Late British acting royalty Robert Morley was the father of the man behind beloved South Tampa pub Mad Dogs and Englishmen. Wilton Morley, 71, grew up surrounded by seemingly endless elements of show biz. Whether he was hanging out with his maternal grandmother Dame Gladys Cooperโwho portrayed Mrs. Higgins in โMy Fair Ladyโ in 1964โor drinking tea with Humphrey Bogart, there never seemed to be a shortage of stardom in his life.
One of his dadโs best friends was fellow British actor David Tomlinson, best known for having portrayed George Banks in โMary Poppins.โ Tomlinsonโs son, Willieโwho dealt with autismโinspired Robert to raise money to assist in opening a new home for autistic children in 1967, a year in which autism was hardly recognized at all.
โHe was trying to get all his showbiz acquaintances to give a thousand pounds each and was not having much luck,โ Wilton told Creative Loafing Tampa Bay. As a result, Wilton told his father to reach out to The Beatles.
The bandโs soon-to-flop Apple Boutique was virtually right next door to his father-in-law Herbert Buckmasterโs members-only club Buckโs, located on Old Burlington Street, which runs off Savile Row. Not to mention that The Beatles almost certainly knew his films, having grown up while he was at the top. Robert seemed to have plenty of hope in his heart that members of the biggest band in the world could help him out with his major act of kindness in some way, even if it meant giving him some free clothing from the boutique, which shuttered less than a year later.
Robert headed for Apple a few days later to make his proposal, and met up with no other than John Lennon himself. The Beatleโwho was shot dead in New York’s Central Park 42 years ago on Dec. 8, 1980โwas so intrigued and touched by the actorโs idea that he threw ยฃ2000 towards the new home. A week later, Robert took Lennonโas well as longtime Beatles roadie and assistant Mal Evansโdown to the existing, run-down home, in an effort to show them what was going on, and why a new one needed to be established as soon as possible.
The three engaged with the children as much as they could, and Lennon in particular was very good at playing with one child, who kept knocking a small trash can full of paper over. Every time the child did it, Lennon would put all the paper back in, and the cycle would start anew for about an hour.
Later that night, while heading back to London, Lennon asked Robert if he would play Father Christmas at an upcoming party for Apple employees that both marked the holiday season, and the launch of the Magical Mystery Tour era. Both the EP and film released in December 1967, following the prior U.S. release of the yellow-covered album on Capitol Records.
Morley accepted Lennonโs offer, and went on to play Father Christmas at what evolved from an enigmatic event that was only billed as something to do with Magical Mystery Tour, to one of the most star-studded, extravagant shindigs ever put on by the Fab Four.
The entire cast of the new film was invited, and an entire Christmas feast was provided for all attendees. A number of unannounced stars showed up to perform, too. The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band put on one of their sessions, Lennonโs father Alfredโa banjo playerโjoined in the fun, and even Mike Love and Bruce Johnston of The Beach Boys showed up as last-minute guests.
And rest assured, Morleyโwho was giving out chocolate bars and other holiday related noveltiesโwas not the only one in costume. Cilla Black came dressed as Charlie Chaplin, Ringo Starr a regency buck, and Paul McCartney and at-the-time girlfriend Jane Asher were clad in โpearly king and queenโ regalia.
The day after the party, Robert got a telegram from the Beatles, thanking him for being such a great Father Christmas the night before. โI have it somewhere, only wish I could find it,โ Wilton told CL Tampa.
Not many Floridians can say that John, Paul, George, and Ringo were mutual friends, so hereโs hoping itโs just safely lying in a box somewhere.
This article appears in Dec 1-7, 2022.

