The Beatles Dentist
A lot has been said, and claimed, about the Beatles and
their LSD use back in the sixties. Certainly John Lennon opened a can of worms
in 1980 when he claimed in a Playboy interview that “We must always remember to
thank the CIA and the Army for LSD. That's what people forget. Everything is
the opposite of what it is, isn't it, Harry? So get out the bottle, boy -- and
relax. They invented LSD to control people and what they did was give us freedom”.
Add to that the inclusion on the Sgt. Pepper sleeve of
well-known LSD advocate Aldous Huxley and the Beatles connections to the likes
of Ginsberg, Leary and Burroughs and it is a conspiracy theorists wet dream. Most
revolve around the theme that it was all a plan by the CIA and the Tavistock
Institute to control youth culture and the Beatles were their patsies.
Certainly the CIA funded MK Ultra project demonstrates
governmental interest in such schemes, however, whether the Beatles were
involved, knowingly or not is a matter of conjecture. The purpose of this
article is to revisit John and George’s first experience with LSD and to
consider the possibility that they were being manipulated right from the off.
The episode took place in April 1965 in Bayswater, London at
the home of Dr John Riley, or, as he was known in the Beatles Anthology the
‘wicked dentist’. It had been an inconsequential evening of socialising shared
by George, John and their wives Cynthia Lennon and Patti Boyd and George's
dentist, who had just drifted over their social horizon. Then the five,
accompanied by the dentist's wife, adjourned from the small dining room to the
lounge, where the dentist slipped LSD - a substance then as little known to the
Beatles as to most in Britain - into their coffees.
Riley’s wife was a Canadian woman living in London called
Cindy Bury who was the bunny mother at a Playboy club. It has been claimed that
Riley was sufficiently immersed within the Beatles sphere that he was in the
Bahamas with them during the filming of ‘Help’.
Riley, the son of a Metropolitan police officer, it seems,
was a south Londoner destined for life as an NHS dentist in north London, until
heading to the Northwestern University dental school in the US and returning as
one of Harley Street's few cosmetic dentists.
As an aside, Riley would later supply the false teeth used
in the Roman Polanski movie, the Fearless Vampire Killers.
His LSD supply was manufactured at a farmhouse in Wales.
This fact is interesting because back in the sixties and seventies the West
Wales village of Llanddewi Brefi became a secluded hang-out for some of the
world’s biggest rock stars – thanks largely to an underground cottage industry
making millions of pounds’ worth of mind-bending LSD. It has been claimed that
those involved were said to have been responsible for 90% of the LSD produced
in Britain and 60% worldwide.
David Litvinoff, a sixties gangster who was an associate of
the Krays and who worked as an advisor on Donald Cammell’s 1968 film
Performance, was a local resident. It is pretty certain that Bob Dylan stayed
at Litvinoff’s house for six weeks during the summer of 1969, just after he’d
been at the Isle of Wight pop festival. Keith Richards from the Rolling Stones has
admitted that he’d been to Llanddewi Brefi too and that whilst staying there
he’d used “every illegal drug in existence and some which weren’t in
existence!”
Clearly any link between Litvinoff and Riley is purely
circumstantial, however, it does make one wonder if this was part of an
established plan to lure the Beatles into the LSD sphere?
Therein lies the story of the Beatles first experience of
LSD, their second, lest one forget, took place in California, according to John
Lennon at “Doris Day’s House” otherwise known as the Tate/Polanski residence!
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ReplyDeleteGreat post as always, Beacon. It's also interesting that in the song "Help!" John says he's "changed his mind" (altered his mind with drugs?) and that he's "opened up the doors". Perhaps a reference to Huxley and Blake Williams' "Doors of perception".
ReplyDeleteIf those were drug references, it was most likely referring to marijuana (as legend has it they hadn't tried LSD yet), but interesting none the less, as Huxley wrote his famous book while under the influence of mescaline (according to legend).
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