Paul McCartney Recalls How George Harrison's Dad Became a “Hero,” Compares Him to ...
Our childhood friends’ parents often play larger roles in our lives than we fully realize when we’re young, and a teenage Paul McCartney watching George Harrison’s dad was certainly no exception. Years before McCartney and Harrison would become a part of one of the biggest rock bands of the time, they were schoolmates and pals familiar with each other’s home lives.
When someone’s parent was acting, as the teens might say, lame, friends knew about it. When someone’s parent did something incredibly cool, friends knew about that, too. And one fateful day at the Liverpool Institute High School for Boys, George Harrison’s father became a “hero” in the eyes of their group of mates.
As the leather jacket-clad, pompadour-haired Quarrymen’s outward appearance might have suggested, Paul McCartney and George Harrison’s style and attitude often made them the target of canings by their teachers at the Liverpool Institute High School. During a television interview, McCartney described his school’s practice of caning students across their open palms. “We never really did anything wrong. But we might have, like, tight trousers and Ted hairdos. That pointed you out as somebody who’s a troublemaker.”
Source: americansongwriter.com/Melanie Davis