Hundreds of screaming teenage girls descended on Sydney airport to greet the Rolling Stones in 1965. Some had slept out overnight; several were injured. ‘It was worth it – I got to touch him!’, one fervently declared.
Hundreds of screaming teenage girls descended on Sydney airport to greet the Rolling Stones in 1965. Some had slept out overnight; several were injured. ‘It was worth it – I got to touch him!’, one fervently declared.
Not everyone was pleased when British band The Rolling Stones arrived in Australia in early 1965. The Sydney Morning Herald declared they had ‘Ugly Looks, Ugly Speech, Ugly Manners’. Perhaps unsurprisingly, such claims did little to disperse the hoards of fans who followed the tour. The aftermath of their concerts was a tableau of broken gates and fainting girls, a consequence of the mass hysteria their presence inspired. In these portraits, renowned Sydney photographer David Moore captures both the sloppy, understated style the group cultivated – as modelled by frontman Mick Jagger – and the maniacal ardour aroused in the Stones’ young fans.