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The Man Who Would Be King; Upcoming CBS miniseries on rise of Elvis should show the man as he was.
WEEKLY STANDARD.COM ^ | MAY 6, 2005 | MICHAEL POTTS

Posted on 05/09/2005 9:57:36 PM PDT by CHARLITE

WHEN ELVIS PRESLEY STROLLED onto the stage for his last performance, there was something different about him. His face had swelled, and his gut was pregnant with obesity. His hair and signature sideburns overran his head and face, and his movements, karate kicks, and hip swivels, were no longer crisp or energetic. He could still sing--he never lost that--and he still had a charismatic stage presence, and he could still send fans into a frenzy. But for years leading up to his death, it seemed the brightness that once shone from this superstar came more from his sequin-adorned jumpsuits than from the man himself.

Today it seems Presley is worth more dead than alive. In the first three years after Presley's death, his estate earned more money than in his entire career. His Graceland mansion is second only to the White House as the most-visited home in the nation. And each year, Elvis books and commemorative merchandise are produced, new Elvis CDs are released, and Elvis documentaries and TV movies are aired.

Recent years prove January and August to be the "months of Elvis," when countless movies and television specials mark Presley's birthday and anniversary of death. But May is making the competition stiff. This month Sony BMG will release a new two-CD set commemorating the legendary singer. Complementing the set will be a new book from Crown Publishers. Both share the title: Elvis By The Presleys.

The CD set should be well received by Presley fans. It features a very playful rendition of Too Much Monkey Business, several takes of Jailhouse Rock, revealing how the rock anthem developed, and private recordings by Presley. The book should be just as successful. It is chock full of anecdotes from friends and family, as well as rare photographs. A close up photo of a bullet riddled television captures just one of Presley's moods.

Then comes a two hour television special, also entitled Elvis By The Presleys, set to air on CBS on May 13. The special will feature never-before-seen footage of Presley's performances and family home movies, along with photographs from the Presley Estate archives. Interviews with Presley family members, including former wife Pricilla and daughter Lisa Marie, will also highlight the special.

Just when you thought the show was over, Presley is back for another encore. Enter Elvis, an upcoming CBS miniseries chronicling Presley's life and rise to stardom. The two-part, four hour miniseries will air on May 8 and 11. What makes this project so rare is that it has acquired the endorsement and cooperation of the Presley Estate; it also gained access to Presley's master recordings. It is the largest of the four Presley projects this month; Todd Morgan, Director of Media and Creative Development for Elvis Presley Enterprises, hopes Elvis "will be a ratings champ."

More than likely, Morgan's wish will come true. Twenty-eight years after his death, Presley is still a gold mine. But will this new installment to Everything Elvis present anything different from what we've seen so far? Val Kilmer, Harvey Keitel, and Don Johnson have already taken on the role of the famed rock'n'roller, and a pre-teen Kurt Russell appeared with Presley in It Happened at the World's Fair before taking on the role himself in a 1979 TV movie. Russell donned a jumpsuit again some twenty years later in 3,000 Miles to Graceland.

Although there have been satisfactory portrayals--Russell's version is perhaps the highest praised--the bad far outweigh the good. In fact, none has accurately captured Presley in full--not his career, not his personal life. Minor details to the average viewer are enormous to fervent Presley fans. For instance, many past films cast a star with too young or too old an appearance to play both phases of Presley's life. There's the actor-turned-Elvis on stage (poorly) lip-syncing songs from the wrong era, handing out sweat drenched scarves while in the famous black leather suit (wrong era again), or wearing Hawaiian lei while sporting the Butterfly jumpsuit (wrong suit, wrong concert, and wrong year). Again, to Elvis fans, these are serious mistakes.

Then there are the lights in which Presley is shown. There have been very few balanced biopics. He is either shown as a flawless rock god, or as a drug induced, gun wielding madman obsessed with peanut butter and banana sandwiches. As an Elvis fan myself, I do not cheer the glossed-over versions, nor do I scoff at the darker ones. As a true Elvis fan, I hope for both.

Todd Morgan agrees, saying, "A whitewash of Elvis would do almost as much a disservice to his legacy as a hatchet job." Neither the Estate nor the producers wanted that. "The estate did not want us to sugar-coat the details of Elvis's life," said Robert Greenblatt, one of the movie's four executive producers. Instead they wanted an "honest and accurate" account. "We think the movie is very balanced in showing the human side," Greenblatt continued, "as well as the side of Elvis that was somehow touched by a force that few people experience."

Greenblatt and David Janollari (Six Feet Under), along with Howard Braunstein and Michael Jaffe (It Must Be Love), are the executive producers of the CBS miniseries. Bend It Like Beckham star Jonathan Rhys Meyers took on the tall order of filling Presley's blue suede shoes for the movie. Asked whether casting an Irishman for the part of one of America's most beloved Southerners was a concern, Greenblatt responded that the concern lasted only "until we heard him speak in Elvis's southern dialect."

Indeed, Rhys Meyers should be the least concern for the project. He nails the dialect and possesses an uncanny likeness to Presley. Rounding out the cast is Rose McGowan (Charmed) as the singer-actress and Presley intimate Ann-Margret; Randy Quaid, perhaps best known for his roles in the National Lampoon's Vacation series, as Presley's manager Colonel Tom Parker; and Camryn Manheim (The Practice) and Robert Patrick (Terminator 2: Judgment Day) as Presley's parents.

Elvis will cover Presley's life up to 1968, when he staged a historic comeback from a long string of B-movies. In doing so, the movie covers Presley's meteoric rise and ends "on a hopeful note." When William Shakespeare wrote of Hamlet: "He was a man, take him for all in all. I shall not look upon his like again," he could have easily been writing about Presley.

It is true. We will never see another Elvis Presley. The closest we will get is on May 8, when Elvis takes the stage. But will they get it right? Here's what we should see: We should see a shy kid, awkward with girls, and a cocky rebel who had all the girls. We should see a loose-bodied, slick-haired singer, a poor, working-class kid who made it big and changed the world. If we see him as the American original he is--a folk hero, a country boy, a mamma's boy, a southerner, an entertainer, a musician, a revolutionary, a triumphant superstar and a defeated man--than Elvis will surely hit its mark when the curtain rises.

Michael Potts is a staff assistant at The Weekly Standard


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cbs; elvispresley; family; genuine; graceland; memorabilia; miniseries; photos; portrayal; rockroll; theking
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1 posted on 05/09/2005 9:57:37 PM PDT by CHARLITE
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To: CHARLITE

I was exhausted sunday so I sat down for a rare spot of TV watching. I tuned into the elvis miniseries and was actually impressed that they did that good of a job on it. Maybe it was just the fatigue or maybe it was that actors all did a great job.


2 posted on 05/09/2005 10:04:48 PM PDT by flashbunny
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To: CHARLITE

I saw the Sunday half of the miniseries and thought it was pretty good. But, then, I'm not an Elvis devotee so I probably would not be upset if there were a few inaccuracies.

I thought the guy playing Tom Parker looked familiar but I just couldn't place it. Now, I know.

Some people are just icons because they were pioneers who not only covered new ground but set the standard for all after them. There won't be another Wayne Gretzky or Babe Ruth or Johnny Carson or Clark Gable. And there will never be another Elvis Presley.


3 posted on 05/09/2005 10:12:14 PM PDT by Tall_Texan (If you can think 180-degrees apart from reality, you might be a Democrat.)
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To: CHARLITE

Show the real Elvis?

Right. Like they've been showing the real FDR.


4 posted on 05/09/2005 10:14:42 PM PDT by mercy (never again a patsy for Bill Gates - spyware and viri free for over a year now)
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To: Tall_Texan

Good point. My sister is six years older than I. Born in 44. EP was a god to her. By the time music meant diddly to me it was the Beatles (although I was more into blues than most of my contemporaries) and Elvis was so .... Elvis, that is, history.

But he WAS the King. Too bad he muffed it.


5 posted on 05/09/2005 10:18:31 PM PDT by mercy (never again a patsy for Bill Gates - spyware and viri free for over a year now)
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To: CHARLITE

Besides Elvis's drug problem he was fine man. Name one person or child he ever hurt ?


6 posted on 05/09/2005 10:20:20 PM PDT by John Lenin (The truth is the opposite of whatever Dan Rather says it is)
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To: Tall_Texan
" There won't be another Wayne Gretzky or Babe Ruth or Johnny Carson or Clark Gable. And there will never be another Elvis Presley."

So true.......and never another John Wayne, Mickey Mantle, Joe DiMaggio, Ty Cobb, Barbara Stanwyck, Lana Turner, Bette Davis, Glenn Ford........or Ronald Reagan!

7 posted on 05/09/2005 10:31:34 PM PDT by CHARLITE (All the world's a stage............)
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To: John Lenin
"Besides Elvis's drug problem he was fine man. Name one person or child he ever hurt?"

That's so true. When I see this self-styled "King of Pop," it makes me sick.


8 posted on 05/09/2005 10:35:38 PM PDT by CHARLITE (All the world's a stage............)
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To: CHARLITE
We TV'od the Sunday show and just finished watching it. My only disappointment so far, and it is a minor one I admit, was the portrayal of Sam Phillips with only a small hint at what a genius that man truly was. When Elvis recorded at Sun, Sam also was recording, Roy Orbison, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash and the original 'Blue Suede Shoe's' Carl Perkins. Phillips knew what he had, knew he could not contain Elvis, but truly was dedicated to the music.

It is too bad that Elvis did not heed Mr. Phillips advice.

9 posted on 05/09/2005 10:37:49 PM PDT by Michael.SF.
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To: John Lenin

I think it was a PBS special that showed how Elvis would stay up all night with his band, after Vegas shows, singing Gospel songs


10 posted on 05/09/2005 10:38:45 PM PDT by churchillbuff
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To: CHARLITE
So true.......and never another... Ty Cobb, Pete Rose, Barry Bonds, Juan Marichal.

Thank goodness

11 posted on 05/09/2005 10:39:50 PM PDT by Michael.SF.
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To: churchillbuff; CHARLITE

"Elvis would stay up all night with his band, after Vegas shows, singing Gospel songs"

I personally heard the late Dr. Bill Bright, founder of Campus Crusade for Christ, say he had heard Elvis on his deathbed confess Jesus as his Savior. I believe he was indicating a deathbed salvation experience after a lifetime of being around the Gospel but not personally accepting it until his last few days. Elvis was no perfect angel (nor am I) but I am confident I'll see him in Heaven.


12 posted on 05/09/2005 10:58:13 PM PDT by The Spirit Of Allegiance (SAVE THE BRAINFOREST! Boycott the RED Dead Tree Media!)
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To: churchillbuff; CHARLITE

If I could be any pop/rock star in my lifetime it would be Elvis. The worst thing he did was lose the gorgeous looking Priscilla.


13 posted on 05/09/2005 11:01:58 PM PDT by John Lenin (The truth is the opposite of whatever Dan Rather says it is)
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To: Michael.SF.
"So true.......and never another... Ty Cobb, Pete Rose, Barry Bonds, Juan Marichal.
"Thank goodness"

Amen. You're funny! :)

14 posted on 05/09/2005 11:14:16 PM PDT by CHARLITE (All the world's a stage............)
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To: CHARLITE
I love the watch that Elvis is wearing in this photo.


15 posted on 05/09/2005 11:42:57 PM PDT by Eagle9
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To: John Lenin

Name one person or child he ever hurt ?


His wife and daughter, although not physically. His choice of life-style hurt millions.


16 posted on 05/10/2005 12:18:07 AM PDT by garylmoore (God Bless you W, you have prevailed.)
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To: John Lenin
Name one person or child he ever hurt?

I love Elvis, but he left his daughter without a daddy and she wound up married to Michael Jackson. That ain't right.

17 posted on 05/10/2005 1:06:01 AM PDT by rogue yam
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To: CHARLITE



              &nbs p;               &nbs p;  

18 posted on 05/10/2005 1:42:40 AM PDT by devolve (My WWII Tribute: http://pro.lookingat.us/WWII.html - more traffic than DU-Koz-LDot)
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To: CHARLITE
You're funny! :)

Thanks!

19 posted on 05/10/2005 6:55:39 AM PDT by Michael.SF.
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To: rogue yam

I mentioned that, but had he been around I doubt Lias Marie would have ever hooked up with MJ.


20 posted on 05/10/2005 7:49:49 AM PDT by John Lenin (The truth is the opposite of whatever Dan Rather says it is)
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