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Rare footage of Beatles’ iconic visit to Japan in 1966 to be screened

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Rare footage of The Beatles’ 1966 visit to Japan recorded by police will be screened on Saturday after a legal battle for the release of the video documenting the legendary rock band’s iconic trip.

The footage of the band’s first visit to Japan will finally be seen, but with the faces of fans and police officers obscured, after a Nagoya-based nonprofit organization lost a lawsuit seeking the release of the uncensored footage.

Joho Kokai Shimin Center, the 35-minute and 40-second long, black-and-white silent footage will be shown at a citizen ombudsman’s conference in Tottori Prefecture, western Japan.

It includes the arrival of the band at Tokyo’s Haneda airport on June 29, 1966, with the members wearing traditional Japanese-style “happi” coats, as well as the reactions of fans.

Over three days from June 30, the band performed at the Nippon Budokan hall in the capital five times and the footage includes what appears to be the never-before-seen final performance.

The censored footage was recently released to the center, which says that although the faces of people other than The Beatles have been obscured and there is no sound, it provides an interesting record of the Showa Period (1926-1989).

 

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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