Part Three - New York City
1971
St Regis Hotel
5th Avenue, East 55th Street,
New York City
Picture
from 'NY Journey'
After leaving England for the final time on 31st August 1971, John
and Yoko initially stayed here in apartments 1701-1703 on the 17th floor.
John had previously conducted a lengthy series of interviews here back
on 13th May 1968 alongside Paul McCartney when they were launching their
Apple business venture. The hotel is a 1904 Beaux Arts landmark that features
256 guest rooms and suites.
1971-72
105 Bank Street,
Greenwich Village, New York
City
On the 16th October 1971, John and Yoko moved to this Greenwich Village
loft, renting it from Jerry Butler of the Lovin’ Spoonful. It had two large
rooms and a wrought-iron staircase which led up to a small roof garden.
Their neighbours at the time included John Cage, Bob Dylan and Jerry Rubin.
With the release of the Imagine album returning Lennon to a commercial
pedestal, John then made a 180-degree turn in recording a highly provocative
and contentious set of tracks together with Yoko and New York Band Elephant's
Memory, the resulting Some Time In New York City album was both
a critical and commercial disaster. Under surveillance of the FBI, the
threat of deportation, the failure to conceive a healthy child and the
continuing heart-ache over the search for Yoko's daughter Kyoko, John &
Yoko reportedly descended back into heroin addiction. One visitor to Bank
Street recalled finding John sat with a typewriter tapping "I love sucking
on Yoko's pussy" over and over, yet the pressures were about to test their
relationship as never before. On the night of the
Republican President Richard Nixon's re-election at the close of 1972,
John felt hopeless enough to engage in a one-off sexual encounter with
a woman at a friends party, the noise of which could be heard by the guests
in the adjoining room - including Yoko. Although the full consequences
of the election night folly were not immediately apparent, it would prove
to be a very significant factor in their eventual decision to embark on
a trial separation.
1973
The Dakota
1 West 72nd Street, New York
City
Perhaps, at least in part, a bid to re-focus their relationship and
start afresh, John & Yoko decided to move to a new home. Built in 1888,
the Dakota was New York’s first luxury apartment building and had become
known as the first block of flats in the city to incorporate a lift into
its building. Residents over the years have included Boris Karlov, Leonard
Bernstein, Rudolf Nureyev, Paul Simon and Lauren Becall. The Dakota was
also the location for the Polanski Horror classic, “Rosemary’s baby”. Initially
renting apartment 72 from the actor Robert Ryan (since the death of his
wife, Ryan had not felt comfortable in the flat), John and Yoko lived here
from May/June 1973 having got the keys to the property about a month prior.
On 18th September 1973 John moved out, Yoko stayed.
1973-75
Various Homes
Los Angeles* & New York
City
This was the 18 month period that John himself later dubbed as his
“lost weekend” during which, at Yoko's suggestion,
May Pang (one of the Lennon's team of assistants) would look after John
to the point of being his companion in all senses of the word. John decided
to go to Los Angeles and upon arrival, checked into the
Beverly Hills Hotel under the name of Mr.
Corey. Next John & May stayed at Lou Adler's mansion, 622
Stone Canyon Road, Bel Air. As the largely drunken sessions for
a Rock 'N' Roll covers album stumbled to an unsatisfactory close, John
sent a postcard to Derek Taylor in December 1973 which read:- "I'm
in Lost Arseholes for no real reason . . . Yoko and me are in hell, but
I'm gonna change it... probably this very day. Anyway, I'm still famous.
He who laffs last is often hard of hearing.".
On 18th February 1974, John and May Pang visited
the Dakota to help celebrate Yoko's 41st birthday, returning to LA two
days later. On 22nd March 1974, following some embarrassing press
coverage over a drunken incident at a club, they
then took up residence at the home of the record executive Harold Seiders,
a beach house at 625 Pacific Coast Highway,
Santa Monica which had been built in the 1930's
by M.G.M. Studio's mogul Louis B. Mayer. It was later occupied by actor
Peter Lawford and his wife Patricia Kennedy, sister of John (then President)
and Robert - JF Kennedy had spent time with Marilyn Monroe here. Regular
guests of John and May at this property included Ringo, Keith Moon,
Harry Nilsson and Klaus Voorman, many other pop stars of the day also dropped
by including Paul and Linda McCartney.
On April 27th, John and May decided to return to New York taking up
temporary residence at the luxurious Pierre Hotel
on Fifth Avenue before moving into a small apartment at Eddie
Germano's two-storey building on East 52nd Street on 16th July 1974
where they were again visited by the McCartneys. 1974 was also the year
John was reunited with his son (having not seen him in 3 years).
In November 1974 John was back at the top of the US charts (both album
and single making #1) but the underlying misery and hopelessness expressed
in many of the lyrics on the otherwise commercially minded "Walls and Bridges"
LP made it clear that John was desperately missing Yoko. The reconciliation
process began with a back stage meeting at Madison Square Garden where
John was making a guest spot appearance at Elton John's Thanksgiving concert.
*John and Yoko stayed at The Chateau Marmont, 8221, Sunset Blvd, West Hollywood at some point. And John (probably with either Yoko or May) also stayed at 8818 Thrasher Avenue, Los Angeles.
1975-80
Returned to - The Dakota
1 West 72nd Street, New York
City
Picture from NY
Beatlefest 2003
Although May Pang claims that Yoko somehow had John tricked, hypnotized
and brainwashed into returning to the Dakota on 31st January 1975, the
interviews he gave following the announcement of the failed separation
clearly give the impression of a man who had his life firmly back on track.
On John’s 35th birthday Yoko finally gave birth to their first child, Sean
Taro Lennon, at the New York Hospital but the joy quickly turned to anxiety
as doctors insisted on carrying out highly dangerous and questionable tests
on the child which eventually led to John and Yoko taking Sean and discharging
themselves.
No longer under contract to produce any further product for EMI and now fully aware of his shortcomings as a father to his elder son Julian, John slowly withdrew from public life to become a househusband (long before the role of full-time Daddy was considered to be anything but a necessity in exceptional circumstances), a 1976 recording session for a song he had written for Ringo proved to be Lennon's last studio work for 4 years. With the threat of deportation finally lifted in the form of a "Green Card", John was able to travel beyond American borders for the first time since 1971, trips abroad included family holidays in Japan (where, in 1977, he made a rare public appearance in the form of a press conference) and sole sojourns to such places as Hong Kong and South Africa. John continued to write and he recorded numerous home demo's, one of which included a chilling passage with John declaring "I'm bleeding now, I'm bleeding now, stop the bleeding now, stop the bleeding now, oozing out, dripping down tables, silent shout".
John and Yoko bought a number of holiday homes as well as farm land during the late 1970's into 1980, details of these need to be added.
In 1980, John was inspired to make a comeback and in the summer recorded
the Double Fantasy album with Yoko in what was evidently a refocusing
of their love for eachother following another testing period, but tragically
their Dakota home was to be the scene of Lennon's terrible and shocking
murder near the guard stand outside The Dakota’s 72nd Street entrance at
10:52pm on Monday 8th December 1980, John was shot five times from behind
at point blank range by a deranged fame seeker. After bleeding to death,
John Lennon was officially pronounced dead at 11:07pm at the St.Luke‘s
Roosevelt Hospital on West 59th Street.
On March 21st 1984 Yoko, flanked by both Sean and Julian, officially
opened New York's version of "Strawberry Fields", a teardrop shaped memorial
garden dedicated to John in Central Park which now serves as a focal point
for fans wishing to reflect on the life of the world's most celebrated
Rock star. Yoko and Sean still live in the Dakota whilst offices on the
ground floor administer the Lennon estate.
Part One - Liverpool
Click
here
Part Two - London
Click
here
Source material for this article includes books listed in the Library
Thanks to Bob for providing the LA addresses.
Last update to this page - June 2008