1. Headline
  1. Headline
Image: The Beatles
Reuters
This undated handout photo shows members of The Beatles walking and singing as they are filmed during a promotional video for their song "Rain."
By
updated 10/4/2012 4:16:45 PM ET 2012-10-04T20:16:45

The heyday of Beatlemania may have been nearly 50 years ago, but the Beatles and their music remain loved, scrutinized and relevant to an adoring public forever clamoring for more details of the Fab Four.

A new book, "LIFE With the Beatles," gives an inside peek at the band that split up in 1970. It features hundreds of never-before-seen and rare photos by the late Robert Whitaker, who was granted generous access to John, Paul, George and Ringo from 1964 to 1966.

Whitaker, who died last year at 71, was hired by the group's then-manager, Brian Epstein, and documented candid and personal moments from concerts to cover shoots. Editors of Life magazine compiled the photos into the book recently released by Time Home Entertainment Inc.

  1. More in books
    1. Harlan Coben returns with ‘Six Years’
    2. ‘I Would Die 4 U’: How Prince became an icon
    3. ‘Until I Say Good-Bye’: Living for love in the face of ALS
    4. Letters from the life of George H.W. Bush
    5. Mom turns sleeping baby into fairy-tale star

Whitaker's images end when the band stopped touring in the summer of 1966, but for the preceding two years he captured the Beatles in moments of happiness and humor, mischief and creativity, boredom and fatigue.

Beatles get scrambled in 'Abbey Road' cover made of breakfast food

"We've used many of Bob's seldom or never-seen-before photographs," said Barbara Baker Burrows, director of photography for Life Books in New York. "He tried hard to catalog his work, and on a couple of trips to England I was able to encourage him to dig deeper into his files than he had done before."

Whitaker's access to the band came after he gained Epstein's trust when the Beatles performed in Australia. Though born in Hertfordshire, Whitaker had moved to Australia and was already a photographer when the Beatles invaded the Southern Hemisphere.

Image: An undated handout photo shows The Beatles in a formal studio setting
Reuters
This undated handout photo shows The Beatles in a formal studio setting.

The young photographer initially turned down Epstein when offered a job, but he reconsidered after seeing the group perform.

The close access he was to enjoy for those two years is what makes the photographs unique, said Burrows.

Video: TODAY re-creates legendary ‘Abbey Road’ photo (on this page)

"Bob's time with the Beatles was in an era quite unlike today when a photographer is lucky to get a few minutes with a subject," she said. "He also had what Life photographers had — the trust of his subjects, and their respect."

Whitaker was thrilled by the prospect of the 300-page book's publication, Burrows added, and he often said it was what kept him alive.

  1. Stories from
    1. The Voice's Final Competition: Country Takes on Indie Rock
    2. Kim Kardashian Is Close to Choosing Baby Name
    3. Katy Perry: Why I Dye My Hair Black - and What I'm Insecure About
    4. Melissa Etheridge Says Angelina Jolie's Double Mastectomy Decision Was 'Fearful Choice'
    5. Demi Lovato Doesn't Need to Be Awake to Get a Manicure

Beatles fan pays more than $485,000 for George Harrison's Aston Martin

"Although he didn't live to see the finished publication, I think that he would be pleased," she said.

Though his time with the Beatles was likely a career highlight, Burrows said, Whitaker photographed Epstein himself and his other acts including Gerry and the Pacemakers and Cilla Black.

After the Beatles disbanded, Whitaker, who first picked up a camera as a child, had a successful run documenting the art world, photographing Salvador Dali and other luminaries.

Story: Early Beatles letter seeking drummer sells for $55,000

But those other career doors were likely opened by the Beatles, a group that remains relevant to music and popular culture today.

"They mirrored the times, and helped create the times," said Robert Sullivan, managing editor of Life Books. "Whether you think that was a service or a disservice to society, it was an extraordinary achievement, especially for what was, at bottom and in the beginning, a pretty gritty rock and roll band."

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Video: TODAY re-creates legendary ‘Abbey Road’ photo

Discuss:

Discussion comments

,

Most active discussions

  1. votes comments
  2. votes comments
  3. votes comments
  4. votes comments

More on TODAY.com

None
  1. AP, Getty images

    Miss Utah joins famous flubs hall of fame: 8 top gaffes

    6/17/2013 8:48:54 PM +00:00 2013-06-17T20:48:54
None
  1. Obama, Putin at G-8: We both want Syria strife to end

    Syria’s raging civil war was set to top the agenda at the two-day Group of Eight summit of world leaders in Northern Ireland starting Monday.

    6/17/2013 9:24:12 PM +00:00 2013-06-17T21:24:12
None
  1. George Pimentel / Getty Images

    slideshow Taylor Swift, Ed Helms and more celebrity sightings

    6/17/2013 5:52:34 PM +00:00 2013-06-17T17:52:34
None
  1. From brownies to chips, try tasty non-GMO treats

    6/17/2013 5:11:32 PM +00:00 2013-06-17T17:11:32
None
  1. Monks gone wild: Buddhists warned over flashy gear

    6/17/2013 10:28:14 PM +00:00 2013-06-17T22:28:14
None
  1. Getty Images stock

    Are you sleep deprived? Take our survey

    6/17/2013 6:45:51 PM +00:00 2013-06-17T18:45:51