Lennon's son and childhood friend Lucy In The Sky... the girl who inspired Beatles song.
Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.
Lucy
Richardson was an art director for the films Chocolat and Elizabeth.
Richardson was also a childhood friend of Julian Lennon and purportedly
helped to inspire the famed Beatles song written by John Lennon, "Lucy
in the Sky with Diamonds." She died of breast cancer in Weybridge,
Surrey, England on June 1, 2005 at age 48.
Lennon's son and childhood friend Lucy In The Sky... the girl who inspired Beatles song.
By Emily Andrews Last updated at 10:59 AM on 08th June 2009
She
was the little girl whose nursery school friendship with John Lennon's
son Julian inspired the song Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds. More than 40 years after the song's release Lucy O'Donnell and Julian Lennon are back in touch. Lucy
- now Vodden after her marriage 13 years ago - and Lennon's oldest son
have been reunited after he heard that she is battling an incurable
disease. Mrs Vodden, 46, has lupus, an autoimmune disease which causes
the body to attack its own cells, causing immense pain and organ
breakdown. Two months ago Julian, who lives in France, heard
through his personal assistant, who knows Lucy's sister, that she was
chronically ill. He sent a huge bunch of flowers to her home in
Surbiton, Surrey, with a personally written card.
He followed up with garden centre gift vouchers because he had learnt that she took solace in looking at her plants. 'I've been able to help out a bit,' he said. 'I was so upset to hear what had happened.' Mrs Vodden said it was lovely to be back in touch with each other. For
years mystery surrounded who Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds really was.
Was the title a euphemism for the drug LSD? or perhaps Lucy Richardson,
a schoolfriend of Julian? In
fact it was Lucy O'Donnell, who went to nursery school in Surrey with
Julian. She was immortalised after the young Julian showed his father a
picture of her with star-like shapes and told him it was 'Lucy in the
sky with diamonds'. Lennon then used the phrase as a title for a
song he wrote for the Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album, which
was released in 1967. 'We were two very energetic school kids,' Mrs Vodden said. 'He
would say "Come on, Lucy", to get me to do things. He was the bravest
boy in school whom I recall jumping into a freezing swimming pool.' The
whereabouts of Julian's painting of Lucy is uncertain, although at one
stage it was in his mother Cynthia's possession. Since they were four,
Mrs Vodden and Julian had seen each other only once - 23 years ago at
one of Julian's concerts.
Julian spoke of the song's creation ahead of a new exhibition at the Beatles museum in Liverpool. He has lent the museum his own collection of memorabilia which for him marks a 'reconnection' with his father's memory. Lennon divorced his mother Cynthia, when Julian was five, to free him to marry Yoko Ono. He
then rarely saw his son for years afterwards. They were later partly
reconciled and Julian made his musical debut at the age of 11 on his
father's Walls and Bridges album, playing drums on Ya Ya. He went
on to enjoy his own musical success with his debut album Valotte in
1984. It reached the top 20 album chart and spawned the No 6 single,
Too Late For Goodbyes. His last hit was in 1991 with the single
Saltwater, which also reached No 6.
Julian says he has
forgiven his father for the way he treated both him and his mother -
and the hostility between him and Ono, and his half-brother Sean, is in
the past. Lucy in 1966
'There is nothing but love now,' he said. 'If he was able to come into the room now, we'd hug and cry.' After Lennon was murdered in New York in 1980, Julian had few keepsakes from his father. During the past two decades he has spent £1million buying up a collection of Lennon's possessions. 'It is, in a way, horrendous that this is what I needed to do to get my father's possessions,' said Julian. They
include hand-written recording notes by Paul McCartney of Hey Jude, a
song originally written as Hey Jules to console the then five-year-old
Julian during his parents' divorce. The collection also includes Lennon's Afghan coat and his cape from the film Help! Lupus is characterised by alternating periods of flare-ups and remissions. Some
with lupus experience only mild symptoms and have few complications.
Others experience frequent flares that can cause severe complications.