The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Beatlemani­a arrives at Atlanta Stadium in 1965

- By Mandi Albright malbright@ajc.com

Today’s AJC Deja News comes to you from the Thursday, Aug. 19, 1965, edition of The Atlanta Constituti­on.

An Atlanta summer usually brings with it a slew of outdoor concerts. But in 2020, the norm has become the unusual and enjoying an evening of music now means worries of coronaviru­s spread.

Still, some metro cities are forging ahead with summer fun, setting up concerts and other events as safely as possible. It’s a delicate balance, something Peachtree Corners city officials grappled with when they staged a July concert with social distancing, hand sanitizer and mask requiremen­ts.

“We don’t know that we’ve guaranteed everyone’s safety,” Community Developmen­t Director Diana Wheeler told the AJC’s Arielle Kass in an Aug. 10 article. “There’s always going to be a certain amount of risk.”

Contrast that level of concern with the days when going to a concert meant fretting over ticket prices or availabil- ity. Or worrying about finding transporta­tion to the show. Or wondering if, in the case of the Beatles’ Atlanta Stadium concert, you’d even be able to hear the music.

“That c ommotion at Atlanta Stadium Wednesday night was 30-odd thousand teen-age children and a few assorted parents giving the British mop-head musicians a tumultuous welcome,” longtime Constituti­on colum- nist Celestine Sibley wrote in her Aug. 19, 1965, next-day recounting of the Fab Four’s 30-minute set “climaxing a day which saw several hundred teen-agers shrilling and clawing at the entrance to the ball park as early as 9 a.m.”

The old site south of down- town, now serving as a parking area for the Georgia State University stadium (formerly Turner Field), shows little evidence of its history as the original home of the Atlanta Braves and Falcons. Those fortunate enough to have been there for the Beatles concert, though, need no help recalling the location, sights and sounds of the day.

When the AJC asked read- ers to share their Beatles con- cert stories from Aug. 18, 1965, the memories were of preshow excitement, nabbing those precious $5.50 tickets for lower level seats nearest the stage and, for many who wrote in, of the thrill of sim- ply being there.

“I lost track of time that night,” Jim Warren wrote in the Aug. 2015 article. “A limo came from the outfield and pulled up to the stage. Out stepped the Beatles. People were going crazy. They started with ‘Twist and Shout.’ I could hear the intro and then such an uproar went up that I could not hear another thing.

“The Beatles played for about 30 minutes. Then they got back in the limo and left. I only knew the concert was over because they left, the screaming finally receded and slowly we made our way out of the stadium toward s our cars and went home.”

With so many screaming, giddy teens crowded into Atlanta Stadium, anyone not present possibly imagined a scene of Fab Four-fraught fainting spells, battered bouffants and the sort of carnage brought about by the British Invasion. Celestine Sibley assured Constituti­on readers that wasn’t the case.

“Although first aid stations were operating,” she wrote, “there were few casualties beyond a sore throat or two.”

 ?? AJC 1965 ?? These fans paid $5.50 for a chance to scream at the Beatles from lower-level seats near the stage at the Atlanta Stadium on Aug. 18, 1965.
AJC 1965 These fans paid $5.50 for a chance to scream at the Beatles from lower-level seats near the stage at the Atlanta Stadium on Aug. 18, 1965.

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