Stories

At The Height Of Beatlemania, ‘Mary Poppins’ Star Julie Andrews Proclaimed Her Love For The Beatles

ADVERTISEMENT

UPDATED 10/6/2023

By October of 1964, the world had succumbed to a disease known as Beatlemania, elevating John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr to the biggest sensations the globe had ever known. Among their legion was British actress Julie Andrews, who commented to The San Francisco Examiner at the time, “I love them!”

ADVERTISEMENT

By that point, The Beatles had released half a dozen No. 1 singles, four No. 1 albums, had, in March of 1964, the top five songs on the charts at the same time (no one’s ever done that before) and their first hit feature film, A Hard Day’s Night.  Of course, Julie was no slouch in the pop sensation department herself.

ADVERTISEMENT

RELATED: Whatever Happened to Julie Andrews, Maria Von Trapp from ‘The Sound of Music?’

John, Paul, George, Ringo and Julie

She made her Broadway debut in 1956 in The Boy Friend, followed by her portrayal of Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady, playing the title character in a 1957 television production of Rodger & Hammerstein’s Cinderella, returning to the stage for Camelot and then making the leap to the big screen as, again, the title character in Walt Disney’s Mary Poppins. One would have to imagine that The Beatles kind of loved her, too.

MY FAIR LADY, from left: Rex Harrison, Julie Andrews at first rehearsal on New Amsterdam Roof, New York, 1956

Interestingly, the fact that Julie had expressed such enthusiasm for the moptop foursome was a little disconcerting to members of the Julie Andrews Admiration Society, described by the newspaper as “a group of non-shrieking teenagers from Oakland Technical High School,” then adding, “They turned out for Miss Andrews at San Francisco International Airport with signs that included, ‘Down with mopheads — we like Julie.”

A HARD DAY’S NIGHT, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, John Lennon, Ringo Starr, chased by fans, 1964.

For her part, Julie obviously didn’t seem fazed at all, despite the fact that (at least at that early stage) there were some who felt the Fab Four lacked “class,” which Julie seemed to embody. Her response, “If I combed my hair the right way, I could be a Beatle, too.”

MARY POPPINS, Julie Andrews, 1964

Ms. Andrews — who was less than a year away from bringing Maria von Trapp to the movies — all we can say is, “Yeah, yeah, yeah!”

Ed Gross

I've been an entertainment journalist for ... well, a long time. Served on the editorial staff of magazines like Starlog, Life Story, Cinescape, Movie Magic and Geek. Most recently I spent a number of years as Film/TV Editor at closerweekly.com and I've authored a number of oral history books on subjects like Star Trek, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Battlestar Galactica, James Bond and Star Wars. All told, that's a lot of words — and I hope to add a lot more to them at Do You Remember.

Show comments
Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Carol Burnett Celebrates 91st Birthday Wish Surprise From Bradley Cooper After NSFW Joke

Carol Burnett celebrated her 91st birthday on April 26, delving further into the life of…

1 hour ago

Moms Welcome Babies Named Johnny Cash And June Carter Born In Same Hospital, Same Day

One hospital was positively rocking out recently after welcoming two illustrious newcomers into the world.…

5 hours ago

Valuable Item From Titanic Wreckage Set To Fetch Thousands Of Dollars At Auction

Henry Aldridge & Son of Devizes is set to auction a watch recovered from the…

6 hours ago

Jennifer Aniston Is Producing A Remake Of ‘9 To 5’

Jennifer Aniston has her eyes set on 9 to 5 remake, bringing the 1980 comedy…

6 hours ago

Rumer Willis And Daughter Join Sisters Talullah And Scout In Matching Pink Swimsuits

Rumer Willis and her sisters — Tallulah and Scout — recently had some quality girl…

7 hours ago

Pierce Brosnan Looks Years Older After Drastic Transformation For New Movie

Pierce Brosnan, who is famous for his roles in Mamma Mia! and Mrs. Doubtfire, was…

8 hours ago