I am~ George Harrison
My controller is~ 22 Paul McCartney 22
George was born in Liverpool, England, on 25 February 1943, the last of four children to Harold Hargreaves Harrison and his wife Louise, née French.
George's first home - 12 Arnold GroveHe had one sister, Louise, and two brothers, Harry, and Peter. His mother was a Liverpool shop assistant, and his father was a bus conductor who had worked as a ship's steward on the White Star Line. The family was Roman Catholic; his maternal grandfather, John French, was born in County Wexford, Ireland, emigrating to Liverpool where he married a local girl, Louise Woollam.
George was born in the house where he lived for his first six years: 12 Arnold Grove, Wavertree, Liverpool, which was a small 2 up, 2 down terraced house in a cul-de-sac, with an alley to the rear. The only heating was a single coal fire, and the toilet was outside. In 1950 the family were offered a council house, and moved to 25 Upton Green, Speke.
His first school was Dovedale Primary School, very close to Penny Lane, the same school as John Lennon who was a couple of years ahead of him. He passed his 11-plus examination and achieved a place at the Liverpool Institute for Boys (in the building that now houses the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts), which he attended from 1954 to 1959. When George was 14 years old, he sat at the back of the class and tried drawing guitars in his schoolbooks: “I was totally into guitars. I heard about this kid at school who had a guitar at £3 10s, it was just a little acoustic round hole. I got the £3 10s from my mother: that was a lot of money for us then." George bought a Dutch Egmond flat top acoustic guitar. While at the Liverpool Institute, George formed a skiffle group called The Rebels with his brother Peter and a friend, Arthur Kelly. At this school he met Paul McCartney, one year older, who played in a band called The Quarrymen.
I looks like~

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I am~ Paul McCartney
My controller is~ 22 Paul McCartney 22
Paul McCartney was born on June 18, 1942 in Liverpool, England. He had a family that consisted of a father, Jim McCartney, a musician, a mother, Mary McCartney, and a brother, Micheal McCartney. He would often use his cute "charm" to get himself out of trouble whenever he did something that would upset his parents. One of his first instruments was a trumpet, in which he quickly disowned due to the fact that he couldn't sing while playing it. Eventually his father swapped the trumpet that he gave Paul for a guitar. Unfortunately Paul couldn't play it well because he was left-handed and it was a right-handed guitar. When he turned fourteen, his mother, who worked as a nurse, had died of breast cancer. This really hurt Paul, but he tried his best to keep the rest of his family as happy as he could.
On June 6, 1957 Paul met John Lennon at the Woolton Parish Church. Jim McCartney worried that John would lead Paul astray, but let him hang out with him anyway. Eventually Paul was let into John's band, the Quarrymen, as a guitarist and vocalist. (Eventually, the band's bassist left, leaving Paul to reluctantly became the bassist.) He had met George on a school bus and begged John to let his friend into the band.
After a while John, George, Pete Best, and he started the Beatles.
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When John got preoccupied with drugs, Paul took command of the Beatles. Eventually George quit due to Paul's pushiness.
The band ended when Paul quit due to "Musical differences". However, John quit before him. Most people thought that it was Paul's fault that the band broke up, but it wasn't. After he left the Beatles he went to his farmhouse in Scottland with Linda and his children.
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In the 1970s he started Wings with Linda.
... {His music career continues}
In 2007, he came out with a CD called "Memory Almost Full". His new single then was a song called "Dance Tonight", a song where he plays the mandolin. In the music video, a postman enters his house and gives him a package with a mandolin inside of it. When he starts to play it, the spirit of the mandolin comes out of the box. Then Paul starts to dance and wander all over his house, with all of the spirits of the furniture and other objects, like trees and fire, dancing with him. (Don't ask, I won't tell.) In this CD, he does a lot of songs all in his lonesome, playing the drums, vocals, bass, guitar, you name it; he played it.
He also paints and writes. In fact, he wrote a children's book.
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He loves his job, and will never retire. "What am I gonna do? Sit around an' watch the tele all day? That's fun for what? Five minutes?"

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I am~ Ringo Starr
My controller is~ 22 Paul McCartney 22
Bio: Ringo Starr was born Richard B. Starkey in 1940 with his father & his mother. His father being a baker gave him a lot of sugar up until he left 3 years after little Richie was born. After wards Ringo began to have health problems, mostly in his pelvis and such. Resulting to surgery that also resulted into him having a great scar on his lower belly. Which is why he never wore regular swimsuits, but ones that go over his belly button. He had a complex about it

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I am~ John Lennon
My controller is~ 22 Paul McCartney 22
Bio: John Winston Lennon was born on 9 October 1940, in Liverpool Maternity Hospital, Oxford Street, Liverpool, to Julia and Alfred Lennon. According to some biographers, a German air raid was taking place, and Julia's sister, Mary "Mimi" Smith, used the light cast by the explosions to see her way as she ran through the blacked-out back roads to reach the hospital two miles away. Smith said later, "I knew the moment I saw John in that hospital that I was the one to be his mother, not Julia. Does that sound awful? It isn't, really, because Julia accepted it as something perfectly natural. She used to say, 'You're his real mother. All I did was give birth.'” Lennon was named after his paternal grandfather, John "Jack" Lennon, and Winston Churchill
Lennon's father, a merchant seaman during World War II, was often away from home and sent regular pay cheques to 9 Newcastle Road, Liverpool, where Lennon lived with his mother. The cheques stopped when Alfred Lennon went absent without leave in 1943. When he eventually came home in 1944, he offered to look after the family, but his wife (who was pregnant with another man's child) rejected the idea. Under considerable pressure, she handed the care of Lennon over to her sister after the latter registered a complaint with Liverpool's Social Services. In July 1946, Lennon's father visited Smith and took his son to Blackpool, secretly intending to emigrate to New Zealand with him. Lennon's mother followed them, and, after a heated argument, his father forced the five-year-old to choose between his parents. Lennon chose his father—twice. As his mother walked away, Lennon began to cry and followed her. Lennon then lost contact with his father for twenty years.
Throughout the rest of his childhood and adolescence, Lennon lived with his aunt and uncle, Mimi and George Smith, at Mendips, 251 Menlove Avenue, Woolton. In September 1980, Lennon would have this to say about his childhood, his family and his rebellious nature:
Part of me would like to be accepted by all facets of society and not be this loudmouthed lunatic musician. But I cannot be what I am not. Because of my attitude, all the other boys' parents ... instinctively recognised what I was, which was a troublemaker, meaning I did not conform and I would influence their kids, which I did. ... I did my best to disrupt every friend's home ... Partly, maybe, it was out of envy that I didn't have this so-called home. But I really did ... There were five women who were my family. Five strong, intelligent women. Five sisters. One happened to be my mother. ... She just couldn't deal with life. She had a husband who ran away to sea and the war was on and she couldn't cope with me, and when I was four and a half, I ended up living with her elder sister. Now, those women were fantastic. ... That was my first feminist education ... that knowledge and the fact that I wasn't with my parents made me see that parents are not gods.
The couple had no children of their own. His aunt bought him volumes of short stories, and his uncle, who was a dairyman at his family's farm, bought him a harmonica and engaged him in solving crossword puzzles. Lennon's mother visited Mendips almost every day, and when he was 11 he often visited her at 1 Blomfield Road, Liverpool. She played him Elvis Presley records, and taught him to play the banjo. The first song he learned to play was Fats Domino's "Ain't That A Shame".
Lennon regularly visited his cousin Stanley Parkes in Fleetwood. Seven years Lennon's senior, Parkes frequently took him on trips, and the pair enjoyed films together at the local cinema. During the school holidays, Parkes often visited Lennon with Leila, another cousin, and they would all go to Blackpool on the tram two or three times a week to watch shows. They would visit the Blackpool Tower Circus and see artists such as Dickie Valentine, Arthur Askey, Max Bygraves and Joe Loss. Parkes recalls that Lennon particularly liked George Formby. They regularly passed Formby's house on the bus journey from Preston to Fleetwood, often spotting the singer and his wife sitting in deck chairs in their front garden and exchanging waves with them. Parkes and Lennon were keen fans of Fleetwood Flyers Speedway Club and Fleetwood Town FC. After Parkes's family moved to Scotland, the three cousins often spent their school holidays together there. Parkes recalled, "John, cousin Leila and I were very close. From Edinburgh we would bundle into the car and head up to the family croft at Durness. That went on from about the time John was nine years old until he was about 16".
Lennon was raised as an Anglican and attended Dovedale Primary School. From September 1952 to 1957, after passing his Eleven-Plus exam, he attended Quarry Bank High School in Liverpool, where he was known as a "happy-go-lucky" pupil, drawing comical cartoons and mimicking his teachers. He was 14 years old when his uncle died in June 1955.
Lennon's mother bought him his first guitar in 1957, a cheap Gallotone Champion acoustic "guaranteed not to split". She arranged for it to be delivered to her own house, knowing that her sister, sceptical of Lennon's claim that he would be famous one day, hoped he would grow bored with music, often telling him, "The guitar's all very well, John, but you'll never make a living out of it". On 15 July 1958, when Lennon was 17, his mother, out walking near the Smiths' house, was struck by a car and killed.
Lennon failed all his GCE O-level examinations, and was only accepted into the Liverpool College of Art after his aunt and headmaster intervened. Once at the college, he wore Teddy Boy clothes and acquired a reputation for disrupting classes and ridiculing teachers. As a result, he was excluded from first the painting class and then the graphic arts course. He was threatened with expulsion for his behavior, which included sitting on a nude model's lap during a life drawing class. He failed an annual exam, despite help from fellow student and future wife Cynthia Powell, and dropped out of college before his final year.

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~others~
I am Clare Carter
How many years have im been living 22
I Like Love, Peace, The Beatles, Playing the Guitar and piano, and writing.
I Hate war, hate, quietness, and being away from music
Some might say im nice, kind, sweet, very musical, quiet when i don' know people (But that won't be long), and very strong.
I look like