True, thousands of heartbroken female fans crowded the columned building in 1969 when he married Linda Eastman, and only a few hundred showed up Sunday as he wed another American, Nancy Shevell, at the very same registry office.
But  the feeling this time was not regret at the loss of a bachelor  heartthrob. Instead there was joy that McCartney, regarded as a national  treasure and revered the world over, seemed happy again.
The  69-year-old former Beatle appeared proud, content and eager to share  his joy with the crowd, raising his bride's hand in triumph as he walked  down the steps after they became man and wife in a simple civil  ceremony attended by close family and friends, including drummer Ringo Starr and Barbara Walters, a second cousin of the bride.
"I  feel absolutely wonderful," McCartney told fans as he arrived at his  home after the ceremony. He was expected to sing a new song he had  composed for his bride at the reception.
Gone was the memory of McCartney's terribly unhappy marriage to Heather Mills,  which ended in 2008 in an ugly public divorce. Remembered was his  marriage to Eastman, a serene union that lasted nearly three decades  until her life was cut short by breast cancer, leaving McCartney alone  and adrift despite his fame and wealth.
The  ceremony Sunday afternoon was everything his wedding to Mills was not:  simple, understated, almost matter of fact. By contrast, McCartney and  Mills married in an over-the-top lavish spectacle at a remote Irish  castle that was disrupted several times by news helicopters flying  overhead, hoping for a glimpse of the A-list guests.
This time, the smiles seemed genuine.The affection — and confetti — showered on McCartney and his bride captured his particular place in British life.
Long  gone are the days when the Beatles divided Britain between young and  old, or between hippies and straights. The band is revered as part of a  glorious musical and cultural era when Britain seemed a more confident  place. There was no controversy whatsoever when McCartney received a  knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II in 1997.
Today  Sir Paul — or Macca, as he's usually known — is celebrated as a musical  legend who is still composing and releasing CDs, even if they no longer  routinely shoot to No. 1 on the charts. His forays into opera, ballet,  painting and poetry have not been critical successes, but none of these  have tarnished his reputation.
Shevell,  51, appeared radiant and composed in an elegant, ivory gown cut just  above the knee. She wore a white flower in her long dark hair, and only  light makeup and lipstick.
The  dress was designed by McCartney's daughter, Stella, a star in the  fashion world who also helped concoct the three-course vegetarian feast  served to guests at the reception at McCartney's home in St. John's  Wood, a property he bought in 1965, when the Beatles were topping the  charts with metronomic regularity.
McCartney,  who has long admitted to tinting his hair to keep out the gray, looked  youthful in a well-cut blue suit and pale blue, skinny tie.
The  couple married on what would have been band mate John Lennon's 71st  birthday. Some guests speculated that Lennon would have been among the  guests had he lived, with the rift between them having healed.
The wedding party included Beatrice, McCartney's young daughter with Mills, who had been expected to serve as flower girl.
McCartney  is credited for having survived a number of tragedies — the 1980 murder  of one-time songwriting partner Lennon, the loss of his beloved first  wife Linda, the 2001 death of guitarist George Harrison and the public  breakdown of his marriage to Mills — with his upbeat nature intact.
Mills,  a much younger model who had lost part of her leg when she was hit by a  motorcycle, tried to battle McCartney in the court of public opinion  during their divorce. She accused him of cruelty and sought a gargantuan  $250 million settlement.
But  her charges against McCartney didn't stick. Few if any fans turned  against him, and the divorce court judge ruled against her, calling her  demands exorbitant and unfair.
The  very public spat opened McCartney's vast fortune to unprecedented  public scrutiny. Long rumored to be pop's first billionaire, he was  found to have assets worth about $800 million, including works by  Picasso and Renoir and luxury real estate in the United States, Britain  and elsewhere.
His wealth  reflects in part his incredible global popularity — in recent years he  has filled stadiums from Rio to Russia, producing tens of millions of  dollar of revenue with each tour.
Shevell,  who is independently wealthy and quite successful in her own right, is  not seen by the British public as being interested in McCartney's  fortune.
The couple met four  years ago in the Hamptons, a seaside playground for the rich and famous  on the eastern tip of Long Island in New York.
Some reports say that Walters played matchmaker, inviting McCartney to a dinner she knew her second cousin Shevell would attend.
Walters said she cried during the ceremony, which she called "beautiful and wonderful."
Shevell,  who was married for more than 20 years to attorney Bruce Blakeman and  serves on the board of New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority,  is also a vice president of a lucrative New Jersey-based trucking  company owned by her father.
She  has stayed out of the public eye since taking up with McCartney,  refraining from commenting on her relationship with the man once known  as "the cute one" in the world's most popular band.
She has a few things in common with Eastman: like McCartney's first wife, she is American and affluent.
Unlike Eastman, who performed with McCartney's post-Beatles band Wings, Shevell is not...More.

 
 
 
 
 
 10/09/2011 02:11:00 PM
10/09/2011 02:11:00 PM
 live news
live news
 












0 commentaires:
Post a Comment