Stuart Sutcliffe was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on June 23, 1940. At 19, Stu
was regarded as one of the most talented and promising students at the Liverpool
Art College, when he met fellow art student John Lennon. All of the girls liked
Stu because of his moody, romantic scowl, sunglasses, and resemblence to James
Dean. Stu even lived like an artist, in a cramped, paint splattered house near
the school. John lived there with Stu for a time, spending long nights drinking
and sharing their passions for art.
When Stu sold a painting in 1959 for £65, an unheard-of sum for a student's
painting in those days, John convinced him to buy a bass guitar and join the
band, never mind that he couldn't play. Before their first big break, a two-week
tour to Scotland backing Johnny Gentle, Stu is partially credited with coming up
with the name Beatles, by jokingly suggesting "Beetles" as a play on
Buddy Holly's Crickets. Back in Liverpool, violence was common at the shows they
played at, and one night, after a show at Litherland Town Hall in the north of
Liverpool, the Silver Beatles were ambushed as they made their way out into the
car park to their van. In the fight, Stu went down and was kicked in the head.
Later at home, still bleeding from the gash in his head, he refused to let his
mother call a doctor.
While in Hamburg, Stu met Klaus Voorman, who introduced him to Astrid Kirchherr,
and they quickly fell in love. Astrid changed Stu's clothes and gave him a new,
distinctive hair style, which all the Beatles later adopted. While on their
second Hamburg t rip, Stu started to study art again, at the Hamburg State Art
College, where Astrid had studied, allowing him to quit the Beatles gradually.
When the tour ended and the rest of the Beatles went back to Liverpool in 1961,
Stu stayed in Hamburg with Astrid . Stu died on April 10, 1962, from a brain
hemmorrhage, following a series of violent headaches. Ironically, the Beatles
were to arrive the next day to start their third Hamburg tour.