- Frederic Seaman
Frederic ("Fred") Seaman, (born
October 10 1952 ) is the formerpersonal assistant toJohn Lennon andYoko Ono , during the formerBeatle 's final years, when Lennon and Ono lived inThe Dakota Apartments inNew York City .Life with the Lennons
Seaman first met the Lennons in October 1975 at the
Russian Tea Room and was introduced through his aunt, Helen Seaman. In need of a job, he renewed his acquaintance with them in 1978. Lennon was in need of a personal assistant at the time, and there were several factors in Seaman's favor which helped him land the job. First, Seaman was primarily ajazz fan and knew little about Lennon's career inThe Beatles . Ono is said to have performed anumerology reading on Seaman and found him to be promising in that respect (he was born in the ChineseYear of the Dragon , and his birthday fell one day after Lennon's). Lennon was struck by the way the name "Fred Seaman" related so directly to Lennon's own father, Freddy, who was a life-long sailor in themerchant marines ; literally a "sea man." During the approximately 24 months that he worked at the Dakota, Seaman was publicly credited by Lennon for introducing him to the music ofThe B-52's , a band whose offerings Lennon felt certain had been inspired by Yoko Ono's music. Seaman was mentioned by name in Lennon's last interviews forBBC Radio andRKO Radio and was given a credit in the liner notes to "Double Fantasy ".Legal problems
After Lennon's murder on
December 8 ,1980 , Seaman, by his own admission, took several items from the Dakota apartments, including stereo equipment and John Lennon's personal diaries. After his arrest, Seaman insisted that Lennon had specifically instructed him to give the diaries - handwritten and assumed to be intensely private - to his eldest son Julian in the event of his death. In 1983, Seaman was convicted of stealing the diaries, which had by then been returned to Yoko Ono, and sentenced to five years'probation .In 2002, Seaman also lost a long and contentious court battle against Yoko Ono for
copyright control of more than 300 photos he took with a camera the Lennons owned during his employ.Writings
Seaman is author of "The Last Days of John Lennon: A Personal Memoir", a book detailing his time as Lennon's private aide (initially published in
September 1991 by Birch Lane Press). A British edition retitled "John Lennon, Living on Borrowed Time: A Personal Memoir" was published in spring 1993, and editions soon followed in German, French, Czech, and Japanese translations. The book is considered controversial by many Lennon fans and observers due to its portrayal of Lennon and Ono's marriage, and for the glimpses he offered into the secluded and often unhappy life Lennon lived inside the Dakota apartments. A review in theJune 1991 edition of "Library Journal " states: "Seaman reveals the day-to-day minutiae of the Lennon lifestyle, and what emerges is a sad portrait of a tormented man. Recommended." In publishing his story, however, Seaman failed to abide by the terms of thenon-disclosure agreement he signed when commencing his time in the Lennons' employ. The book is now out-of-print.External links
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/showbiz/2279935.stm "Yoko Ono v. Fred Seaman"]
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,800772,00.html Seaman in court]
* [http://www2.oakland.edu/oujournal/files/11_let_me_take_you_down.pdf "The Last Days of John Lennon: A Personal Memoir" deconstructed and contrasted with six other John Lennon biographies]
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