The
newspapers said, “Say what you doing in bed?”
I
said, “We’re only trying to get us some peace.”
--The
Ballad of John and Yoko
Somewhat
ironically, the extensive press coverage of John and Yoko’s “bed-in” at the
Amsterdam Hilton (in March, 1969 shortly after their wedding in Gibraltar) was
due in part to the misbelief that their well-advertised “happening event”
might, in fact, be an “artsy-fartsy orgy.” It wasn’t. Instead it was nothing
more than a clever commandeering of the spotlight that Lennon knew so well how
to use.
Four
years later, at 17:30 on Friday 20 January at Mt. Carmel Catholic Church in
Essex, MD another wedding took place. John and Yoko seemed not even to know,
and save the Essex Times, the American press corps otherwise ignored it.
Forty-three years later, to the day mind you, Debbie and I decided--actually
Debbie decided; I was clueless until I saw that we were in front of the
Hilton--that a proper way to celebrate would be a visit to the place that
remains as significant to the Fab Four’s fans and fans of John Lennon as most
others in Beatles’ folklore.
The
bus ride into Amsterdam (driving here is absolutely out of the question, which
is fodder for a different blog posting) was no different from countless others
except I didn’t know where we were going. When we got off at Emmastraat, the
only thought I had was that to my recollection I had never been on the street
in that part of town before. I was still clueless when we turned the corner and
remained so until I saw the marquee for the Amsterdam Hilton.
| Olaf |
“Holy
crap,” I said. “We’re gonna see Lennon’s room; aren’t we?” Debbie had visited
the week before--thus the prohibition on inquiries--and asked to arrange a
visit. The policy is simple. Anyone can see the room upon request, provided it
is not booked. (They average one request per day!) They told Debbie that the
chances of that were extremely small as it would be a Wednesday in January.
Guess what… When Debbie approached the front desk and made our request, the
clerk said, “I will see if the room is booked,” and he left. When he returned
he said, “It is.” Before Debbie could say anything in response, he said, “But,
they are not here yet, so I will ask my colleague to escort you.”
Now...I
admit that I have the emotional maturity of a 12-year old pre-menstrual girl.
Everything makes me well-up. Everything. My mother has been gone for 16 years,
but the mere mention of her name can make me lose my breath. Kids singing St.
Maarten songs at the front door, guaranteed. Staring for too long at photos of
my grandchildren. (I think Anna, the oldest, tries to work me up. “Are you
crying yet?” she’ll ask just before I assure her that I never cry.) For a hot
second when the guy at the front desk said that the room was booked, I was a
little disappointed (only because I am far too lazy to want to go home only to
return another day in hopes it would be available then), but when he motioned
toward the man standing behind us, I thought I would lose it right then and
there. Seriously, all the way to the room (as Olaf, our guide, asked us about
everything from why we are in Amsterdam to how we could look so young despite
claiming to be married 43 years) I could feel myself getting worked up.
As
we got closer and closer, I don’t think I even heard the conversation. He
unlocked the outer door and pushed it open allowing me to see the space inside.
The air seemed to suck out of the room. He probably wondered why I just stood
there. Finally he said, “You may go in.”
The
first time I stood in front of Johannes Vermeer’s A View of Delft it occurred
to me that I was standing precisely where the great Vincent van Gogh had stood
when he first saw the painting. I once stood in right field at Three Rivers
Stadium where Roberto Clemente became a legend. I have been in the living
quarters of Jefferson Davis, and I knew I was standing where Abraham Lincoln
had been in the waning days of the Civil War. I’ve stood at Rembrandt’s easel and Louis XIV’s throne, and every time I visit the Grote Kerk in Haarlem, I can
easily imagine Mozart as a child prodigy playing the massive organ. I once
stood on an empty stage at the Red Rocks Amphitheater in Denver where the
Beatles once performed, but last Wednesday my list increased in such a
surprising way I think I would have traded most of the other ones for this one
chance. Thank goodness I didn’t have to.
Replete
with one of Lennon’s guitars and two pieces of his original artwork, the room
is a shrine. Olaf told us all about the renovations done to the room, which now
features Lennon’s drawings etched on glass and printed on the linens and
draperies. The bed is the same although not original, in fact nothing is. (At
1700 euros per night, 47-year old design elements won’t work.)
The
whole experience is ineffable. I cannot, or I should say that until now I have
not been able to say what it meant to be there. As a Beatles fan the “bed-in”
is not more than the bully pulpit it was designed to be. Lennon was a master of
the message, and for those of us whose only question was “What flavor is the
kool-aid?” the event was not more than the goal. But...and it is a huge
however...being in that room--seeing his art, sitting on the edge of “his” bed,
knowing I was where he had been--was stunning.
***
Needless
to say, after we seated ourselves in the Hilton’s lounge, the conversation did
not include the 42 restaurants that paled in comparison to the night we were
living. We were greeted by a server who promised to come back when we had made
our selections, but when he did he brought with him two glasses of
champagne--compliments of Olaf.
Like
I said, stunning.

Very cool Jay! Hats off to Debbie for taking the chance it would be available to see! And also to Olaf... Happy anniversary...43...wow...in awe, really. Thanks for all the posts...often they make me ponder or reflect. Good stuff. Cathy (Jim's sister)
ReplyDeleteI love this. Simply love it.
ReplyDeleteMT