USA TODAY International Edition

The Beatles made it by going ‘ Eight Days a Week’

Film explores years as a live sensation

- Kim Willis LAS VEGAS

To hear Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr tell it, The Beatles wrote the most beloved songs in rock to avoid being upstaged by rival cover bands.

“The band before you could do your whole act,” McCartney says of the Fab Four’s earliest days as live performers in Liverpool. “It wasn’t like this great muse came down — it was the only way out of this situation. We’d better write a few because then they can’t do them before we go on.”

The two surviving Beatles are seated chummily, side by side, in a plush villa at The Mirage to talk about Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years. The documentar­y ( in theaters Friday, on Hulu Saturday), directed by Ron Howard, tracks the group in concert — from the beginnings of Beatlemani­a through their last trek in 1966 — using fan- sourced clips and new and archival interviews.

The project follows a narrative arc that asks, “How on earth did they stay sane and stay together through this tidal wave of fame, fortune, glitz ... and not have their souls expropriat­ed?” producer Nigel Sinclair says.

Howard’s idea was to look at “this moment of explosion through the point where it wasn’t really sustainabl­e and make an adventure story out of it,” says the director, who watched John Lennon, George Harrison, McCartney and Starr burst into American consciousn­ess in 1964 on The Ed Sullivan Show. Three weeks later, when he turned 10, “I wanted a Beatle wig. And that’s what I wore for my birthday.”

In the film, The Beatles are seen performing sets that play like pantomime, unable to hear themselves over the shrieking.

“It’s about us dealing with the life we had to lead in those days,” says Starr, 76. Still, “we were never full of fear. In Wales, some kid grabbed me by the hair and would not let go. But that was the most that ever happened.”

The chaotic 1965 Shea Stadium show, the beginning of the bigvenue rock era, proved both momentous and manic.

“We could be very angry and annoyed in front of 56,000 people or get hysterics,” says McCartney, 74. “And so there’s John doing his solo on I’m Down,” he says, running his elbow up and down an imaginary keyboard: “‘ Rrrr, rrrr, rrrr.’ We’re just ‘ Ha, ha, ha.’ It just went to hysterics, which was often the safety valve.”

New to most fans is the revelation that The Beatles refused to play to a segregated audience in Jacksonvil­le and insisted on integratin­g the Gator Bowl.

“It wasn’t the kind of thing we wanted to boast about, to say, ‘ Yeah, you know what? We’re anti- segregatio­n.’ We just were,” McCartney says.

But they feel good about those years on the road.

“We get in a band, and, you know, the band gets good. It’s just this whole miracle,” McCartney marvels. England had just stopped military conscripti­on, “and we all would have had to go into the Army the next year.”

“I think of it like God opening the waters for Moses: ‘ Well, OK, you don’t have to go in the Army. You can be The Beatles.’ ”

 ?? MJ KIM ?? Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and director Ron Howard are talking about Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years, out Friday.
MJ KIM Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and director Ron Howard are talking about Eight Days a Week: The Touring Years, out Friday.
 ?? APPLE CORPS LTD. ?? The boys banter with the press on Feb. 11, 1964, as they travel by train from New York to Washington for their first U. S. concert.
APPLE CORPS LTD. The boys banter with the press on Feb. 11, 1964, as they travel by train from New York to Washington for their first U. S. concert.

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