Eleanor Rigby (statue)
{{Short description|Statue in Liverpool, England}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2025}}
{{Use British English|date=April 2015}}
Eleanor Rigby is a statue in Stanley Street, Liverpool, England, designed and made by the entertainer Tommy Steele. It is based on the subject of the Beatles' 1966 song "Eleanor Rigby", which is credited to the Lennon–McCartney partnership.
History
When Tommy Steele was performing in a show in Liverpool in 1981, he made an offer to Liverpool City Council to create a sculpture as a tribute to the Beatles. His fee for the commission would be three pence (half a sixpence).{{efn|This was an allusion to Steele's musical show and film Half a Sixpence.}} The offer was accepted by the council, as the statue would be expected to increase the tourist trade of the city, and they made a donation of £4,000 towards its cost. The project was otherwise funded by the Liverpool Echo.{{cite web|last=Fontenot|first=Robert|url=http://oldies.about.com/od/thebeatlessongs/a/eleanorrigby_2.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150906092353/http://oldies.about.com/od/thebeatlessongs/a/eleanorrigby_2.htm |title='Eleanor Rigby' – The history of this classic Beatles song [page 2]|publisher=oldies.about.com|archive-date=6 September 2015|access-date=11 March 2022}}
The statue took nine months to make. Steele unveiled it in Liverpool on 3 December 1982.{{Citation | last = Cavanagh| first = Terry | year = 1997| title = Public Sculpture of Liverpool| publication-place = Liverpool| publisher = Liverpool University Press| pages = 213–214 | isbn = 978-0-853-23711-2}}
Description
The statue consists of a bronze figure on a stone bench. The figure is {{convert|128|cm}} tall, {{convert|120|cm}} wide, and {{convert|96|cm}} deep. It depicts a seated woman with a handbag on her lap, a shopping bag on her right, and a copy of the Liverpool Echo on her left. Poking from the shopping bag is a milk bottle, and on the newspaper is a sparrow and a piece of bread. The woman is looking down at the sparrow.
Steele included what he described as "magical properties" in his design, all hidden inside the bronze figure and representing a different facet of life. These were: a four-leaf clover (for good luck), a page from the Bible (for spiritual guidance), football boots (representing sport and fun), a comic book (for comedy and adventure), and a sonnet (for love).
On the wall behind the figure is an inscribed plaque which originally read:{{citation needed|date=January 2019}}
{{centre|DEDICATED TO}}
{{centre|"ALL THE LONELY PEOPLE ..."}}
{{centre|This statue was sculpted and donated to the City of Liverpool}}
{{centre|by Tommy Steele as a tribute to the Beatles.}}
{{centre|The casting was sponsored by the Liverpool Echo.}}
{{centre|DECEMBER 1982}}
This inscription has since been replaced.
File:Eleanor Rigby plaque.jpg|The plaque as it appears in 2018
File:Eleanor Rigby face.jpg|Close-up of Eleanor's face
File:Eleanor Rigby sparrow.jpg|Close-up of the sparrow at which Eleanor is looking
Notes and references
Notes
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Citations
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{{The Beatles|state=collapsed}}
Category:Outdoor sculptures in Liverpool
Category:Monuments and memorials to the Beatles
Category:Statues of women in England
Category:Bronze sculptures in England
Category:Monuments and memorials in Liverpool