Whether it was in music, morality, ethos, or national identity, John Lennon spent all four short decades of his life proving that if people were going to keep putting up rules and safeguards around him, he was just going to keep dismantling them by doing exactly what he wanted to do. On April 2, 1973, the former Beatle made it clear that he wasnโt afraid to enter the world of national diplomacy to prove his point, and neither was his wife.
Lennon and Yoko Ono held a press conference the day after April Foolโs (probably a good call) to announce the founding of their conceptual micronation, Nutopia. In the coupleโs statement about their new country, they wrote, โCitizenship of the country can be obtained by declaration of your awareness of NUTOPIA. NUTOPIA has no land, no boundaries, no passports, only people. NUTOPIA has no laws other than cosmic.โ
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As the two sole citizens of Nutopia, Lennon and Ono requested โdiplomatic immunity and recognition in the United Nations of our country and its people.โ This immunity bit was necessary, of course, because Lennon was in an immigration battle with the United States.
Nutopia Had a New York City Embassy and a Memorable Flag
John Lennon waved a white handkerchief at the press conference he held with Yoko Ono, signifying that the small white cloth was Nutopiaโs flag. โWe surrender,โ Lennon said, โto peace and to love.โ Lennon then blew his nose with the handkerchief. The embassy for Nutopia was located at the same mailing address as the coupleโs headquarters for his ongoing immigration case with the United States. Eventually, the โembassyโ moved to the pairโs apartment in the Dakota building.
Lennon won his immigration case, and his deportation order was revoked in 1975, after which Nutopia was even less necessary than it ever was. Yet, the โnationโ lived on in a gilded plaque that read โNUTOPIA EMBASSYโ and hung over Lennon and Onoโs kitchen doorway.
John Lennon First Tried to Establish an Island Country Near Greece
Amazingly, Nutopia was not John Lennonโs first foray into establishing countries. He embarked on a similarโthough, admittedly, less fleshed outโjourney with former bandmates George Harrison and Paul McCartney while vacationing off the coast of Greece. The musicians set out to purchase the island of Aegoes and five unnamed islands surrounding it, with the intent of establishing a sunny utopia right there in the Mediterranean Sea. By the time they secured the funding, the ideaโs allure had worn off like the LSD they were taking when they first thought to buy it.
โItโs a good job we didnโt do it,โ McCartney later told Barry Miles in Many Years From Now. โAnyone who tried those ideas realized eventually there would be arguments, there would always be who has to do the washing-up, and whose turn is it to clean out the latrines. I donโt think any of us were thinking of that.โ
That probably wasnโt on the agenda at the first Nutopia meeting, either.
Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images
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30th January 1969: British rock group the Beatles performing their last live public concert on the rooftop of the Apple Organization building for director Michael Lindsey-Hogg's film documentary, 'Let It Be,' on Savile Row, London, England. Drummer Ringo Starr sits behind his kit. Singer/songwriters Paul McCartney and John Lennon perform at their microphones, and guitarist George Harrison (1943 – 2001) stands behind them. Lennon's wife Yoko Ono sits at right. (Photo by Express/Express/Getty Images)







