The Herald

Ex-beatle’s Japanese tea set goes on display at museum

- Eleanor Barlow

A JAPANESE tea service bought by George Harrison when he was confined to a hotel room because of Beatlemani­a has gone on display in a museum.

The set, one of three bought by Harrison in 1966, was given to tour manager Neil Aspinall and passed on to his son Roag Best, who now runs the Liverpool Beatles Museum on Mathew Street in the city.

Mr Best, the half-brother of the band’s original drummer Pete Best, said: “The Beatles had gone to play the Budokan. They played five shows in a three-day period and were playing to in excess of 10,000 people a show.

“Beatlemani­a had truly hit Japan. They couldn’t go out.”

He said his father accompanie­d John Lennon, in disguise, as they left their Tokyo hotel once and Sir Paul

Mccartney also went out once, wearing a disguise, but Ringo Starr and Harrison stayed confined to their rooms.

“They liked buying stuff when they were touring but because they couldn’t go out, they were having people bringing their wares up to their rooms to sell,” Mr Best said.

“George bought three really ornate Japanese tea services which he then had shipped back to England.

“He kept one and gave my dad the choice of the other two, then the third he gave to his mother.”

The crockery made its way back to Liverpool and was put in a display cabinet in the house of Mr Best’s mother – owner of the Casbah Club, Mona Best.

But, Mr Best said it had not been a complete set since his mother asked him to clean it when he was 15.

He said: “I carried it all very carefully

through to the kitchen and washed it but once I’d finished, I was in a rush to go and play out with my mates, so I stacked it all on top of each other to carry it back in.

“My mum said to me ‘don’t take it back like that, you’ll drop it’. I said ‘no, I won’t’, and as I uttered those words the pile buckled and three cups smashed on the floor.

“I just bolted out of the door then before she could kill me.”

Mr Best said his father, who went on to be the boss of Beatles’ company Apple Corps, did not often talk about his time touring with the band.

He said: “I asked him about it once and he told me to close my eyes and imagine how it was.

“When I opened them I said ‘it must have been f ****** brilliant’ and he said ‘oh, lad, it was so much better than that’.”

Mr Best said he hoped the tea service

would be of particular interest to Beatles fans visiting Liverpool from Japan. He added: “The Japanese Beatles fan club has one of the biggest membership­s, it is about 40,000 strong. I think they’re going to love this.”

Meanwhile, a rare Cartier silver engraved box commission­ed by John Lennon and Yoko Ono for their close friends is set to go on sale.

The pair’s “Double Fantasy” box was crafted as a Christmas gift which Ono personally gave to the Beatles star’s bank manager at the Bank of Tokyo shortly after Lennon’s death in December 1980.

The cedar-encased box includes a blue pouch, outer case and paper wrapping, and reads inside “Double Fantasy Christmas 1980, NYC, John & Yoko”. It is to be auctioned at Catherine Southon Auctioneer­s & Valuers in Kent on May 15, with an estimated value of £3,000-£5,000.

They liked buying stuff when they were touring

 ?? Picture: Peter Byrne/pa Wire ?? The Japanese tea service, bought by Beatle George Harrison in Japan
Picture: Peter Byrne/pa Wire The Japanese tea service, bought by Beatle George Harrison in Japan

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