The N Number was N7201U, The Serial Number was 17907, it was the first B720 built and it was delivered to United Airlines on October 1960 and then purchased in 1973 by Contemporary Entertainment. Sherman and Sylvester invested $200,000 to reduce its seating capacity to forty and to install into the main cabin a bar, seats and tables, revolving arm chairs, a 30-foot-long couch, a television set and a video cassette player, complete with a well-stocked video library. An electronic organ was built into the bar, and at the rear of the craft were two back rooms, one with a low couch and pillows on the floor, and the other, a bedroom, complete with a white fur bedspread and shower room.
Here's a great photo of John Paul Jones on the electronic organ…
Here's a few shots of Jimmy Page & Robert Plant aboard "The Starship."
Flying on "The Starship," Led Zeppelin were no longer required to change hotels so often. They could base themselves in large cities such as Chicago, New York, Dallas and Los Angeles and travel to and from concerts within flying distance. After each show, the band members would be transported direct by limousine from the concert venue to the airport, as depicted in the Led Zeppelin concert film "The Song Remains the Same." For the 1973 tour The exterior of the plane was re-sprayed with Led Zeppelin emblazoned down the side of the fuselage (as pictured above). Throughout Led Zeppelin's 1975 US concert tour, "The Starship" was painted red-and-blue paint scheme with white stars similar to the United States flag, and with a smaller Led Zeppelin logo on the fuselage.
Here's an awesome photo of Robert Plant, John Paul Jones and Jimmy Page in "The Starship" sitting next to the fireplace during Led Zeppelin's 1975 Tour.
"The Starship" went through many owners from 1977 through 1979 until it went into storage at Luton Airport. It was dismantled for parts starting in July 1982.
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