Writing "Eleanor Rigby"
How one of the Beatles greatest songs came to be.
My mums favorite cold cream was Nivea, and I love it to this day. Thats the cold cream I was thinking of in the description of the face Eleanor keeps in a jar by the door. I was always a little scared by how often women used cold cream.
Growing up, I knew a lot of old ladiespartly through what was called Bob-a-Job Week, when Scouts did chores for a shilling. Youd get a shilling for cleaning out a shed or mowing a lawn. I wanted to write a song that would sum them up. Eleanor Rigby is based on an old lady that I got on with very well. I dont even know how I first met Eleanor Rigby, but I would go around to her house, and not just once or twice. I found out that she lived on her own, so I would go around there and just chat, which is sort of crazy if you think about me being some young Liverpool guy. Later, I would offer to go and get her shopping. Shed give me a list and Id bring the stuff back, and wed sit in her kitchen. I still vividly remember the kitchen, because she had a little crystal-radio set. Thats not a brand name; it actually had a crystal inside it. Crystal radios were quite popular in the nineteen-twenties and thirties. So I would visit, and just hearing her stories enriched my soul and influenced the songs I would later write.
Eleanor Rigby may actually have started with a quite different name. Daisy Hawkins, was it? I can see that Hawkins is quite nice, but it wasnt right. Jack Hawkins had played Quintus Arrius in Ben-Hur. Then, there was Jim Hawkins, from one of my favorite books, Treasure Island. But it wasnt right. This is the trouble with history, though. Even if you were there, which I obviously was, its sometimes very difficult to pin down.
Its like the story of the name Eleanor Rigby on a marker in the graveyard at St. Peters Church in Woolton, which John and I certainly wandered around, endlessly talking about our future. I dont remember seeing the grave there, but I suppose I might have registered it subliminally.
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/10/25/paul-mccartney-writing-eleanor-rigby-beatles