Biography
Fresh from a nondescript Liverpudlian musical group known as Rory Storme and the Hurricanes, Ringo Starr made the quantum leap to superstardom in 1962 when he replaced Pete Best as drummer for the burgeoning Beatles. Starr was regarded by many music aficionados as the least creative of the foursome, though he may well have enjoyed the largest fan following -- especially among young ladies who felt the urge to "mother" the diminutive Mr. Starr (though he appeared to be the baby of the group, Ringo was in fact the oldest of the Fab Four). In the Beatles' first two films,
A Hard Day's Night (1964) and Help! (1965), most of the comedy material went to Ringo, whose Chaplinesque demeanor and droll, deadpan dialogue delivery paid off in big laughs. Upon the group's breakup in 1970, it was Ringo who fared best as a solo screen actor. He had already brightened up the dull proceedings of
Candy (1968) and
The Magic Christian (1970); after the Beatles' split, he was seen to good advantage as the Pope in
Ken Russell's
Lisztomania (1975), as one of
Mae West's bewildered amours in
Sextette (1978) and as a bumbling Cro-Magnon in
Caveman (1979), in which he co-starred with his second wife,
Barbara Bach. In 1973, Ringo produced the bizarre horror movie spoof
Son of Dracula, appearing onscreen with fellow rock icon
Harry Nilsson. A big draw all over again in the 1980s thanks to his All-Star Band tours, Ringo Starr remains a most welcome, if infrequent TV guest star; he has also shown up in several entertaining commercials, including a 1995 Pizza Hut spot in which he co-starred with ex-Monkees
Davy Jones, Micky Dolenz, and Peter Tork. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide