Heather McCartney
Parents: Linda McCartney and Joseph Melville See (adopted by Paul McCartney)
Born: December 31, 1962
In addition to being the daughter of Linda McCartney and the late Joseph Melville See, Heather McCartney also a descendant of the legendary McCartney family. Paul McCartney became her legal adoptive father in 1969 when she was six years old, owing to her parents’ divorce while she was a child and her mother’s marriage to Paul McCartney when she was six years old in 1969. Her maternal father had a profound impact on her and she has always believed Paul to be her biological father as a result of this influence. Heather has always had a keen interest in the performing and visual arts. She obtained her bachelor’s degree in ceramics and architecture from an art institution where she had studied pottery and architecture. After moving to Arizona with her biological father later in life, she eventually returned to England to pursue a ceramics profession. She is the daughter of a ceramicist and a painter.
Kyoko Chan Cox
Parents: Yoko Ono and Anthony Cox (adopted by John Lennon)
Born: August 8, 1963
John and Yoko’s daughter from their former marriage to American director and art promoter Anthony Cox was born shortly after their marriage in 1969, and John was designated as the child’s paternal grandfather by the court. Yoko Ono and her ex-husband were involved in a severe custody dispute over their daughter at one time during the early years of their marriage, which ended in divorce. Following his ordeal, John wrote the song “Don’t Worry Kyoko (Mummy’s Just Looking for Her Hand in the Snow)” (Mummy’s Just Looking for Her Hand in the Snow) for his daughter as a result of his ordeal. The Plastic Ono Band, which included members such as John Lennon, Ringo Starr, and Eric Clapton, among others, collaborated on the song’s composition. Kyoko was kidnapped by Cox when she was eight years old and raised as Ruth Holman by Cox and her family after being taken from her parents. Unlike her, he was a member of The Living Word Fellowship, which was a religious cult at the time of his arrest. Kyoko didn’t see her mother again until she was an adult in the 1990s, after leaving the cult with her father in the 1970s. Kyoko was raised by her father in the cult. However, Kyoko’s background is unknown, but she is claimed to be a retired schoolteacher who is married and the mother of two children, according to sources.