Despite popular belief that Yoko Ono chased after John Lennon, it was John Lennon who begged Ono to take him back after his year-and-a-half-long drunken bender nicknamed โThe Lost Weekend.โ Lennon went on this alcohol-fueled binge following his and Onoโs first breakup in 1973, which was Onoโs idea.ย
Ono would be the one to decide when the pair reunited in early 1975, inviting Lennon to come back home after raising hell in California with the likes of Harry Nilsson, Keith Moon, and other colleagues. The former Beatle had also been having a short-lived affair with his assistant, May Pangโan extra-marital stint that was, once again (and shockingly so), Onoโs idea.
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Yoko Ono Was The First To Decide The Pair Needed A Break
Amidst John Lennon and Yoko Onoโs tumultuous legal battle of the early 1970s, during which both musicians faced deportation from the United States, the coupleโs relationship deteriorated. Fed up with their constant arguing, Ono kicked Lennon out of their home. Then, in what many would consider quite an unusual turn of events, Ono asked Lennonโs assistant, May Pang, to start seeing the ex-Beatle.
โ[Ono] did not realize it was going to turn into such a big love affair,โ Pang later recalled in the 2023 documentary The Lost Weekend: A Love Story (via People). โShe thought it would be two weeks, gone, goodbye.โ But perhaps to Onoโs credit, Lennon had far less romantic notions of his separation from his second wife. In a 1980 Playboy interview, Lennon described Onoโs decision differently: โShe kicked me out. I was on a raft alone in the middle of the universe.โ
โAt first, I thought, โWhoopee, whoopee!โ You know, bachelor life,โ Lennon continued. โWhoopee! And then I woke up one day, and I thought, โWhat is this? I want to go home! But she wouldnโt let me come home. Thatโs why it was 18 months apart instead of six months. We were talking all the time on the phone, and I would say, โI donโt like this. Iโm getting in trouble, and Iโd like to come home, please.โ And she would say, โYouโre not ready to come home.โ So, what do you say? Ok, back to the bottle.โ
Why Yoko Ono Decided To Take John Lennon Back 18 Months Later
In their 1980 Playboy interview, Ono described the ways in which the publicโs perception of herโa โdragon ladyโ who manipulated Lennon and stole him away from the Beatlesโaffected her psyche. As an artist who had been pursuing her career long before meeting Lennon, the vitriol affected her self-esteem both personally and professionally. Although interpersonal conflict was the final nail in the coffin with the coupleโs first split, there was a part of Ono that needed to regain her independence, too.
Months after Lennon and Pang had been dating, Pang recalled Ono reaching out to say, โIโm thinking of taking John back. I said, โWhat?โ And she said, โI think itโs time.โ As Ono told writer David Sheff, โIt slowly started to dawn on me that John was not the trouble at all. John was a fine person. It was society that had become too much. We laugh about it now, but we started dating again. I wanted to be sure. He was intelligent enough to know this was the only way that we could save our marriage, not because we didnโt love each other but because it was getting too much for me. Nothing would have changed if I had come back as Mrs. Lennon.โ
Following their reunion and 1975 vow renewal, the dynamics of John and Yokoโs relationship changed. Whereas Ono handled most business affairs, Lennon stayed home tending the house and baby. โWe learned that itโs better for the family if we are both working for the family, she doing the business and me playing mother and wife,โ Lennon told Sheff. โThe number one priority is her and the family. Everything else revolves around that.โ
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