PLAYBOY: The word
is out: John Lennon and Yoko Ono are back in the studio,
recording again for the first time since 1975, when they vanished
from public view. Let's start with you, John. What have you been
doing?
LENNON: I've been baking bread and looking after the baby.
PLAYBOY: With what secret projects going on in the basement?
LENNON: That's like what everyone else who has asked me that
question over the last few years says. "But what else have
you been doing?" To which I say, "Are you
kidding?" Because bread and babies, as every housewife
knows, is a full-time job. After I made the loaves, I felt like I
had conquered something. But as I watched the bread being eaten,
I thought, Well, Jesus, don't I get a gold record or knighted or
nothing?
PLAYBOY: Why did you become a househusband?
LENNON: There were many reasons. I had been under obligation or
contract from the time I was 22 until well into my 30s. After all
those years, it was all I knew. I wasn't free. I was boxed in. My
contract was the physical manifestation of being in prison. It
was more important to face myself and face that reality than to
continue a life of rock 'n' roll -- and to go up and down with
the whims of either your own performance or the public's opinion
of you. Rock 'n' roll was not fun anymore. I chose not to take
the standard options in my business -- going to Vegas and singing
your great hits, if you're lucky, or going to hell, which is
where Elvis went.
ONO: John was like an artist who is very good at drawing circles.
He sticks to that and it becomes his label. He has a gallery to
promote that. And the next year, he will do triangles or
something. It doesn't reflect his life at all. When you continue
doing the same thing for ten years, you get a prize for having
done it.
LENNON: You get the big prize when you get cancer and you have
been drawing circles and triangles for ten years. I had become a
craftsman and I could have continued being a craftsman. I respect
craftsmen, but I am not interested in becoming one.
ONO: Just to prove that you can go on dishing out things.
PLAYBOY: You're talking about records, of course.
LENNON: Yeah, to churn them out because I was expected to, like
so many people who put out an album every six months because
they're supposed to.
PLAYBOY: Would you be referring to Paul McCartney?
LENNON: Not only Paul. But I had lost the initial freedom of the
artist by becoming enslaved to the image of what the artist is
supposed to do. A lot of artists kill themselves because of it,
whether it is through drink, like Dylan Thomas, or through
insanity, like Van Gogh, or through V.D., like Gauguin.
PLAYBOY: Most people would have continued to churn out the
product. How were you able to see a way out?
LENNON: Most people don't live with Yoko Ono.
PLAYBOY: Which means?
LENNON: Most people don't have a companion who will tell the
truth and refuse to live with a bullshit artist, which I am
pretty good at. I can bullshit myself and everybody around. Yoko:
That's my answer.
PLAYBOY: What did she do for you?
LENNON: She showed me the possibility of the alternative.
"You don't have to do this." "I don't? Really?
But--but--but--but--but...." Of course, it wasn't that
simple and it didn't sink in overnight. It took constant
reinforcement. Walking away is much harder than carrying on. I've
done both. On demand and on schedule, I had turned out records
from 1962 to 1975. Walking away seemed like what the guys go
through at 65, when suddenly they're supposed to not exist
anymore and they're sent out of the office [knocks on the desk
three times]: "Your life is over. Time for golf."
PLAYBOY: Yoko, how did you feel about John's becoming a
househusband?
ONO: When John and I would go out, people would come up and say,
"John, what are you doing?" but they never asked about
me, because, as a woman, I wasn't supposed to be doing anything.
LENNON: When I was cleaning the cat shit and feeding Sean, she
was sitting in rooms full of smoke with men in three-piece suits
that they couldn't button.
ONO: I handled the business: old business -- Apple, Maclen [the
Beatles' record company and publishing company, respectively] and
new investments.
LENNON: We had to face the business. It was either another case
of asking some daddy to come solve our business or having one of
us do it. Those lawyers were getting a quarter of a million
dollars a year to sit around a table and eat salmon at the Plaza.
Most of them didn't seem interested in solving the problems.
Every lawyer had a lawyer. Each Beatle had four or five people
working. So we felt we had to look after that side of the
business and get rid of it and deal with it before we could start
dealing with our own life. And the only one of us who has the
talent or the ability to deal with it on that level is Yoko.
PLAYBOY: Did you have experience handling business matters of
that proportion?
ONO: I learned. The law is not a mystery to me anymore.
Politicians are not a mystery to me. I'm not scared of all that
establishment anymore. At first, my own accountant and my own
lawyer could not deal with the fact that I was telling them what
to do.
LENNON: There was a bit of an attitude that this is John's wife,
but surely she can't really be representing him.
ONO: A lawyer would send a letter to the directors, but instead
of sending it to me, he would send it to John or send it to my
lawyer. You'd be surprised how much insult I took from them
initially. There was all this "But you don't know anything
about law; I can't talk to you." I said, "All right,
talk to me in the way I can understand it. I am a director,
too."
LENNON: They can't stand it. But they have to stand it, because
she is who represents us. [Chuckles] They're all male, you know,
just big and fat, vodka lunch, shouting males, like trained dogs,
trained to attack all the time. Recently, she made it possible
for us to earn a large sum of money that benefited all of them
and they fought and fought not to let her do it, because it was
her idea and she was a woman and she was not a professional. But
she did it, and then one of the guys said to her, "Well,
Lennon does it again." But Lennon didn't have anything to do
with it.
PLAYBOY: Why are you returning to the studio and public life?
LENNON: You breathe in and you breathe out. We feel like doing it
and we have something to say. Also, Yoko and I attempted a few
times to make music together, but that was a long time ago and
people still had the idea that the Beatles were some kind of
sacred thing that shouldn't step outside its circle. It was hard
for us to work together then. We think either people have
forgotten or they have grown up by now, so we can make a second
foray into that place where she and I are together, making music
-- simply that. It's not like I'm some wondrous, mystic prince
from the rock-'n'-roll world dabbling in strange music with this
exotic, Oriental dragon lady, which was the picture projected by
the press before.
PLAYBOY: Some people have accused you of playing to the media.
First you become a recluse, then you talk selectively to the
press because you have a new album coming out.
LENNON: That's ridiculous. People always said John and Yoko would
do anything for the publicity. In the Newsweek article [September
29, 1980], it says the reporter asked us, "Why did you go
underground?" Well, she never asked it that way and I didn't
go underground. I just stopped talking to the press. It got to be
pretty funny. I was calling myself Greta Hughes or Howard Garbo
through that period. But still the gossip items never stopped. We
never stopped being in the press, but there seemed to be more
written about us when we weren't talking to the press than when
we were.
PLAYBOY: How do you feel about all the negative press that's been
directed through the years at Yoko, your "dragon lady,"
as you put it?
LENNON: We are both sensitive people and we were hurt a lot by
it. I mean, we couldn't understand it. When you're in love, when
somebody says something like, "How can you be with that
woman?" you say, "What do you mean? I am with this
goddess of love, the fulfillment of my whole life. Why are you
saying this? Why do you want to throw a rock at her or punish me
for being in love with her?" Our love helped us survive it,
but some of it was pretty violent. There were a few times when we
nearly went under, but we managed to survive and here we are.
[Looks upward] Thank you, thank you, thank you.
PLAYBOY: But what about the charge that John Lennon is under
Yoko's spell, under her control?
LENNON: Well, that's rubbish, you know. Nobody controls me. I'm
uncontrollable. The only one who controls me is me, and that's
just barely possible.
PLAYBOY: Still, many people believe it.
LENNON: Listen, if somebody's gonna impress me, whether it be a
Maharishi or a Yoko Ono, there comes a point when the emperor has
no clothes. There comes a point when I will see. So for all you
folks out there who think that I'm having the wool pulled over my
eyes, well, that's an insult to me. Not that you think less of
Yoko, because that's your problem. What I think of her is what
counts! Because -- fuck you, brother and sister -- you don't know
what's happening. I'm not here for you. I'm here for me and her
and the baby!
ONO: Of course, it's a total insult to me----
LENNON: Well, you're always insulted, my dear wife. It's
natural----
ONO: Why should I bother to control anybody?
LENNON: She doesn't need me.
ONO: I have my own life, you know.
LENNON: She doesn't need a Beatle. Who needs a Beatle?
ONO: Do people think I'm that much of a con? John lasted two
months with the Maharishi. Two months. I must be the biggest con
in the world, because I've been with him 13 years.
LENNON: But people do say that.
PLAYBOY: That's our point. Why?
LENNON: They want to hold on to something they never had in the
first place. Anybody who claims to have some interest in me as an
individual artist or even as part of the Beatles has absolutely
misunderstood everything I ever said if they can't see why I'm
with Yoko. And if they can't see that, they don't see anything.
They're just jacking off to -- it could be anybody. Mick Jagger
or somebody else. Let them go jack off to Mick Jagger, OK? I
don't need it.
PLAYBOY: He'll appreciate that.
LENNON: I absolutely don't need it. Let them chase Wings. Just
forget about me. If that's what you want, go after Paul or Mick.
I ain't here for that. If that's not apparent in my past, I'm
saying it in black and green, next to all the tits and asses on
page 196. Go play with the other boys. Don't bother me. Go play
with the Rolling Wings.
PLAYBOY: Do you----
LENNON: No, wait a minute. Let's stay with this a second;
sometimes I can't let go of it. [He is on his feet, climbing up
the refrigerator] Nobody ever said anything about Paul's having a
spell on me or my having one on Paul! They never thought that was
abnormal in those days, two guys together, or four guys together!
Why didn't they ever say, "How come those guys don't split
up? I mean, what's going on backstage? What is this Paul and John
business? How can they be together so long?" We spent more
time together in the early days than John and Yoko: the four of
us sleeping in the same room, practically in the same bed, in the
same truck, living together night and day, eating, shitting and
pissing together! All right? Doing everything together! Nobody
said a damn thing about being under a spell. Maybe they said we
were under the spell of Brian Epstein or George Martin [the
Beatles' first manager and producer, respectively]. There's
always somebody who has to be doing something to you. You know,
they're congratulating the Stones on being together 112 years.
Whoooopee! At least Charlie and Bill still got their families. In
the Eighties, they'll be asking, "Why are those guys still
together? Can't they hack it on their own? Why do they have to be
surrounded by a gang? Is the little leader scared somebody's
gonna knife him in the back?" That's gonna be the question.
That's-a-gonna be the question! They're gonna look back at the
Beatles and the Stones and all those guys are relics. The days
when those bands were just all men will be on the newsreels, you
know. They will be showing pictures of the guy with lipstick
wriggling his ass and the four guys with the evil black make-up
on their eyes trying to look raunchy. That's gonna be the joke in
the future, not a couple singing together or living and working
together. It's all right when you're 16, 17, 18 to have male
companions and idols, OK? It's tribal and it's gang and it's
fine. But when it continues and you're still doing it when you're
40, that means you're still 16 in the head.
PLAYBOY: Let's start at the beginning. Tell us the story of how
the wondrous mystic prince and the exotic Oriental dragon lady
met.
LENNON: It was in 1966 in England. I'd been told about this
"event" -- this Japanese avant-garde artist coming from
America.
I was looking around the gallery and I saw this ladder and
climbed up and got a look in this spyglass on the top of the
ladder -- you feel like a fool -- and it just said, Yes. Now, at
the time, all the avant-garde was smash the piano with a hammer
and break the sculpture and anti-, anti-, anti-, anti-, anti. It
was all boring negative crap, you know. And just that Yes made me
stay in a gallery full of apples and nails. There was a sign that
said, Hammer A Nail In, so I said, "Can I hammer a nail
in?" But Yoko said no, because the show wasn't opening until
the next day. But the owner came up and whispered to her,
"Let him hammer a nail in. You know, he's a millionaire. He
might buy it." And so there was this little conference, and
finally she said, "OK, you can hammer a nail in for five
shillings." So smartass says, "Well, I'll give you an
imaginary five shillings and hammer an imaginary nail in."
And that's when we really met. That's when we locked eyes and she
got it and I got it and, as they say in all the interviews we do,
the rest is history.
PLAYBOY: What happened next?
LENNON: Of course, I was a Beatle, but things had begun to
change. In 1966, just before we met, I went to Almeria, Spain, to
make the movie "How I Won the War." It did me a lot of
good to get away. I was there six weeks. I wrote "Strawberry
Fields" Forever" there, by the way. It gave me time to
think on my own, away from the others. From then on, I was
looking for somewhere to go, but I didn't have the nerve to
really step out on the boat by myself and push it off. But when I
fell in love with Yoko, I knew, My God, this is different from
anything I've ever known. This is something other. This is more
than a hit record, more than gold, more than everything. It is
indescribable.
PLAYBOY: Were falling in love with Yoko and wanting to leave the
Beatles connected?
LENNON: As I said, I had already begun to want to leave, but when
I met Yoko is like when you meet your first woman. You leave the
guys at the bar. You don't go play football anymore. You don't go
play snooker or billiards. Maybe some guys do it on Friday night
or something, but once I found the woman, the boys became of no
interest whatsoever other than being old school friends.
"Those wedding bells are breaking up that old gang of
mine." We got married three years later, in 1969. That was
the end of the boys. And it just so happened that the boys were
well known and weren't just local guys at the bar. Everybody got
so upset over it. There was a lot of shit thrown at us. A lot of
hateful stuff.
ONO: Even now, I just read that Paul said, "I understand
that he wants to be with her, but why does he have to be with her
all the time?"
LENNON: Yoko, do you still have to carry that cross? That was
years ago.
ONO: No, no, no. He said it recently. I mean, what happened with
John is like, I sort of went to bed with this guy that I liked
and suddenly the next morning, I see these three in-laws,
standing there.
LENNON: I've always thought there was this underlying thing in
Paul's "Get Back." When we were in the studio recording
it, every time he sang the line "Get back to where you once
belonged," he'd look at Yoko.
PLAYBOY: Are you kidding?
LENNON: No. But maybe he'll say I'm paranoid.
[The next portion of the interview took place with Lennon alone.]
PLAYBOY: This may be the time to talk about those
"in-laws," as Yoko put it. John, you've been asked this
a thousand times, but why is it so unthinkable that the Beatles
might get back together to make some music?