While former Beatles bassist Paul McCartney and drummer Ringo Starr have enjoyed lengthy careers well into the mid-2020s, six decades after they got their start together as half of the Fab Four, their bandmates have not been so lucky. John Lennon died by gun attack in 1980. George Harrison died of cancer in 2001. Their deaths were pivotal moments in global musical history, without a doubt.
But even more than that, their deaths marked significant and tragic milestones in the lives of their former friends and colleagues. That emotion remains years later, as proven by Ringo Starrโs tearful testimony about George Harrisonโs last words to him in the 2011 documentary, George Harrison: Living in the Material World, by Martin Scorsese.
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Ringo Starr Recalls George Harrisonโs Final Words
If one were to embark on the strange and macabre practice of comparing deaths, John Lennonโs was easily far swifter than George Harrisonโs. Better? Impossible to say. But quicker? Yes. Lennon died after Mark David Chapman shot him multiple times mere steps from the musicianโs front door of his apartment building, the Dakota, in New York City. He was pronounced dead by the time he got to the hospital. It was brutal and violent, but it was swift.
Harrisonโs death was far more protracted, slow, and arduous. The โMy Sweet Lordโ singer just barely survived a vicious knife attack by a man who broke into his home. The attacker stabbed him 40 times and punctured a lung before Harrisonโs wife incapacitated the burglar. Two years before the attack, Harrisonโs doctors diagnosed him with throat cancer. Those close to Harrison believed the attack might have caused his illness to come back after treatment. By 2001, he received a second cancer diagnosis, this time of the lungs. The summer of that year, Harrison was being treated for a brain tumor at a Swiss cancer clinic.
โI went to see him, and he was very ill,โ Ringo Starr recalled in the 2011 Harrison documentary. โHe could only lay down. While he was being ill and Iโd come to see him, I was going to Boston โcause my daughter had a brain tumor. I said, โWell, you know, Iโve got to go. Iโve got to go to Boston.โ He goesโitโs the last words I heard him say, actuallyโhe said, โDo you want me to come with you?โโ
Starr wiped tears from his eyes as he relived the painful memory, adding, โGod. So, you know, thatโs the incredible side of George.โ
A Touching Snapshot Of A Special Relationship
Although the Beatlesโ final years were often marred by interpersonal tension and clashing egos, not every member of the Fab Four had beef with everyone else. George Harrison and Ringo Starr stayed relatively close in the years that followed the Beatlesโ breakup. They both helped each other with their burgeoning solo projects. As the affable and quiet Beatles, respectively, itโs no wonder that Starr and Harrison would have found a way to maintain a relationship.
Even when the Fab Four was still together, Harrison seemed to go the extra mile for Starr. After a particularly contentious recording session for the โWhite Albumโ caused Starr to walk out and temporarily quit the band, the rest of the group sent Starr a telegram asking him to come back. When Starr acquiesced and arrived at the studio, he found that Harrison had decorated the entire room and Starrโs drum kit with fresh flowers. โThat was a beautiful moment for me,โ Starr said.
George Harrison died of cancer at 58 years old on November 29, 2001, just months after he last saw Starr.
Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic
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The Beatles at the press launch for their new album 'Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band', held at Brian Epstein's house at 24 Chapel Street, London, 19th May 1967. Left to right: George Harrison (1943 – 2001), Ringo Starr, John Lennon (1940 – 1980) and Paul McCartney. (Photo by John Downing/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)







