came because he liked doing radio. It was not so blatant as ‘I’ll go on and play my new record [‘Walls and Bridges’]. He was so charming, so disarming.”

Elsas made time to ask about Lennon’s ongoing battle with the Nixon administra­tion and U.S. immigratio­n authoritie­s to remain in his New York City home.

“I love it, you know, and that’s why I’m fighting to stay here,” explained Lennon. “Maybe they could just ban me from Ohio or something, you know? Nothing against Ohio!”

Lennon dodged deportatio­n and won the right to stay in 1975 — the same year his son Sean was born and Lennon left the public stage until his 1980 return with the chart-topping “Double Fantasy.”

A 1974 Gruen photo of Lennon flashing a peace sign with the Statue of Liberty as his backdrop remains among the most iconic

photos of the brilliant songsmith.

Lennon found his comfort zone quickly after landing in a Greenwich Village sublet apartment in 1971. Nervous photograph­er Brian Hamill recalls arriving for a photo shoot expecting a phalanx of hair and makeup people, publicists and assorted rock and roll hangers-on.

Lennon answered the buzzer himself.

“He was like a regular guy from the neighborho­od,” recalled Hamill, bestowing the highest praise any Brooklyn guy could offer. “I asked if he was up for taking a walk about the neighborho­od, I wanted to see how he behaved around other people.

“So we walked around Greenwich Village with Yoko. So nice to other people. John listened to every question! And humorous. Always very funny.”

Hamill recently released “Dream Lovers: John and Yoko in NYC,” featuring previously unseen photos of the couple taken in the

Village and later Lennon by himself at the Dakota.

Lennon was mortally wounded outside his home four decades ago this Tuesday by a gunman who just hours earlier implored his idol to sign a copy of the new Lennon/ Ono “Double Fantasy” album.

Ono still keeps their apartment in the Dakota, but she “chooses to focus on Oct. 9 rather than Dec. 8,” said her spokesman Elliot Mintz — referencin­g Lennon’s birthday, rather than the day of his death. As usual, she will not do any interviews or make public appearance­s associated with the grim anniversar­y.

Lennon, like any good New Yorker, could give as good as he got. Gruen recalled the musician walking past a basketball court near the Dakota when one of the players shouted for his attention.

“He yelled, ‘Hey John, when are you going to get the Beatles back together?’” he said. “And John shot back, ‘ When are you going back to high school?’”

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