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Carol Cuffe at Beatles concert
Carol Cuffe (centre): 'The next day at school, my teachers weren’t impressed: this photograph was on page 5 of the Daily Mirror, with the headline: “Hands, knees and – yeah, yeah, yeah!”' Photograph: Reg Lewis/Mirrorpix
Carol Cuffe (centre): 'The next day at school, my teachers weren’t impressed: this photograph was on page 5 of the Daily Mirror, with the headline: “Hands, knees and – yeah, yeah, yeah!”' Photograph: Reg Lewis/Mirrorpix

That’s me in the picture: Carol Cuffe at a Beatles concert in Plymouth, 13 November 1963

This article is more than 8 years old
‘Brenda had hand-embroidered “The Beatles” on the back of her brown woolly jumper. I was wearing my best outfit’

I was really into the whole Liverpool scene – Gerry and the Pacemakers, the Merseybeats – but the Beatles were something else. They were fantastic. So when I heard they were coming to Plymouth, my home town, I knew I had to see them. One Friday in October 1963, I caught a bus into town after school, made my way to the ABC cinema with my sleeping bag, and sat down on the pavement. At 4.15pm, I was first in the queue for tickets that were going on sale the following day. After a while, a couple of blokes arrived and were annoyed that I was there first. Later, my dad turned up with a flask of soup and some sandwiches. The next morning I got three front-row tickets – for me, my friend Janet and for my younger sister, Brenda.

Before the concert, Brenda had hand-embroidered “The Beatles” on the back of her brown woolly jumper. I was wearing my best outfit – a denim pinafore with a black polo neck sweater. Everyone wore black polo necks then, like the Beatles. I was 16, and Brenda was 12.

The concert, on Wednesday 13 November, was at the ABC. The cinema screen was rolled up, the 50s gold curtains pulled back, and the Beatles ran on. I screamed and screamed, as did everyone else. You were so thrilled to see these people, so familiar from TV and photographs, right in front of you that you took a deep breath, screamed and didn’t stop. It was a wall of noise. There were no amps back then, so the sound from their small speakers probably only reached row 12. I think I remember hearing them above the din.

The four of them were very smart. They arrived on time, and there was no security. It was so civilised. There was a big gap between the front row and the stage, and it never once occurred to us to invade that space. You didn’t do things like that. After an hour, they bowed and walked off. There was a second show later that evening when they did the whole thing again.

Instead of going straight home, my sister and I hung around outside. We were hoping to catch a glimpse of them after the second performance. There must have been 1,000 people outside the cinema, and I had to keep a tight hold of Brenda’s hand. By the time we realised they’d left, we’d missed the last bus home. We had no money for a taxi so we started walking the eight miles back. After about an hour – it was now around 1am – I saw our father’s car coming towards us. He was livid, and worried. I think he was most upset that I’d kept my sister out so late. I was grounded for a month.

The next day at school, Stoke Damerel High, my teachers weren’t impressed: this photograph was on page 5 of the Daily Mirror, with the headline: “Hands, knees and – yeah, yeah, yeah!” I’d lost my voice, too. Most people’s parents got the Mirror, so they all knew I was at the concert.

I never saw the Beatles again. When I look back at this photo I think, is that really me, and did I really scream through their whole performance? I was so lucky: it was just before they became superstars; in 1963, we were all young innocents together.

Interview by Hannah Booth.

Are you in a famous photograph? Email thatsme@theguardian.com

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