This episode is Part Two of our 12-part series, Beneath the Surface: The Beatles in 1966, a year-long, month-by-month look at the band’s most transformational year. February 1966 continues the strange calm at the start of the year. There are no riots. No screaming headlines. No dramatic breakups or public meltdowns. Instead, the changes are quieter — but no less significant. George Harrison and Pattie Boyd slip away to Barbados for their honeymoon, marking a new chapter in George’s personal life. Brian Epstein turns his attention to producing a play, widening his ambitions beyond managing the biggest band in the world. And Paul McCartney continues his immersion into London’s cultural underground — one night seeing Stevie Wonder in concert, another attending avant-garde composer Luciano Berio’s lecture — steadily expanding the artistic influences that will soon reshape the Beatles’ sound. But the most important development of February 1966 happens on the page. Journalist Maureen Cleave begins writing an extraordinary series of five individual profiles — one for each Beatle, and one for Brian — unusually intimate pieces for pop stars at the time. Rather than treating the band as a single unit, Cleave captures them as four increasingly distinct individuals, each evolving in different ways at a critical turning point in their lives and careers. She also offers a rare and revealing portrait of the complicated, foundational bond between the Beatles and Brian Epstein. In this episode, we dive into each profile and examine how Cleave’s observations quietly document a band in transition — and how one of those interviews, with John Lennon, will echo far beyond February, ultimately igniting the “more popular than Jesus” controversy that explodes in America later that summer. The surface still looks calm. But the fault lines are becoming visible. About the series: On the surface, 1966 begins like peak Beatlemania: hit records, big plans, and a global machine that still seems unstoppable. But underneath, everything is starting to shift. Over the course of the year, we’ll watch as touring becomes untenable, old identities fall away, new artistic ambitions take hold, and the band slowly, and sometimes reluctantly, becomes something entirely different. Each episode explores one month in 1966, tracing the small decisions, strange moments, cultural collisions, and personal turning points that — piece by piece — reshape the Beatles’ music, image, and inner lives. This isn’t the story of a single break, but of a gradual reveal: the year the surface finally started to crack. Further reading: Want to dive deeper into the fascinating twists and turns of 1966? We highly recommend Beatles ’66: The Revolutionary Year by Steve Turner, which serves as a major source and foundational text for this series — and one of the best deep dives into this pivotal year in the band’s history. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter/X for photos, videos, and more from this episode & past episodes — we’re @bcthebeatles everywhere. Follow BC the Beatles on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you’re listening now. Buy us a coffee! www.ko-fi.com/bcthebeatles Contact us at bcthebeatles@gmail.com