Maureen Diana Cleave (20 October 1934 – 6 November 2021) was a British journalist. She worked for the London Evening Standard from 1958[1] conducting interviews with many prominent musicians of the era, including Bob Dylan and John Lennon. Over 50 years, she continued to interview people in all walks of life, in the Standard, the Telegraph Magazine,[2]Observer Magazine,[3]Saga magazine,[4]Intelligent Life magazine,[5] and elsewhere.
^"Maureen Cleave, a Sixties legend". 47 Shoe Lane, 16 November 2021.
^"Telegraph magazine – Jewel cover (27 February 1999)". crazyaboutmagazines.
^"John Lennon A Memoir by Maureen Cleave". The Lennon Years – A Souvenir to the Observer Magazine, January 1981.
^Barber, Lynn (1 December 2002). "Grey mischief" – via The Guardian.
^"Intelligent Life – The Economist Spring 2008". allearchiwum.pl. Archived from the original on 16 April 2016. Retrieved 23 March 2016.
Maureen Diana Cleave (20 October 1934 – 6 November 2021) was a British journalist. She worked for the London Evening Standard from 1958 conducting interviews...
Reindeer used the song in “Episode 4”. Cleave, Maureen (1965a), p. 7. Cleave, Maureen (1965b), p. 6. Cleave, Maureen (1965c), p. 5. Reynolds, Stanley (1965)...
bedroom. During an interview at Kenwood with Evening Standard reporter MaureenCleave, Lennon said, "Here I am in my Hansel and Gretel house, famous and loaded...
Edmond, Annette Funicello, Bob Monkhouse, Karen Elliott 14 March 1964 – MaureenCleave, Millicent Martin, Matt Monro, Bobby Vee 21 March 1964 – Kathy Kirby...
In her contemporaneous review of Revolver, for The Evening Standard, MaureenCleave highlighted "For No One" among McCartney's contributions and deemed...
" In March 1966, during an interview with Evening Standard reporter MaureenCleave, Lennon remarked, "Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink ...
Starr, George Harrison and Paul McCartney. The articles were written by MaureenCleave, who knew the group well and had interviewed them regularly since the...
1969 that the Beatles did not win in that category. The same writer, MaureenCleave, cited a comment by Harrison in her round-up of 1966 for The Evening...
comment Lennon had made in a March interview with British reporter MaureenCleave. "Christianity will go", Lennon had said. "It will vanish and shrink...
included the song among the year's five "singles to remember", and MaureenCleave of The Evening Standard recognised the single and Revolver as the year's...
explore his interest in Indian music and the sitar, which, journalist MaureenCleave noted in a contemporary article, "has given new meaning to [his] life"...
"The boundaries [of pop music] will now have to be re-negotiated." MaureenCleave of The Evening Standard described the song as a "lengthy and monstrous...
Geoff Stephens, songwriter and record producer (died 2020) 20 October MaureenCleave, journalist (died 2021) Timothy West, actor 24 October – Wally Herbert...
and, decades later, evoked progressive women such as Edie Sedgwick, MaureenCleave and Pauline Boty. He said that the same three songs were statements...
between. MaureenCleave writing in the Daily Telegraph implies that it inclines more towards fiction, 'She quotes Rudolph Valentino.' writes Cleave, '"There's...
Harrison voiced this concern in his "How a Beatle Lives" interview with MaureenCleave of the Evening Standard, in late February, in addition to railing against...
(b. 1926). 6 November Astro, singer and musician (UB40) (b. 1957). MaureenCleave, journalist, conducted John Lennon's "more popular than Jesus" interview...
people on board. In an interview with London Evening Standard reporter MaureenCleave, John Lennon of The Beatles states: "We're more popular than Jesus now...
Ray Davies told journalists MaureenCleave and Keith Altham that "See My Friends" was about homosexuality. He told Cleave that it was "about being a youth...
again very distinctive. Adds something to a toughly romantic number." MaureenCleave of The Evening Standard expressed surprise that Harrison had written...
László Bélády, 93, Hungarian-American computer scientist, dementia. MaureenCleave, 87, British journalist, conducted John Lennon's "more popular than...