Chris O'Dell

Chris O’Dell poses for a photo outside her Tucson home today. A new documentary film documents her career in the music industry, from her early days working for the Beatles to her later role as a tour manager for the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, the Grateful Dead, Led Zeppelin, Queen and Linda Ronstadt, to name a few.

Chris O’Dell’s wild ride through the glory days of rock ’n’ roll always seemed like something out of a movie.

Now it is.

The new feature-length documentary called β€œMiss O’Dell” chronicles the Tucson woman’s career in the music industry, from her early days working for the Beatles to her later role as a tour manager for the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, the Grateful Dead, Led Zeppelin, Queen and Linda Ronstadt, to name a few.

The film will make its world premiere in Tucson on April 11, when The Loft Cinema hosts an already sold-out screening in its 370-seat main theater.

Photos from Chris O’Dell’s personal archive show her with some of the most iconic musicians in history, from Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones, to Ringo Starr of the Beatles, to Bob Dylan, Roger McGuinn (of the Byrds) and T Bone Burnette. Others in her photo array include Sam Shepherd (the playwright and actor), May Pang (a John Lennon girlfriend), Louie Kemp (producer of Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue shows), Leslie Cavendish (the Beatles’ hairdresser) and Mic Ronson (a guitarist who worked with David Bowie).

β€œIt’s kind of amazing, because Tucson has been such a big part of my life,” O’Dell said. β€œI grew up here. I left. I came back a long time ago, and now I’m watching a documentary come out in Tucson. It’s so hard to explain the feeling, but it’s almost unbelievable.”

The Palo Verde High School graduate left the Old Pueblo for Los Angeles in 1966 at the age of 19. After menial work at the periphery of the recording industry, she lucked into a job as a personal assistant at the Beatles’ Apple Records in London in 1968.

She would spend the next two decades working with some of the biggest names in rock music, blazing a trail as one of the only female tour managers in a male-dominated business.

Tucsonan Chris O’Dell with George Harrison. O’Dell worked for the Beatles’ Apple Records in London in the late 1960s and briefly lived with Harrison and his then-wife, Pattie Boyd, at their Friar Park mansion outside the city.

Her voice is part of the chorus at the end of the Beatles’ β€œHey Jude.” Her face shows up in the cover-art collage for the Rolling Stones album β€œExile on Main St.” Her family snapshots have Ringo Starr in them.

The documentary borrows its name from a song George Harrison wrote about O’Dell and later released as the B-side to his 1973 solo hit β€œGive Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth).”

β€œMiss O’Dell” is also the title of her 2009 memoir about her charmed, exhausting and sometimes painful rock music odyssey.

Liverpool West Productions, which made the film, describes it as a β€œbackstage VIP pass to the life of a woman who saw it all.”

Watch the preview for "Miss O'Dell," the new documentary about Tucson resident Chris O'Dell's wild ride through rock music history, which premiere's April 11 at The Loft Cinema.

Lofty debut

The movie premiere in Tucson will feature a live concert by an all-star band of local musicians performing songs by some of the legendary acts O’Dell worked with.

After the screening, O’Dell will take part in a question-and-answer session and sign copies of her memoir.

A number of celebrities recorded video messages that will be played to introduce the documentary, including Ronstadt, Bobby Whitlock from Derek and the Dominos, and May Pang, a long-time friend of O’Dell’s whose affair with John Lennon was chronicled in the documentary β€œThe Lost Weekend: A Love Story.”

Tucsonan Chris O’Dell, pictured here with Mick Jagger, worked for the Rolling Stones in the early 1970s.

O’Dell appears briefly in that film, and she helped introduce it when it debuted at The Loft in 2023.

Jeff Yanc, program director for The Loft, said world premieres are rare at the historic, nonprofit arthouse theater on East Speedway, but this one β€œmakes total sense.”

β€œIt was kind of a no-brainer to me,” he said. β€œTucsonans love movies about Tucsonans.”

The Loft has scheduled daily screenings of β€œMiss O’Dell” through April 17. The movie is slated to debut on streaming platforms on May 13.

Since there are no more tickets available for opening night, O’Dell plans to return to The Loft for the evening show on April 12 and the matinee on April 13 to sign some more books and answer questions from audience members.

Chris O'Dell, left, who worked at the Apple Records, laughing next to Rolling Stones lead singer Mick Jagger.

London calling

She said she was first approached about making a documentary in 2022, when movie producer Doug Schwab tracked her down while she was signing copies of her memoir at the annual Fest For Beatles Fans in New Jersey.

β€œHe bought a book and left his card and said, β€˜I’d like to maybe talk to you about a project,’” she recalled. β€œI’m like, β€˜Yeah, right, sure.’”

Then, on the last day of the convention, she was met in her hotel lobby by British director Simon Weitzman, who doubled down on Schwab’s pitch. β€œAnd when someone tells you something in an English accent, you believe it,” O’Dell said with a laugh.

Chris O’Dell says this is how she spent much of her career in the music industry: with a phone to her ear, making tour or travel arrangements for some band or another.

The documentary was shot in London and Los Angeles in 2023. Among those interviewed were influential BBC music show host β€œWhispering Bob” Harris and English musician, manager and record producer Peter Asher, who was O’Dell’s boss at Apple Records.

β€œThe majority of it is really Beatle-focused,” she said of the documentary.

As part of the filming in London, she strolled across Abbey Road and returned to the site of the Fab Four’s iconic 1969 concert on the rooftop at Apple, which turned out to be their final live performance before they broke up. In photos from that famous, frigid day, O’Dell is the young woman with the blond bob, sitting against the chimney three seats down from Yoko Ono.

Chris O’Dell sits at the base of the chimneys, far right, during the Beatles’ famous rooftop concert in London on Jan. 30, 1969.

O’Dell also appeared on camera in β€œMiss O’Dell” with her friend Pattie Boyd, the British model who famously divorced George Harrison and later married Eric Clapton β€” in Tucson, coincidentally enough β€” after he declared his love for her in the song β€œLayla.”

The women laughed and swapped stories about the old days, including the time O’Dell spent a few months living with Boyd and Harrison at Friar Park, the famous Victorian estate outside of London that served as the musician’s primary home and recording studio.

Boyd later recorded an introductory message for the movie premiere.

Taste of fame

Now O’Dell said she and her friend are in the early stages of completing a project that the two of them started working on together in the 1980s: Interviews and portraits of some of rock music’s most famous wives and exes.

O’Dell said they profiled about a dozen women, including Linda McCartney (Paul’s wife and a former Arizona Wildcat); Shirley Watts (wife of Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts); Maureen Starkey (Ringo’s first wife); Jill Collins (Phil Collins’ second wife); and Nicole Winwood (then married to Steve Winwood).

Tucsonan Chris O’Dell shares an embrace with Keith Richards in 1972, during her time working for the Rolling Stones.

Boyd took the photographs while O’Dell conducted the interviews. β€œThey are literally conversations on a really old tape recorder,” she said.

They hope to use modern technology to clean up the recordings for eventual use in a documentary and a companion book about what it was like for these women to live inside the whirlwind of rock ’n’ roll fame.

And O’Dell is about to get her own small taste of that, as her story makes its way to the big screen.

Though the run-up to the premiere has been hectic, she said the experience of making the film was β€œactually kind of fun,” thanks in no small part to her director.

β€œWe worked on a pretty small budget, and Simon did an amazing job with what he had to work with,” she said.

O’Dell is glad she said yes to the guys who approached her at that Beatles convention three years ago, and she’s flattered that they wanted to make a movie about her life in the first place.

β€œIt’s really nice that someone wanted to do that,” the 78-year-old said. β€œYou know, for many years, I was referred to as a groupie, or I was not referred to at all. I was back in the background. To be brought out of the background is validating.”

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Contact reporter Henry Brean at hbrean@tucson.com. On Twitter: @RefriedBrean