Sir Paul McCartney was nearly HIT by a car at the zebra crossing

Sir Paul McCartney, 80, was nearly HIT by a car at the zebra crossing where the Beatles iconic Abbey Road album cover was photographed

Sir Paul McCartney was nearly hit by a car on the iconic crossing from his Abbey Road album cover during his time in the Beatles.

The anecdote was shared by Sir Paul’s daughter Mary, 53, who revealed her father was almost knocked down at the area where the 1969 cover was shot.

Mary revealed the near-miss happened when she wanted to recreate the zebra crossing moment in her new documentary, If These Walls Could Talk. 

Oh no! Sir Paul McCartney was nearly hit by a car on the iconic crossing from his Abbey Road album cover during his time in the Beatles

Mary recalled in an interview with the Mirror: ‘The bit where the car nearly ran him over on the zebra crossing, that was so funny.

‘As we were leaving [the studio], I said, ‘I’ll film you [on the crossing],’ and he went over and this car totally didn’t stop for him!’

Mary, who is the daughter of the late Linda McCartney, worked with her father on the new documentary which looks at the famous London recording studio.

Family: The anecdote was shared by Sir Paul’s daughter Mary (pictured), 53, who revealed her father was almost knocked down at the area where the 1969 cover was shot

It comes weeks after Sir Paul revealed that he ‘couldn’t talk about’ his friend and bandmate John Lennon’s death after his murder in 1980. 

He said he found it ‘so difficult’ after his former Beatles bandmate was gunned down outside his New York City apartment.

Sir Paul detailed how he returned home from the studio the day of his friends death and turned on the TV to see people reflecting on ‘what John meant’ to them. 

Sir Paul admitted he was not able to do the same due to the loss being ‘too deep’ and he was not able to ‘put it into words’. 

He said: ‘When John died it was so difficult. It had hit me so much that I couldn’t really talk about it. 

‘I remember getting home from the studio on the day that we’d heard the news he died. Turning the TV on and seeing people say, “Well, John Lennon was this” and “What he was, was this” and “I remember meeting him”. 

‘It had hit me so much’: He said he found it ‘so difficult’ after his former Beatles bandmate was gunned down outside his New York City apartment

‘I was like, “I can’t be one of those people. I can’t go on TV and say what John meant to me.” It was just too deep. I couldn’t put it into words.’ 

Sir Paul added how he managed to express his grief about losing John in his 1982 song Here Today. 

The artist revealed her ‘sat on the wooden floor in the corner with my guitar’ and came up with the opening chords to the track. 

Sir Paul also added that the line “the night we cried” referred to when he and his late pal, who was killed over 40 years ago, had a drunk heart-to-heart and ‘told each other a few truths’ and how much they loved each other.  

Mark David Chapman killed John Lennon on the night of December 8, 1980, as he and Yoko Ono were returning to their Upper West Side apartment.

He said: ‘When John died it was so difficult. It had hit me so much that I couldn’t really talk about it. It was just too deep. I couldn’t put it into words.’

The killer is serving a 20-years-to-life sentence at Green Haven Correctional Facility in New York´s Hudson Valley. 

He has repeatedly expressed remorse during his parole hearings over the years and has recently been denied parole for the twelfth time. 

In denying him release, the board mentioned Chapman’s action has left ‘the world recovering from the void of which you created.’ His next parole board appearance is scheduled for February 2024. 

Sir Paul is currently promoting documentary If These Walls Could Sing – a love letter to Abbey Road studios, where The Beatles recorded all of their albums – directed by his photographer daughter, Mary McCartney.

The Disney + film reveals the ‘untold story of the Abbey Road studio’ which is still considered ‘the heart of the music industry.’

‘In this personal film of memory and discovery, Mary McCartney guides us through nine decades to see and experience the creative magic that makes it the most famous and longest-running studio in the world,’ the synopsis reads.

The documentary features all-star appearances from the likes of Sir Elton John and Oasis legend Noel Gallagher, along with carefully curated archival footage and session tapes.

‘These conversations, paired with vivid archive footage and session tapes, give exclusive access to these famously private studios,’ the synopsis concludes.

If These Walls Could Sing is set for a global December 16 release on the streaming platform, but it has been delayed until January 6 for UK and Ireland viewers.

Opening up: Sir Paul added how he ‘sat on the floor with my guitar’ and expressed his grief about losing John, and came up with the opening chords for his 1982 song Here Today

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