Thereâs something in the way he chews!
A piece of toast allegedly eaten, then discarded by George Harrison in the early 1960s has reportedly been acquired by a memorabilia dealer, The Daily Express reports.
Joseph OâDonnell, whose website calls him a âpassionate collector of Beatles and music memorabilia,â reportedly paid an undisclosed sum for the bread, which has been kept for the last few decades in a scrapbook and was previously auctioned off in 1991.
âItâs a brilliant story that is both bizarre, historical and a story Iâll continue telling friends, memorabilia collectors and fellow Beatles fans,â OâDonnell told the Daily Express.
The lore goes that a 15-year-old Beatles fan named Sue Houghton was visiting the Harrison family home when she pocketed a piece of crust that the star had left behind on his plate. She then put it in a scrapbook with the caption, âPiece of Georgeâs breakfast. 2-8-63.â
The outlet reports the date in Houghtonâs scrapbook as significant, as the Beatles played their final show at Liverpoolâs Cavern Club, where they got their start, the very next day.
The Los Angeles Times reported in 1991 that the toast, as well as a love letter John Lennon wrote to his ex-wife Cynthia, fetched $94,800 at an auction in Christieâs in London.
Still, Harrison â who died in November 2001 â joked about the authenticity of the keepsake in a 1992 interview with VOX magazine, reportedly saying, âI ate all my toast! I never left any!â
A popular Harrison fan page on Instagram called the Harrison Archive quotes Houghton â a young fan who was a regular at the bandâs Cavern Club shows â in a 1995 interview with Yeah! magazine, saying she âconcentrated on collecting parts of [the Beatlesâ] everyday life that would only mean something to me, things so minor that they would never miss them.â
In that same interview, Houghton reportedly said that Harrisonâs mother Louise invited her inside their home because she was a Beatles fan, and quotes her from Mark Lewisohnâs 2013 book The Beatles â All These Years â Extended Special Edition saying Louise also let her rummage around in Harrisonâs room whenever she went over to the house.
The page also shared a photo of a letter Harrison allegedly wrote Houghton, in which he thanked her for giving his mom flowers and chocolate. It also included instructions on washing his car, which Hougton later told Yeah! magazine was a joke, as sheâd asked Louise if she could clean his car.
Beatle memorabilia continue to be hot-ticket items. In May, a 12-string guitar that Lennon played during the recording of Help! in 1964 sold for $2.85 million at auction. The instrument had been lost for 50 years before it was discovered, abandoned, in the attic of a home in the British countryside.
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