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Today in Whostory: 7/28/2025

    1964 – The High Numbers play the Railway Hotel in Wealdstone

    1965 – The Who play the Pontiac Club at Zeeta House in Putney. They play only one set due to a sound failure. This show did feature “My Generation”, the earliest known performance of the song

    1965 – Glyn Johns prepares tape copies of “Anyhow Anywhere Anyway” [sic] and “Anytime You Want Me” for Australasian release at IBC Studios in London

    1965 – Richard Cole applies for a position as a roadie for The Who. His trial by fire working for them prepares for his future employment as Led Zeppelin’s tour manager.

    1966 – The Who play Queen’s Hall in Barnstaple, Devon

    1967 – The Who play the Garrett Coliseum in Montgomery, Alabama. Before the show Keith leaves the hotel, attracting the attention of some local toughs who shove the British “longhair” through a plate glass window.

    1967 – The Dutch TV show Hoopla airs an interview with Pete they had recorded the previous month

    1968 – The Who play the Marine Stadium in Miami, Florida

    1969 – The Who play “The Fillmore” at the Locarno Ballroom in Sunderland

    1992 – Roger’s solo album Rocks In The Head is released in the U.S. It does not make the album charts and its low sales silence Roger’s solo recording career for 26 years.

    1995 – Ringo Starr’s All-Starr Band, featuring John Entwistle on bass, play the Starlite Music Theatre in Latham, New York

    1997 – The Who play the Molson Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada

    1999 – Pete performs at the Supper Club in New York City as part of a release party for his forthcoming new CD Pete Townshend Live: A Benefit For Maryville Academy. It is by invitation only with a meet and greet prior. Pete performs a solo set and then is joined by Eddie Vedder who also appears on the CD. The John Entwistle Band is in the audience.

    1999 – Pete and Eddie Vedder tape an appearance on Late Night With David Letterman performing “A Heart To Hang Onto” and “Magic Bus”

    2001 – “A Walk Down Abbey Road: A Tribute To The Beatles” featuring John on bass play the Carolina Amphitheater in Marion, South Carolina

    2002 – Maxene, the second Mrs. Entwistle, sells her inside story on John and The Who to The Mail On Sunday. She tells them that John hated the others, he hated touring but had to because he was perpetually broke, he had to use the £1 million advance from the current tour to pay off gambling debts, Townshend hates Mick Jagger because he is so rich, none of the band like each other and never meet except to work and John had a huge drink and cocaine problem.

     

    Transcript thanks to Brian Cady!

    From Caroline Graham
    In Lake Tahoe, Nevada

    THE DAY Maxine Entwistle decided she had had enough was the day she went
    shopping in Beverly Hills.
    She had exhausted the exclusive boutiques in Rodeo Drive and returned, tired
    but happy, to the Regent Beverly Wilshire hotel to show her husband, The Who
    guitarist, John Entwistle, her purchases.
    But when she opened the door to their suite she was topped in her tracks.
    There, on the hotel balcony, her husband stood naked while a young blonde
    groupie performed a sex act. Maxine was struck speechless. She wanted to
    shout and go ballistic but she was so shocked not a sound came out of her
    mouth. She walked back out of the door without a word, knowing their 15-year
    relationship was effectively at an end.
    Uncertain of what to do next she called her mother-in-law, Queenie,
    expecting sympathy and advice but was told instead, ‘John’s a star. He’s
    allowed to have a wife and mistress. They all do. All the wives accept it.’
    But not this one. Maxine Entwistle is devastated by John’s death last month,
    of a heart attack in the arms of a woman in a Las Vegas hotel bedroom, but
    she cannot have been surprised by the circumstances.
    Last week a coroner ruled that a massive cocaine overdose triggered the
    heart attack.
    Although grieving, Maxine is glad she left John and the carnival that went
    with being on tour with a world famous rock band.
    She knew that otherwise, one day, she too would end up dead in an anonymous
    hotel bedroom hundreds of miles from home.
    It might have been an impure batch of drugs, a drunken fall or even suicide.
    But she knew that the debauched, debilitating excesses of the music business
    would get her in the end, just as they got John. Few people have seen the
    corrupt, morally bankrupt, world of rock up close in the way that she has.
    Today, for the first time, Maxine talks about the hatred and the bitterness
    that ran like a fault line through The Who, and that turned Entwistle, 57,
    and one of the world’s most successful bass guitarist, into a shambling
    drunk racked with jealousy and consumed by a destructive self-loathing. She
    reveals the band’s uncontrollable envy of Mick Jagger
    for the money he has made, which they never could, for his business acumen,
    which they never had, and for his continued success which they couldn’t
    emulate.
    And she told me that despite The Who’s image – in which Roger Daltrey, Pete
    Townshend and Entwistle had been the best of friends since adolescence –
    they couldn’t, in fact, bear to be in the same room together and only came
    together for recording sessions and stage shows.
    Maxine also disclosed that although John had a 53-room Gothic mansion in
    Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, and insisted on traveling only by private
    plane, he was in debt and worried that if he didn’t earn more – in the form
    of huge advances – to support his lavish lifestyle he would be declared
    bankrupt.
    It was this terror, fuelled by an addiction to gambling, drink and sex, that
    persuaded him to go back on the road and that ultimately; she believes, led
    to his death. He needed the money that the tour would provide him with but
    tragically he had spent the £1 million he had already been given, on
    gambling debts, before a single note had even been played.
    One mystery that still surrounds the death of John Entwistle in the Hard
    Rock Hotel in Las Vegas is the identity of the woman who was in the room
    when he died.
    Lurid reports have focused around private strippers and expensive call girls
    but Maxine, 46, is convinced they are inaccurate. The petite American who
    was married to John for eight years until their divorce in. 1997 said: ‘I am
    absolutely certain there will have been a woman but John never had to pay
    for sex.
    ‘John couldn’t stand to be alone. He needed sex and loved being the big rock
    star. I haven’t asked any of the band members whether there was a woman
    because, to be frank, I would be shocked if there wasn’t.
    ‘One day in LA he sent me and a friend out with some money to go shopping. I
    got back and the suite had two bimbos in it. I walked on to the balcony and
    there was John getting oral sex from another girl. I was just expected to
    tolerate it because he was a rock star.
    ‘People say it was a sad way to end up – alone with a girl in his room. But
    it wasn’t the girl that was sad. It was the fact that he didn’t want to be
    there at all. He had to do one last tour because he was broke. He knew he
    had high blood pressure and was at risk of a heart attack, but he ignored
    all the signs because he needed the cash.
    ‘The tragedy is no one around him did anything. For all his fame and
    adulation, there was no one in his life who cared enough about him to get
    him the help he needed.
    ‘The Who never saw each other unless they were working. Their egos were too
    dig to be in the same room together.’
    MAXINE, who has successfully fought her own battle with alcohol, said: ‘John
    was an alcoholic.
    When I last saw him two years ago backstage after a Who concert in Los
    Angeles, he gave me a big hug and told me how proud he was of me for getting
    sober. He told me: “I wish I had the strength to do what you did, but I
    don’t.” It was a cry for help. He should have gone to rehab. But he was in
    denial and those around him were too.
    ‘He and the rest of the band were always going on about being jealous of
    Mick Jagger because of his money. The Who never made the multi-millions that
    Mick did.
    Mick had a great business brain and was notoriously tight with his money.
    When he was dating Jerry Hall she told me he made her pay for her own plane
    tickets and hotel rooms. John had money tied up in homes, but he was always
    broke.
    ‘When I divorced John, everyone thought I’d get a huge pay-off. But he
    didn’t have that sort of money.’
    But why did John Entwistle suffer more than other members of the band?
    Maxine paints a picture of a rock and roll victim. And certainly what had
    seemed attractive as an adolescent became desperate as a grown man.
    When The Who became successful, writing teenage anthems which chimed with
    their own adolescent feelings, such as Can’t Explain and My Generation which
    includes the ultimate rallying cry, ‘Hope I die before I get old’, Entwistle
    was just 19 years old.
    Maxine realised just how desperate the band had become when, in their vain
    attempts to appear young, she witnessed them dying their hair in a hotel
    bathroom sink.
    She said: ‘Both John and Keith (Moon) died their hair black. That was one of
    the things I stopped when we got together. I made John go to his real grey.
    It was more dignified.’
    At this stage, Entwistle would do anything to try to compete with the
    flamboyant members of the group. Moon was famous for driving limousines into
    swimming pools. Roger Daltrey had perfected the brilliant techniques of
    swinging his mike on stage like a lasso and Pete Townshend dazzled audiences
    with his athletic mid-air leaps white playing guitar.
    31
    All Entwistle was required to do was stand in the background while the
    others stole the limelight. It was to depress him and inevitably – as with
    another bass player, Bill Wyman of The Rolling Stones – Entwistle began to
    resent his role as the band wallflower, forever left in the shadows.
    It was then that his addictions, the drinking, the gambling and the constant
    stream of women, took hold, while he stubbornly ignored warnings from his
    doctors about his dangerously high blood pressure.
    Maxine said: ‘John had the reputation of being the quiet one of The Who but
    I brought him out of himself. We were soulmates. When we first met I wasn’t
    a fan but John kept pestering me for a date but I refused a couple of times
    because I knew he was married and had a wife and kid back in England. But he
    was persistent and in the end I went out with him.
    We had an affair for a year while he was flying back and forth between his
    wife in England and me in L.A. But their marriage was over. In 1980 he asked
    me to move to England with him. First of all we lived in Pete Townshend’s
    flat on London’s King’s Road before moving to the country to a mansion
    called Quarwood. It was a daze of drink and drugs and parties.
    ‘We lived sex, drugs and rock and roll. We would hang out with Jagger all
    the time. Bill Wyman was a very good friend. So were John Hurt and Michael
    Caine, We partied every night. We would go to clubs like Stringfellows and
    Tramp and it was champagne and pot the whole way. But I was anorexic and my
    body was messed up. I longed for a child with John but the doctors told me I
    would never be a mother.
    ‘I had started getting unhappy in the relationship. John was going away more
    without me. We got married on a whim on September 11th, 1991 but I knew as I
    was walking down the aisle of this tacky wedding chapel in Las Vegas that
    the marriage wouldn’t last. An Elvis impersonator was our witness.
    ‘I hit rock bottom just a year later – on June 24, 1992. John was away with
    the band and I was in the wine cellar drinking everything but I wasn’t
    getting drunk. Then I smoked some pot, but didn’t get stoned. I was
    frightened. I thought I was losing my mind. The drugs and the drinking had
    become too much. I knew I had to sober up to survive. I went into rehab.’
    There would be no going back to their relationship that had begun in 1978
    when she was a 22-year-old waitress at LA’s infamous celebrity hang-out
    Rainbow Bar and Grill.
    In an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting Maxine met French count Thierry Curial de
    Brevannes with whom she had a brief fling and who is the father of her
    eight-year-old son, Oliver. She then went on to marry her second husband,
    marketing manager Richard Bolen, 54, and now lives in a modest wooden chalet
    home by Lake Tahoe, Nevada.
    But she still wears an enormous black pearl ring given to her by Entwistle
    as a reminder of past times, both sad and happy. Maxine said: ‘I wanted us
    to he like Barbara and Ringo and detox together but John didn’t want to give
    up booze. He loved drinking too much.’
    When Maxine became pregnant Entwistle was furious and filed for divorce. ‘I
    think I humiliated him by getting pregnant by another man. But by the time
    the divorce was finally sorted out in 1997 we were friends again.
    ‘We spoke on the phone every few months and I was due to see John on July 3
    when The Who played San Francisco. Then John died. In the end, I went anyway
    and met Pete and Roger backstage. I think John and I would still be married
    if he’d sobered up. And I also believe that if we were still married he
    would be alive today. I loved him and would have taken care of him to the
    end.’
    Maxine did not attend his funeral last month in the 12th Century church of
    St. Edward in Stow-on-the-Wold, claiming she had to look after her son back
    in America.
    In truth, however, John’s first wife, Alison, the mother of his 30-year-old
    son, and Lisa Pritchard-Johnson, his girlfriend of six years, did not want
    her there.
    It is a sad commentary, and yet a cliché of all rock stars, that at the end
    three women were fighting over his gravestone – and what little money there
    is left – for the guitarist has bequeathed all his assets to his mother,
    Queenie, and son, Chris.
    Perhaps tragically for Entwistle, he didn’t die before he got old. He died a
    portly, grey-haired 57-year-old trying to live out the fantasies of a
    teenager while hating himself for it.
    It was, in truth, a far more tragic outcome than his cocaine-induced heart
    attack with a female stranger in an anonymous hotel bedroom, desperate
    though that is, too.

    Additional reporting:
    Elizabeth Sanderson

    2004 – The Who play the Sydney Entertainment Centre in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

    2011 – Roger plays the Royal Hall in the Villa Marina, Douglas on the Isle of Man

    2014 – Roger performs at the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia