Shaky finances may have prompted Cynthia, 51, to sell the collection, expected to fetch about $100,000. Divorced in 1968 after six years of marriage and the 1963 birth of their son, Julian, Cynthia received a paltry £100,000 from Lennon. In ensuing years, her income was "never stable," says Cynthia, whose London restaurant, Lennon's, served Rubber Sole but flopped. After appearing at some recent Beatle fests, Cynthia decided, "I'd had enough. I thought, 'Do I want to be wheeled onto television programs in a wheelchair at 70, discussing the Beatles and John?' I just can't face that."
Cynthia, who lives on the Isle of Man with her business manager and companion of 10 years, Jim Christie, 47, insists she doesn't want to forget John—nor could she. "All my memories are intact," she says. "But the past is over now."
Saved by the Bell Reunion
The hookups, the meltdowns, the memoires
The case reveals what was really going on what they think of each other now!















