Julian Lennon said that Yoko Ono signed him a confession by denying the links to John Lennon’s missing newspapers after his father’s death.
In emotions after John LennonThe murder of 1980, a 19 -year -old Julian Lennon, was pushed into a world of penalty, confusion and suspicion.
Julian, Lennon’s son of his first marriage to Cynthia Lennon, had lived quietly in the UK when Yoko Ono summoned him to Dakota, the Manhattan Home shared with John. The purpose, at first, seemed to be rooted in the penalty. But what was deployed was much more complicated.
“He fell,” Julian d’Ono recalled. “I had to be strong for me, and strong for her. He had not even told Sean [John and Yoko’s son] That father had still died. She asked me how to receive the news. “”
Read -Ne More: Jake Paul’s national singers make a powerful political gesture during the “Banner Star-spangled”Read -Ne More: What Jake Paul has in common with Donald Trump and Shart
But things soon took a tense turn. According to Julian, Ono suspected when a guitar who had belonging to John was given anonymous to England anonymous.
This delivery, according to her, could be related to the theft of some Lennon newspapers.
“Shortly after Father Died, Yoko learned about the guitar who gave me and sent me someone from New York to sign -” said Julian.
He continued: “Then I was flying in New York and I asked to sign a confession, saying that I knew nothing about the missing newspapers.”
Julian fulfilled, although he maintains that he had no connection to the stolen items.
“Apparently someone told Yoko that the newspapers were given to me, they were not,” he said. “Some have recovered, but not all.”
Julian recounted the episode in a quiet and calm shape, but the implications were scarce: in mourning, he was trapped in a network of distrust inside his father’s inner circle. At that time he had little financial support. John had left a modest fund of trust for him years earlier, which had been largely dried.
For all the latest news directly on your inbox, sign up -Free newsletters here.
Julian’s interest in the media exploded at night, making him a reluctant public figure, just as his father.
“I feel like I had to live this picture of Playboy,” he said. “People thought about me before posting any music. They didn’t take me seriously.”
Now New York -based headquarters, Julian says his relationship with Ono has softened.
“It’s a little relaxed, and I too. This pain has been worked on, we can be normal again.”
Julian continues to tour, but admits that he still feels like an outsider in Britain. “I don’t like them there,” he said blatantly. “Maybe it is because of all early advertising. But I will go on.”
Despite the past shadows, Julian Lennon says he has tried to be his father. “This legacy will always be there,” he said. “But I have my own life to live.”
To get the latest local news and features in Irish America, visit our main page here.