海角大神

海角大神 / Text

A fuller portrait of artist-provocateur Yoko Ono

David Sheff reappraises Yoko Ono鈥檚 role, as an artist in her own right and as a support to John Lennon, with whom she collaborated on 鈥淚magine.鈥

By Barbara Spindel , Contributor

Yoko Ono has long been accused of breaking up the Beatles, but David Sheff offers a different perspective in 鈥淵oko,鈥 his compelling biography of the artist, musician, activist, and, most famously, widow of John Lennon.聽

Ono鈥檚 ubiquitous presence at the band鈥檚 final recording sessions in 1969 has been characterized as intrusive, inappropriate, and downright weird. But Sheff points out that a miserable and exhausted Lennon was already determined to leave the band, and he theorizes that Lennon was able to make it through the sessions precisely because Ono was at his side.聽

鈥淭here鈥檚 a version of the Beatles story in which there鈥檇 be no Let It Be or Abbey Road without Yoko,鈥 he ventures, adding that 鈥淚nstead of being blamed and pilloried for breaking up the group, maybe Yoko should be thanked for keeping the band together during that fertile period.鈥

That conclusion is in keeping with the book鈥檚 sympathetic portrayal of Ono, a longtime friend of the author. As a young journalist, Sheff conducted the last joint interview with Lennon and Ono, for Playboy magazine, spending three weeks with them in New York City in August and September 1980. When Lennon was murdered months later, Sheff became, he writes, 鈥渙ne of the people who circled the wagons around [Ono] as she struggled to survive a period she would later describe as the season of glass, when she was as fragile as glass and almost shattered.鈥澛

Ono is now 92 years old, and it鈥檚 jarring to consider that she was with Lennon for only 14 years of her long life. 鈥淵oko鈥 is divided into three parts 鈥 essentially before, during, and after Lennon. The first section charts her unhappy early years. She was born to wealthy but distant parents in Tokyo in 1933, and her childhood was lonely and marked by the trauma of World War II. She used her imagination to mentally escape the fear and deprivation wrought by the war, soothing her younger brother with detailed descriptions of food they wished they could eat. She traces her career as a conceptual artist back to that survival technique.聽

When Ono and Lennon met in 1966, both were in unhappy marriages. Ono was well known in avant-garde circles for performance art like 鈥淐ut Piece,鈥 during which she invited audience members onto the stage to wield scissors and slice off pieces of her clothing. She wasn鈥檛 expecting mainstream approval: Sheff notes that she didn鈥檛 regard a performance as successful 鈥渦nless half the audience walked out.鈥澛

Lennon, meanwhile, was by then one of the most famous people in the world. They fell in love, divorced their spouses, and married in 1969. Their honeymoon was a weeklong 鈥渂ed-in鈥 to protest the Vietnam War, during which they held court from their bed in an Amsterdam hotel room, talking to journalists and visitors about peace.

As a musician, Ono was known for singing in what has been described as a screechy, caterwauling voice, and many of her musical collaborations with Lennon were baffling to Beatles fans. But their most impactful joint production, the indelible 鈥淚magine,鈥 had wide appeal. The song became Lennon鈥檚 bestselling recording as a solo artist, even as Ono鈥檚 role in inspiring and writing it was initially uncredited. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 man enough to let her have credit for it,鈥 Lennon confessed to Sheff during their 1980 interview.

Sheff, the author of the memoir 鈥淏eautiful Boy,鈥 covers the dark moments in the couple鈥檚 relationship, including their heroin use and, later, an 18-month separation, which Lennon called his 鈥渓ost weekend.鈥 Lennon begged her to take him back, but Ono needed the time apart. 鈥淐an you imagine every day of getting this vibration from people of hate? You want to get out of that,鈥 she remarked.聽

Like other commentators, Sheff notes that racism and sexism played a big part in Ono鈥檚 widespread vilification. The late feminist writer Kate Millett, who was friends with Ono, said, 鈥淪he got in people鈥檚 faces and screamed. People didn鈥檛 like a person from Japan screaming, and they didn鈥檛 like a woman screaming. A screaming Japanese woman enraged them.鈥 Ono received death threats for years after Lennon was killed.

The author is frank about Ono鈥檚 shortcomings as a parent. Her daughter from an earlier marriage, Kyoko, tells Sheff that her mother was more interested in Lennon and in her work than in her. The two were out of contact for many years. Ono鈥檚 son with Lennon, Sean, expresses a similar sentiment, saying he鈥檇 sometimes wished for a mother 鈥渓ess involved with her own life and art and more attuned to me.鈥 Ono herself admitted that she had trouble being around her young son in the period following Lennon鈥檚 death.

Sheff鈥檚 access to those close to Ono makes 鈥淵oko鈥 an intimate read. (The author reports that he and Ono drifted apart, but he doesn鈥檛 say why.) Ono鈥檚 cultural influence has been newly appreciated in recent years 鈥 with institutions like the Museum of Modern Art and the Tate Modern mounting retrospectives and musicians including Lady Gaga and David Byrne citing her as an inspiration 鈥 but it is Sean Ono Lennon who offers the most poignant appraisal of her legacy.聽

He describes her use of imagination to survive the trauma of World War II and to fuel her art, including, with Lennon, the song 鈥淚magine,鈥 an internationally recognized hymn for peace.聽

鈥淪he has this ability to overcome difficulty with positive thinking,鈥 he tells Sheff of his mother. 鈥淪he really wanted to teach the world to do that. She taught my dad to do that. It鈥檚 not going to stop a moving train or a bullet. But I think there鈥檚 something profound about it. And I think it affected the world.鈥