Eric Schaal
After The Beatles arrived in
America with “I Want to Hold Your Hand” at No. 1 and screaming fans everywhere,
“Beatlemania” officially kicked into gear. In the following years, the band
would rack up one chart-topping hit after another (including six in 1964) and
dominate the music scene.
When the band played to 56,000
fans at Shea Stadium in August ’65, it might have been the peak of Beatlemania.
By the following year, they were singing about the “Nowhere Man” inside them
and some “Day Tripper” who turned up at their flat. They had more on their mind
than holding hands.
And in ’66 the Fab Four quit
touring for good. After an ugly experience in the Philippines and the
realization that their live shows sounded terrible, the band decided to pack it
in following its last hurrah in San Francisco that August.
But that final tour was a
revelation for reasons other than sound quality. At several stops along the
way, The Beatles played to thousands of empty seats. And at Shea, triumphant
site of their famous ’65 show, the Fab Four faced the reality of 11,000 unsold
tickets.
Some 11,000 tickets went unsold
for The Beatles’ August ’66 show at Shea
Even with empty seats in front of
them, The Beatles didn’t have any trouble making a mint at Shea in August ’66.
Whether they had a more favorable percentage or higher prices at the gate, the
group walked with more money that night than they had at their
record-shattering ’65 appearance.
In footage from the show, you see
how the Fab Four raked in so much cash that night. Asked by an interviewer if
she’d come to the show to listen to music or shout, a fan replied, “We didn’t
pay $5.75 for nothing!” In 1965 dollars, that was quite a lot of cash.
In Anthology, longtime producer
George Martin described it as “a pretty unsettling time” when he mentioned the
11,000 unsold tickets. It’s unlikely so many people stayed home because of John
Lennon’s “more popular than Jesus” comments, but something kept them away.
Another 7,000 seats at an August
25 Seattle show went unsold
When The Beatles arrived on the
West Coast a few days later, they encountered more empty seats. At an August 25
afternoon show at the Seattle Coliseum, promoters only managed to sell 8,000 of
15,000 seats for an afternoon show.
While Martin faced the decline in
sales with clear eyes, Beatles manager Brian Epstein did his job and spun the
’66 concert as the massive success it was by most standards. “People have been
saying things about diminishing popularity, but all one can go by is
attendances, which are absolutely huge,” Epstein said in a statement.
Indeed, the band was still
grossing hundreds of thousands at its biggest shows in ’66. If Epstein couldn’t
keep the band’s finances in excellent shape with that sort of revenue, he had
only himself to blame. As far as the “unsettling times” Martin referenced,
there may have been more to the story.
Speaking with Beatles biographer
Phillip Norman later, Martin let fly a conspiracy theory about Epstein’s 1967
death. After Epstein botched a few Beatles-merchandise ventures, Martin suggested
someone might have murdered him. But we’ll leave that story for another time.