Heaviest Smoker?

The history and music of the Fab Four
lennonon
Member
Posts: 209
Joined: Sat Apr 17, 2004 6:09 am

Heaviest Smoker?

Post by lennonon »

Looking at a recent cache of George photos on a site, lots of stuff I've never seen before, he HAD to be the heaviest smoker in the '62-'67 time period. A least that's the way it seems from photos across many sources. Anyone ever notice? I know it's trivial, but, MAN, those guys could SMOKE.

That's cigarettes, btw.
User avatar
bassduke49
Senior Member
Posts: 6580
Joined: Wed May 14, 2003 5:00 am

Post by bassduke49 »

It killed him in the end. Sad. :^(
Author: "The Rickenbacker Electric Bass - 50 Years As Rock's Bottom"
User avatar
revolver323
Intermediate Member
Posts: 997
Joined: Mon Jul 04, 2005 5:48 am
Contact:

Post by revolver323 »

Smoking was the norm at the time. Part of the bad boy image started in the '50s. After spending 30+ years playing clubs and being a non-smoker yet having my clothes and equipment reek of smoke, I'm glad things have changed.
User avatar
simer4001
Veteran RRF member
Posts: 4288
Joined: Sat Nov 11, 2000 8:14 pm

Post by simer4001 »

I think they all smoked pretty heavily. I share your feelings Paul...sad indeed.
LET THE WORLD KNOW YOU WANT PAUL TO BRING BACK THE 4001. JOIN OUR FACEBOOK GROUP!! http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=147641915268984
rickfan63
Veteran RRF member
Posts: 896
Joined: Fri Nov 01, 2002 8:30 am

Post by rickfan63 »

That's the bad part about playing in club bands...the alcoholics and the smokers. I don't drink or smoke so I've pretty much stayed off to myself during breaks when doing a gig. Most of the time, I've gone outside if the weather permits. I wish George could have kicked the habit like Paul did. He might still be with us.
I recently went back to playing a Rickenbacker bass. Its like meeting an old friend again
User avatar
studiotwosession
Advanced Member
Posts: 2215
Joined: Fri Jul 29, 2005 1:36 pm

Post by studiotwosession »

Two clips come to mind. One during Let It Be (might be on outtake only in the Anthology) where Billy Preston has his first day on the job. During the hellos George is smoking heavily. Then, there was a clip on some TV show of him and Ringo in recent years, both dragging on ciggies. Ringo says "this one's for (and names some town or something)" and takes a big drag on the Marlboro or whatever it was. I could only think when George died if Ritchie quit. Tom Petty, another friend of George's, is reputed to be a heavy smoker, too. I always wondered how people who made their livings as singers, in a young man's business no less, could not quit. But then again, I never started. Lastly, when I did my Beatles places tour in July '97, I walked past George's House on a brilliant Sunday morning. I was stunned to read later that George reported that he was out gardening one day in July, '97, when he noticed a lump on his skin. I guess there's about a 1 in 30 chance it was the day I passed by. It was a beautiful day for gardening but I hope it wasn't that day, not that it makes any difference to George now. He made that famous quote about the Beatles "giving their nervous systems" to Beatlemania. He seems to have had the least agreeable constitution to fame. That may have made it harder to quit.
This is off the record
User avatar
brammy
Senior Member
Posts: 5074
Joined: Thu Apr 07, 2005 5:00 am

Post by brammy »

When I see the scene in AHDN of George and Ringo smoking between the train cars, I want to scream out... "No, George, DONT DO IT!"

I just watched AHDN again the other night. I think that makes 2,345,721 viewings.... and I STILL notice new things every time.
“The urge to save humanity is always a false front for the urge to rule it.” ....H. L. Mencken
drathbun
Member
Posts: 240
Joined: Fri Aug 26, 2005 6:55 pm
Contact:

Post by drathbun »

"It is a Malaboro with a Microny Finger! A big smoke for a big man!"
2006 Rickenbacker 360/12FG
2005 Rickenbacker 4003FG
1981 Rickenbacker 320JG
2004 Larrivee L05
2005 Yamaha FG720-12
2006 Epiphone Casino
2004 Fender American Deluxe Stratocaster
2003 LaPatie Etude Classical
1968 Yamaha FG150 Red Label
User avatar
mgauction
Advanced Member
Posts: 2360
Joined: Sun Jun 13, 2004 5:00 am
Contact:

Post by mgauction »

John might have had them all beat. At the end he was smoking those unfiltered french cigarettes - Gitan. I tried one of those in the early 80's. There was never a stronger american cigarette.
Leprosy is rare & scarce but nobody wants that!
User avatar
kog
Member
Posts: 498
Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2005 5:55 am

Post by kog »

I just got the DVDs of the Dick Cavett interviews of John & Yoko. The first show was from September, 1971, and it is SO odd to see them both sitting there smoking like chimneys, lighting one after another. Cavett even brings it up, and Yoko makes a comment about being a chain smoker. I know it was the "norm" back then, people on talk shows just smoked, period. But it looks so strange today. It had only been 1970 when cigarette ads were "outlawed" on TV.

Interestingly, though, in the third show they appeared on around May, 1972, neither of them touched a cigarette.
User avatar
studiotwosession
Advanced Member
Posts: 2215
Joined: Fri Jul 29, 2005 1:36 pm

Post by studiotwosession »

Supposedly, when John and Yoko separated, his heavy smoking of foreign cigarettes was an issue.

Otherwise, yes today they say 25% of Americans smoke (which still seems exceedingly high...for the 21st Century anyway. The main reason I never started is because 30 years ago it seemed to me to be an anachronism.)

My friend was telling me there's a Sports Illustrated with one of our old Chicago White Sox players on the cover and he's smoking in the dugout (and also used to drink beer during the game out of Coke cups.)

Ahh the days when substance abuse was the norm and not the exception. Maybe it's why rock 'n roll was better?
This is off the record
User avatar
mgauction
Advanced Member
Posts: 2360
Joined: Sun Jun 13, 2004 5:00 am
Contact:

Post by mgauction »

In fact, Glenn, there are numerous advertisements from the 1930s to early 50s with current sport stars of the day promoting different brands with a cig dangling from the side of their mouths!
Leprosy is rare & scarce but nobody wants that!
User avatar
webhead
Veteran RRF member
Posts: 1120
Joined: Thu Aug 23, 2001 11:11 pm

Post by webhead »

Even the Flintstones promoted ciggies...

Image
"Take the RIC... Leave the cannoli."
stubby
Intermediate Member
Posts: 643
Joined: Sun May 08, 2005 2:52 pm

Post by stubby »

As an archivist, I once processed a collection of portraits of prominent North American business leaders in the 40s and 50s. These were commissioned portraits, very "official." In these portraits, probably 75% of the fellows were posing with a cigarette prominently figuring in the photo. I remember how incongruous it looked to more modern sensibilities and the ciggies really caught my eye. Times have changed indeed.
User avatar
studiotwosession
Advanced Member
Posts: 2215
Joined: Fri Jul 29, 2005 1:36 pm

Post by studiotwosession »

As an ad copywriter, I used to have a collection of old TV commercials on VHS and it had that Flintstones ad on it. Not only were they in the ad, it was the days when an entire show was sponsored by one main sponsor and it was, you bet, Winston. Fred even sang the jingle. And yes, there were tons of other celeb smoker ads on it (none bigger than Fred, though.) Anyway, it puts Joe Camel print ads to shame.

There's an outdoor ad campaign running here in NYC now that's aimed at shaming Hollywood for all the ciggie industry money they take (and therefore put cigs into actors hands.) Of course, the trouble with that is, smoke just looks great on film.

Far as times changing, I remember the show Dallas, which is only as old as 1978, and it seemed the main characters all had bars in their offices. Someone would walk into JR's office at 11 a.m. and he'd be like "so, what'll you have?"

I entered the work force in the mid 80s, or the tail end of the three martini lunch. There were still old timers coming back to the office crocked at two in the afternoon.
This is off the record
Post Reply

Return to “Beatles' Forum”