I Met the Walrus features an exclusive 1969 interview with Beatles member
For nearly 40 years, York graduate Jerry Levitan (’79) kept his
exclusive interview with John Lennon hidden away in a box, only taking
it out to show people on rare occasions. Other than one article
published in TO magazine in 1988, he preferred to keep this very
meaningful interview to himself.
Now, finally, that audio
interview has been turned into a critically-acclaimed animated short
film called I Met the Walrus, using Levitan’s original interview as the
soundtrack. The film has received major attention at film festivals
everywhere from Hawaii to the Middle East. Its latest honour is a
nomination for Best Animated Short Film at the Academy Awards, taking
place in Hollywood on Feb. 24.
“I never wanted to do anything that
was demeaning or commercial or exploitative. It was always, in a weird
way, a very personal thing to me. So about three years ago, I thought,
I’m gonna do it in an artistic way – find a young filmmaker or artist
and have them do their take on it,” said Levitan.
He met with many
young artists eager to interpret his work into something new before
deciding on Josh Raskin as the director and animator of I Met the
Walrus.
“I liked the things he did. I thought he was funny, smart
and creative and we hit it off, and he loved John Lennon. So he had the
passion for it, and he had a great idea – to take the 40 minutes [of
audio recordings], put it into five minutes and animate it,” said
Levitan.
It all started in 1969, when the young Levitan, a
14-year-old Beatlemaniac, heard on CHUM FM radio that John Lennon and
Yoko Ono were supposedly just arriving at Toronto’s airport. Before the
rumour had been confirmed, even before the local media learned of their
arrival, Levitan had deduced that the Lennons were staying at the King
Edward Hotel and located their room with the help of an obliging
cleaning lady.
Through sheer backbone and determination, Levitan
snuck his way into the room and struck up a conversation with his hero,
who invited him back at 6 p.m. for a proper interview. Levitan told
Lennon that he wanted to play the interview for his school, to spread
the message of peace. Several hours later, he literally had to push his
way through the lineups of reporters waiting in the hotel hallway and
was nearly dragged away by police. Luckily, he was called into the room
at the last minute for the most coveted of interviews.
Lennon had plenty to say about revolutions, the Beatles and then-prime minister Pierre Trudeau, but his main message was clear.
“There are many ways of protesting for peace. Do everything for peace.
Piss for peace or smile for peace, or go to school for peace or don’t
go to school for peace. Whatever you do, just do it for peace,” said
Lennon during the interview.
Levitan’s interview took place just
before the Lennons’ famous Montreal bed-in for peace, during which the
newly-married couple stayed in bed for seven days and nights to promote
their ideals and speak to the press on the subject. It was during that
bed-in, in room 1742 of the Queen Elizabeth Hotel, that the song ‘Give
Peace a Chance’ was written and recorded.
Levitan is hoping the
acclaim and Oscar buzz surrounding the film I Met the Walrus will
breathe new life into Lennon’s 40-year-old anti-war message.
“What is brilliant about the film is it uses [animated] images for
every word that he says, and it communicates it in a very simple, yet
beautiful way […] Everyone is happy to hear John’s words, and they’re
as meaningful today as they were then,” he said.
These days,
Levitan, a graduate of York’s Osgoode Hall Law School, makes a living
at his law firm, Levitan Lawyers. He also wrote the book The Complete
Idiot’s Guide to Winning Everyday Legal Hassles in Canada. When he
isn’t practicing law, he can be found acting in various roles or
performing for children as his alter ego, Sir Jerry, a gig that started
after writing a song for his then-two-year-old daughter.
Levitan
may have an unusually varied career, but one thing that has never
changed is his enthusiasm for the Beatles, their music and their
message. He is just glad, he said, to be responsible for having
Lennon’s voice heard again.
from the Excalibur Web edition Written by Laura Godfrey, Assistant Arts Editor
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