Ringo Starr
Richard
Starkey was born in the Dingle area of Liverpool on 7 July 1940.
While John Lennon, Paul
McCartney, George Harrison
and Pete Best sweated through their musical apprenticeship in
Hamburg and Liverpool, Ringo learned his trade around the coast of
Britain working in summer holiday camps.
He didn't play on The Beatles' first
single, Love Me Do, or on any of the early demo tapes.
And when the cover photograph for Please Please Me was
taken he still hadn't got his hair straightened-out,
Beatles-style.
Yet, after a childhood of persistent illnesses, the tide turned
for him and he signed on the dotted line at the exact moment of
Beatle take-off.
Fast forward seven years, and when The Beatles' break-up became
inevitable, Ringo was quickly out of the starting-gates with two
solo albums by September 1970.
Both of these albums fell into the
'things-to-get-off-your-chest' category: The first, Sentimental
Journey (1970), was something of a joke and failed on every
conceivable level except the all-important one of providing Ringo
himself with some satisfaction.
It was an album of standards
that Ringo remembered being heartily sung in his local pubs back
home in Liverpool when he was a kid. A sentimental journey indeed.
Ringo
had no trouble in persuading various A-list guests to come along
and produce one track each - including Elmer Bernstein, Quincy
Jones and Paul McCartney.
The second album, later that same year, was a different matter
entirely.
Ringo had always liked Country & Western music, as
his choice of songs from early Beatles days had indicated. this
time, however, he was invited by steel-guitarist Pete Drake to
record a complete album in Nashville, and was granted the services
of the cream of local studio musicians - from Jerry Reed right
through to The Jordanaires.
Since Pete Drake had also obligingly commissioned all the songs
from top Country writers, this was one time it did come
easy for Ringo.
The album was engineered by Elvis Presley's
old guitarist, Scotty Moore, and the company was in fact so
distinguished and talented that Ringo didn't even have to play
drums.
The album was titled Beaucoups Of Blues and
contained many maudlin songs of love and death which Ringo
delivered in his usual carefree manner.
It Don't Come Easy was an archetypal Ringo record, and
his first single. It was written by himself and George Harrison,
who produced it in a sub-Spector
fashion; but it was a belting, driving song that was perfect for
Ringo's voice.
With these projects out of the way, and with the exception of
his appearance at The Concert For Bangla Desh at Madison Square
Garden, Ringo otherwise diverted his attention from making what he
off-handedly described as "pieces of plastic". Each of
The Beatles had individual film work before Ringo, but ultimately
it was he who was most attracted to the cinema.
In Candy he
portrayed a lecherous Mexican gardener, and in The
Magic Christian he played the unruly nephew of Peter
Sellers. He wasn't then a great actor, but he did provide
occasional moments of humour, and was emphatically not the
embarrassment that many unkind people had suggested he would be.

Blindman was a
bloody Western made on location in Spain, in which Ringo played a
passable Mexican bandit. Even so, it appeared an ill-judged
attempt by Ringo to broaden his acting experience by playing a
dramatic role in a film that took over two years to open in
Britain and was instantly forgettable at a time when violent, neo-Peckinpah
Westerns were two-a-penny.
His next film was 200
Motels, conceived and written by Frank
Zappa, in which Ringo played the role of Frank Zappa(!). Made
in the post-Tommy era
when rock stars liked to think themselves masters of several art
forms, 200 Motels was one of the events that proved
conclusively that few of them actually were.
During 1972 Ringo himself took up directing. He had several
projects in mind but only two came to fruition. The first was a
documentary about Marc Bolan who was then
at the zenith of his career, called Born To Boogie. Much
of the film surrounded a T. Rex concert at London's Empire Pool in
April, 1972.
If it proved anything it was perhaps that Ringo could
occasionally point a camera in the right direction, and that Marc
Bolan was considerably out of his depth as 'superstar' material,
as he didn't have the character to carry a whole film.
The other film, Son Of Dracula, starring Harry
Nilsson - another of Ringo's show-biz buddies - had a
soundtrack by an ad-hoc grouping of Ringo, Nilsson, Klaus Voorman,
Peter Frampton and John
Bonham, but for some reason its release just didn't follow.
Then, towards the end of 1972, Ringo eagerly accepted the
opportunity to play the part of a philosophising Teddy Boy in a
film designed to catch the vogue for 1950s nostalgia, That'll
Be The Day.
With That'll Be The Day (1973) - starring
opposite David Essex - Ringo played
his part perfectly.
Whether working on a fairground at a holiday
camp or wising-up the inexperienced Essex on how to bed girls, he
was entirely at home in the part and easily the most authentic
thing in the film.
Ringo celebrated further success in 1973 when he released his
first solo rock album, simply titled Ringo.
His singles, Photograph
and You're Sixteen, both did well in the UK, but
especially so in the US (where they both went to number one).
Through his movies - Caveman
specifically - Ringo met his second wife, Barbara Bach.
During the 1990s Ringo began organising a series of concert
tours under the name Ringo Starr and His All-Starr Band, teaming
up with well-known musicians to play a selection of his Beatles
and solo songs, along with songs made famous by the other
musicians in the line-up. The ninth such All-Starr Band tour took
place in 2006.
But to a whole generation of kids born long after the 60s,
Ringo is probably more famous as the voice of Thomas
The Tank Engine which he narrated in 1984, and which has
been screened on TV virtually non-stop ever since.
Ringo's first wife, Maureen
(nee Cox), died on 30 December 1994 from complications
following a bone-marrow transplant as treatment for leukaemia. The
couple were married between 1965 and 1975.
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