Paul McCartney & Ringo Starr by Tom Murray, Martha My Dear
This is one of the photographer’s favorite pictures from The Mad Day shoot. The longest-haired of the subjects was the subject of Paul’s well-know...
View full detailsThis is one of the photographer’s favorite pictures from The Mad Day shoot. The longest-haired of the subjects was the subject of Paul’s well-know...
View full detailsShot in impromptu scenes around London such as this, “The Mad Day” photographs are from the last publicity shoot of all four of the Beatles. They...
View full detailsWhen the group arrived by the banks of The Thames, Tom Murray recalls, “John dropped to the ground, pretending to be dead. The Beatles laughed. N...
View full details“The guys were in a great mood,” Tom Murray says. “It was a super shoot and great fun.” The following day, the band went into the studio to reco...
View full detailsThe intensity of the colors in shots like this one, photographed in St. Regents Park, stand in stark contrast to the iconic photos so familiar to f...
View full detailsAt London’s Old Street Underground station, The Beatles used a wooden plank as a ramp and climbed on top of a large concrete block that was in the ...
View full details“Bring along your camera. You might get some nice snaps.” With those words, spoken in the summer of 1968, a fellow photographer invited Tom Murra...
View full details“This was a lot of fun, they were just play acting the whole time,” says Tom. “It was a sequence of five shots and took about an hour.” Paul almos...
View full detailsFor Tom Murray, his role as a sideman on the “Mad Day” shoot was liberating. “I realized I had the unique opportunity to shoot what I wanted and w...
View full details“Paul and I had a little game going on,” Tom Murray remembers. “He would check to see if I was watching him and then pull some silly face or make ...
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