Princess Diana, Barbie and now the Beatles.
All have been subjects of exhibits at the Mall of America, which on Thursday opens a new Midwest Music Museum with the touring show "Ladies and Gentlemen, the Beatles."
The museum is the first of three phases of a new fourth-floor entertainment complex at the megamall, including a restaurant and a live-music club. No opening dates have been set for those but Denny Laine, formerly of the Moody Blues and Paul McCartney's Wings, is scheduled to play there Aug. 1.
The museum exhibit is all about Beatlemania and, specifically, when the Fab Four performed in the United States from 1964 to '66.
"A crowd of about 30,000 people — mostly squirming, writhing, clapping teenagers — screamed and screeched their approval of the Beatles Saturday night at Metropolitan Stadium," began a front-page story in the Aug. 22, 1965, Minneapolis Tribune, one of many artifacts in the exhibit.
Some treasures might be more exciting to Beatlemaniacs.
There's McCartney's jacket from the group's 1965 concert at Shea Stadium in New York (though the Wells Fargo agent's badge on it is a replica).
There are several Beatles vinyl discs, including a 1961 German single of "My Bonnie" by Tony Sheridan and the Beat Brothers. (They couldn't use "The Beatles" because that word is phonetically similar to a German vulgarity.)