Despite having no musical ability,
81-year-old Vince Calandra got to be a member of The Beatles – at least for a
day.
It was February 8, 1964, and The
Beatles were set to make their American television debut.
“Neil Aspinall, their road manager,
was standing in for George Harrison who had a 102 degree fever,” Calandra said.
“Brian Epstein, their manager, comes over and starts to whisper in his ear.”
Calandra was no musician but they
handed him George Harrison’s guitar and had him stand in for Harrison on the
set.
“I am left handed. I have never held
a guitar in my hand,” said Calandra, a Pierce College student for two years. “They tell me, ‘This is George Harrison’s
favorite guitar so make sure you do not drop it.’
“As rehearsal began, Calandra was
unknowingly holding an important piece of Beatles memorabilia.
“I stood there with George
Harrison’s guitar, worth about a million dollars now,” Calandra said.
Calandra grew up in Brooklyn. In
high school he was an all-city baseball player. He was offered scholarships to
six colleges and decided to attend St. John’s College.
He was drafted by the New York
Giants, but couldn’t play for them because he had to join the army for two
years of compulsory military training.
After his military service, the G.I.
Bill covered his tuition and he began taking classes in television production.
“This was in the 1950s when jobs in
television really started to happen,” Calandra said. “One day you could be a
stage manager and another day you could be a director, so I was having a good
time.”
Calandra’s career began when he
acquired a position in the CBS mailroom. One of the places he delivered mail to
was the Ed Sullivan office.
“They asked me if I would be
interested in working on the weekends on the Ed Sullivan Show,” Calandra said.
“I said yes and I started as a cue-card guy. I did that for about a year and a
half, working full-time at CBS and weekends on the Ed Sullivan Show.”
He picked up odd jobs on other shows
before he got a job editing promos for CBS. Calandra got married in 1960 and in
the same year, became the production assistant on the Ed Sullivan Show.
“The Beatles were very professional.
There was an air about them,” Calandra recalled about their appearances on the
show. “The stagehands would bring their kids around and Paul McCartney and
Ringo Starr would take pictures with the kids.”
The studio was packed with people
and Calandra had to help get in some famous people.
“I was sneaking people in through
the men’s restroom, like Walter Cronkite’s daughter and Leonard Bernstein,”
Calandra said.
Not only was the studio packed, but
the streets were packed with people and the band required a police escort.
“The Beatles came down Broadway in
limos, with at least 20 police escorts on motorcycles. They looked like the
Charge of the Light Brigade,” Calandra said.
After the show, he said, Ringo Starr
flirted with Calandra’s wife.
“Ringo Starr took a real liking to
my wife. They danced at a party we had in Miami,” Calandra said.
But one of his favorite memories, he
said, involved John Lennon and another act on the show that night.
“John Lennon loved Coca-Cola. Next
to the vending machine was the comedy duo Mitzi McCall and Charlie Brill.
Lennon knocked on their door to ask for some change for the machine. They gave
him some change to get him out of the room,” Calandra said.
“Lennon came back and asked if he could sketch
them. Lennon finished the sketch and signed it. After Lennon left, they threw
away the sketches.”
The Ed Sullivan Show was not the
only time he spent with The Beatles.
“I also worked with the Beatles when
they played at Shea Stadium. Paul took a scorecard from the Mets game and wrote
the set-list on the back of it,” Calandra said.
Calandra was “the go-to guy” when it
came to the Beatles. If the Beatles were in New York or in Miami, Brian
Epstein, the Beatles manager, knew to call him. Even today, Calandra is “the
go-to guy” for authors writing about the Beatles.
“I can talk for more than two hours,
uninterrupted, just about my relationship with the Beatles,” Calandra said.
“Basically, myself and my boss, the producer of the show, are really the only
two guys alive that were there for all the Beatles’ appearances. People can
write books, but the story is that there are 7 billion people on the face of
this earth and I’m the only one who was actually on stage with them.”
Calandra was also part of another
famous rock ‘n’ roll moment in history.
“I was the one that had to tell Mick
Jagger not to sing the lyric of ‘Let’s spend the night together’ and to instead
change it to ‘Let’s spend some time together’ before they performed on The Ed
Sullivan Show,” Calandra said.
Calandra has worked in the industry
for 57 years. He has been told by many that he was born for this job because of
his personality and temperament. His great work ethic and his ability to listen
well attracted many celebrities to him, he said.
Calandra went from holding cue cards
for Elvis, to hanging out with Roger Moore, star of the 007 movies.
“Moore, the famous James Bond, did
the dishes at my house. He was the only person my wife allowed to smoke a cigar
in the house,” Calandra said.
One of Calandra’s favorite memories
is of how Moore came to have dinner in his house.
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