When The Beatles dissolved, Paul McCartney lost more than a band. He lost the framework around which his entire professional identity had been built. What came next — the uncertainty, the freedom, the grief of an ending he hadn’t chosen — required something he hadn’t expected to find in a two-word phrase from his wife.
In the new documentary “Paul McCartney: Man on the Run,” directed by Morgan Neville, the 83-year-old music legend reflects with remarkable candor on that period of his life — and on the woman whose outlook on the world quietly remade his own.
The Beatles’ breakup left McCartney unmoored in ways that went beyond the professional.
“In a situation like that you lost your job, you can get uptight very easily,” he said in the documentary. The pressure to define what came next — and the invisible rules he felt constrained by — weighed heavily on him.
It was Linda who cut through it.
“One of my favorite expressions of hers was, you’d be saying, ‘Oh, I don’t know. I’d love to do so and so, but I can’t. I can’t,’ and she’d say, ‘it’s allowed,'” Paul recalled. “It’s like all the weight just went off. It’s allowed. Yeah, of course it is.”
He added that the phrase ultimately reshaped his sense of what was possible: “Those kind of things really impressed me and I think probably made me think a lot more was allowed than was.”
Two words. Decades of impact.
The Woman Behind the Mantra
To understand why Linda’s philosophy resonated so deeply with Paul, it helps to understand where it came from.
Linda had grown up in a “posh” area of New York, Paul explained — a background that put her on a conventional trajectory. But she consistently rejected that path. She was drawn to rock and roll, and had a habit of “sneaking out of the house late at night” to drive into New York City — a small but telling act of quiet rebellion that defined a larger orientation toward life.
“There was a lot of freedom in her thinking,” Paul said. “I think that’s really was good for me.”
Linda and Paul first met in 1967 while she was working as a photographer — a profession their eldest daughter Mary would later carry forward. The couple married in March 1969 and went on to have three children together: Mary, Stella, and James.
Paul described Linda as “a freeing influence” throughout their marriage — not just philosophically, but practically.
After The Beatles ended, Paul formed Wings — and Linda was not simply a supportive presence on the sidelines. She joined the band full-time as a keyboardist and vocalist, becoming an active creative participant in one of the most commercially successful acts of the decade.
Wings produced a remarkable run of hits — “Band on the Run,” “Live and Let Die,” and “My Love” among them — and earned two Grammy Awards.
Looking back on that period now, Paul says what strikes him most is the quality of Linda’s voice — raw, untrained, and entirely her own.
“I think wait a minute there was no auto tune. We didn’t have any of… that’s real,” he said. “She hadn’t had any lessons and it was just a love of singing. I liked her voice. Her style was not operatic. It was not blues.”
He described hearing “these beautiful harmonies coming from Linda” in recordings and still finding himself standing in awe.
Nearly 30 Years Together — and a Grief That Lasted a Year
Paul and Linda were married for nearly three decades before breast cancer took her life in 1998 at the age of 58. The loss, by Paul’s own account, was devastating in ways that resisted easy description.
In a separate interview with BBC Radio Scotland’s Ricky Ross, Paul spoke with quiet vulnerability about the months that followed her death.
“I think I cried for about a year on and off,” he said. “You expect to see them walk in, this person you love, because you are so used to them. I cried a lot. It was almost embarrassing except it seemed the only thing to do.”
The Family Linda Left Behind
Linda’s influence has continued to ripple through the generations that followed her.
Their eldest daughter, Mary, became a photographer — directly following in her mother’s professional footsteps. Their middle child, Stella, became one of the fashion world’s most prominent designers, once describing herself as “one of the first nepo-babies” in a 2023 Time interview. Their son, James, pursued music — collaborating with Sean Lennon, son of Paul’s former Beatles bandmate John Lennon, to write the 2024 song “Primrose Hill.”
Paul also shares a daughter, Beatrice, with his second wife, Heather Mills, and was stepfather to Linda’s daughter Heather from her first marriage.
More than five decades after The Beatles ended and more than two decades after losing Linda, Paul McCartney is still finding words for what she meant to him. In a career defined by some of the most celebrated music ever recorded, it is a two-word phrase from his late wife — “it’s allowed” — that he returns to as one of the most transformative things he ever heard. For a man who spent years navigating the wreckage of one of history’s greatest musical partnerships, that permission to simply be free may have been the most valuable gift of all.

