Today in 2000 marked a quiet, almost invisible turning point in music history.
Backstage at Cirque du Soleil’s O in Las Vegas, George Harrison and Paul McCartney stood together in public for the very last time. No press conference. No microphones. No grand farewell. Just two former bandmates, bound by a past that had already reshaped the world, sharing a moment few realized would be final.

The setting itself felt symbolic. O — a dreamlike production of water, light, and controlled chaos — mirrored the strange place the Beatles’ legacy occupied by the turn of the millennium. Monumental, untouchable, yet deeply human beneath the spectacle. George and Paul were there not as pop idols, but as witnesses to an idea still evolving: how their music could live on without them standing at the center of it.
By 2000, George Harrison was already battling declining health, though the public knew little of how serious things had become. Paul, ever forward-moving, was deeply involved in shaping the future of the Beatles’ catalog, particularly through the Cirque du Soleil project that would soon become LOVE. That night backstage, there was no sense of promotion — only recognition. A shared understanding of where they had been, and how little control they truly had over where the story would go next.

What makes this moment so haunting is its ordinariness. No tension. No visible drama. Just a brief convergence of two lives that had once been inseparable. Within a year, George would be gone. And with him, any chance of another shared appearance, another photograph, another quiet exchange between the men who once helped define an entire generation’s sound.

Years later, this fleeting moment resurfaced in the 2008 All Together Now documentary. From that footage, the bottom image was captured and carefully part-colourized — not to modernize it, but to gently pull it out of the shadows. To remind us that this wasn’t myth. It happened. Two Beatles, side by side, unaware they were closing a chapter forever.
Looking back now, the image feels almost unbearably intimate. Not because of what they are doing — but because of what they are not. They are not performing. Not explaining. Not revisiting old wounds. They are simply there. And sometimes, in rock history, that’s when the most important moments slip by unnoticed — until time teaches us what we lost.
In the end, this wasn’t a reunion. It was a goodbye that didn’t know it was one.