The Beatles’ story has been told, retold, remixed and reimagined for every generation that came after them. Decades since their breakup, they remain a living presence in our cultural imagination, not just as nostalgia, but as something enduring and evolving.
When the original eight-part Beatles Anthology began to be restored and remastered last year, I had the great privilege of being asked to add to this seminal work by directing a brand-new episode nine. The Beatles Anthology has become not only a record of The Beatles’ history but a cultural artefact in its own right, a snapshot of how they once chose to remember themselves 20-plus years after their breakup.
This new episode offered a chance for the Beatles story not just to be revisited, but reexamined for what it tells us about memory, legacy, loss, and the enduring human desire to connect through their music.
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The greatest freedom in creating episode nine was to step outside the familiar chronology, from Liverpool to Abbey Road to the rooftop, and instead turn inward. How do The Beatles themselves perceive the vast weight of their own legacy? How does subjective recollection, both personal and collective, soften or distort what truly happened? These are not questions about the past, but about what it means to live within one’s own extraordinary myth.
At its heart, The Beatles’ story is one of transformation, not just theirs but also of the world. They began as a gang of childhood friends chasing a dream out of post-war Britain. By the time they parted, they had changed not only music but our engagement with youth culture, fame, creativity and our understanding of the way the world saw itself.