This episode is Part Three 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.
March 1966 marks the moment the Beatles begin to emerge from their early-year hibernation — and as they do, the divide between who they were and who they were becoming has never been more visible.
On the surface, Beatlemania appears as strong as ever. The month opens with the premiere of The Beatles at Shea Stadium, followed by Brian Epstein’s announcement of an ambitious upcoming world tour. From the outside, the machinery is still running.
But underneath, things are already shifting.
We revisit the early UK reaction to John Lennon’s now-infamous remarks to Maureen Cleave — including the first, largely muted responses to what will later explode into the “more popular than Jesus” controversy in America. In the US, the band is nominated for ten Grammy Awards… and walks away with none. And in London, they attend the premiere of the film Alfie, still moving through the rhythms of pop stardom even as their relationship to it begins to change.
Then, on March 25, everything converges.
After months of relative quiet, the Beatles step back into the spotlight for their first full-scale publicity day of the year — a tightly orchestrated press circus designed to reintroduce them to the public. But something is off. The band, now deep into new intellectual and artistic territory, finds itself being asked to perform a version of “The Beatles” that no longer quite fits.
And in the corner of the studio, photographer Robert Whitaker is preparing something entirely different.
As the press cycle winds down, Whitaker begins a series of increasingly provocative images — a conceptual project he calls A Somnambulant Adventure. Drawing on surrealism and religious imagery, Whitaker sets out to challenge the idea of the Beatles as untouchable cultural icons, using dolls, meat, and symbolic props to dismantle the illusion of pop stardom.
What begins as an experimental art shoot escalates into something far more unsettling — culminating in the images that will later become known as the infamous “Butcher Cover.”
In this episode, we explore how that moment came together, what Whitaker was trying to say, and why March 25, 1966 represents a turning point: the day the Beatles’ public image — and their relationship to it — began to fracture.
Because on that day, two versions of the Beatles existed side by side:
the polished pop phenomenon the world expected…
and something stranger, more confrontational, and far more revealing.
Only one of them would survive.
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.