Yahoo – AFP,
Carlos BATISTA, March 23, 2017
Havana (AFP) - While their American and European peers twisted and shouted to The Beatles in the 1960s, in Cuba childhood sweethearts Gisela and Hector kept their Beatlemania a naughty secret.
![]() |
| A woman puts glasses on a statue of John Lennon, in a park in Havana, on March 11, 2017 (AFP Photo/YAMIL LAGE) |
Havana (AFP) - While their American and European peers twisted and shouted to The Beatles in the 1960s, in Cuba childhood sweethearts Gisela and Hector kept their Beatlemania a naughty secret.
Now, still
Beatles-crazy after all these years, but with the communist island's Cold
War-era censorship of rock music a thing of the past, they are making up for
lost time.
"We
are very happy that Cuba is becoming reconciled to the Beatles," says
Gisela, 64.
She and
Hector, 65, have decorated their home with pictures, posters and souvenirs
dedicated to the British band.
Whenever
they can, they join crowds of fellow Cubans in their 60s and 70s, singing and
dancing at the Yellow Submarine bar -- El Submarino Amarillo -- in downtown
Havana.
"This
is not nostalgia," says the artistic director of the club, journalist
Guillermo Vilar, 65.
"This
is about them claiming their right to experience what they could not experience
before because of all the contradictions of the time."
![]() |
A fan of
The Beatles shows John Lennon's driver's license at his home in
Havana, on
March 12, 2017 (AFP Photo/YAMIL LAGE)
|
You Can't
Do That
Fidel
Castro's revolutionary regime banned songs in English, the language of its
enemy the United States, for fear such music would spawn ideological deviance.
Gisela
Moreno and Hector Ruiz would listen to The Beatles on US radio stations they
captured on short-wave radios.
Records
lent by the occasional returning traveler were copied in state recording
studios, with the complicity of staff, onto low-quality metal discs.
"You
put it on the record players we had back then and you just heard noise with the
music in the background," Ruiz recalls.
"It
was terrible, but hey, at least it was The Beatles."
At their
high school, skinny-leg trousers, miniskirts and long hair were also banned.
But times
have changed. The Yellow Submarine, opened in 2011, is one of at least six
Beatles tribute bars across the island -- all of them run by the culture
ministry.
One of
them, in the eastern city of Holguin, is said to be an initiative of ruling
party leader Miguel Diaz-Canel -- widely touted as the country's possible next
president.
![]() |
A man with
his sons sit next to a statue of John Lennon in a park in Havana,
on March 11,
2017 (AFP Photo/YAMIL LAGE)
|
I Should
Have Known Better
On a bench
near the Yellow Submarine sits a bronze statue of late Beatle John Lennon.
Fidel
Castro himself inaugurated the statue in 2000. In footage of the ceremony, the
late leader can be heard bewailing the former censorship of Beatles songs.
"I
greatly regret not having met you sooner," Castro told the statue.
The
censorship was not his idea, Castro went on: he delegated cultural policy to
underlings while he was busy leading Cuba through the Cold War.
Fidel
Castro's death last November marked the end of an era in Cuba. His brother
Raul, in charge now for more than a decade, has been gradually opening up the
economy and foreign relations.
The bronze
Lennon has become an attraction for locals and the growing number of foreign
tourists visiting the island.
The
statue's spectacles have been stolen several times and a guard has been
appointed to take care of them, getting them out for passers-by when they want
to take photos.
![]() |
A man with
his dog walks next to The Beatles bar in Varadero, Matanza,
on March 17, 2017
(AFP Photo/YAMIL LAGE)
|
From Me
To You
Fans trace
the rise of Beatlemania in Cuba to 1990, when Vilar organized a tribute concert
to mark the 10th anniversary of Lennon's murder.
For many
Cubans, that marked the belated birth of rock on the island -- for the old
generation and the new.
At the
Yellow Submarine, gentlemen's bellies bulge under black Beatles t-shirts and
grey ponytails, while the ladies show off their miniskirts and long boots.
On stage,
Cuba's top Beatles tribute singer Eddy Escobar, 46, plays the band's hits for
scores of ageing revelers.
This
ponytailed rocker was not yet born when The Beatles lit up the counter-culture
movement before they broke up in 1970.
But he
discovered the music, like younger Cubans are doing now.
"Good
music will always last as long there is someone who somehow appreciates it,
right?" says Escobar.
"The
Beatles are here to stay," he says. "I give the bug to anyone I
can."




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