“Elvis On Beale” restored to glory [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 20 when I wrote this article back in 1995 for The Elvis Beat #12, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


The restoration of the statue formerly known as “Elvis On Beale” has been completed. Although the awesome Memphis statue, created by Eric Parks, once had an outside home on Beale Street, it will now be displayed inside a new Tennessee welcome center, scheduled to be opened in Memphis by early next year.

The 10-foot-tall bronze statue was originally unveiled in 1979 but fell prey to erosion and other deterioration.

A new, weather-proof statue of Elvis is being designed to fill the vacancy on Beale Street. There will also be a better plan for the care of the statue and the surrounding Elvis Presley Plaza.

The “E” in “E-mail” [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 20 when I wrote this article back in 1995 for The Elvis Beat #12, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


E-mail has a new meaning. Forget “Electronic mail.” Now there is only one definition: “Elvis mail.” Graceland now has two Internet E-mail addresses for fans with access to a computer and a modem.

Fans can send questions, comments, or suggestions about Graceland or Elvis directly to the Graceland corporate office. The addresses are: [. . .].

The Internet addresses are the result of Graceland recently opening the Elvis Presley Fan Club Forum on the InterComm Bulletin Board Service. To connect to the InterComm service for the first time with a modem, dial [. . .].

According to Graceland Express, the fan club forum will include “a bulletin section which lists the latest news from Graceland, Elvis Week and other event information . . . and interesting Elvis facts and trivia.”

“Tenere me ama” [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 20 when I wrote this piece back in 1995 for The Elvis Beat #12, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


“Latin is an eternal language, so what better way to immortalize a legend?” asked Professor Jukka Ammondt of Finland. He is the creator of a new CD that contains songs made famous by Elvis performed in Latin by the Eurovision Choir.

Some of the songs featured on the unusual disc are “It’s Now Or Never” (“Nunc hic aut numquam“), “Surrender” (“Nunc aeternitatis“), “Love Me Tender” (“Tenere me ama“), and “Can’t Help Falling In Love” (“Non adamare non possum“).

Presently, the CD has solely been released in Finland, where Latin has a devoted following. Ammondt said the idea for the project came to him in a dream.

Elvis’ new job [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 20 when I wrote this article back in 1995 for The Elvis Beat #12, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


Fans visiting Graceland this summer can look forward to a revamped tour of the mansion, featuring a new audio guide system and the addition of the home’s kitchen to the experience.

The audio tours were slated to begin in the spring. According to Graceland Express, “Guests will pick up a headset and tape machine in the visitor center. . . . Then the tour of the house, grounds, fan mail office, racquetball building, and trophy room will be presented almost entirely on tape.”

The audio tour will include a narrator, but will primarily feature the voice of Elvis from spoken material and musical recordings. “It is expected to feel very much as if Elvis himself is giving the tour, especially in the trophy room,” stated Graceland Express.

The kitchen is the first new room added to the public tour since the opening of the mansion in 1982. The kitchen has been restored to the way it was when Elvis was alive. “It has harvest gold appliances and avocado-colored appliances. It’s very much the ’70’s,” a Graceland spokesperson said.

The audio tour was expected to be available in several different languages by the summer. In the future, the audio concept will also be considered for the other Graceland attractions, including the airplanes and the car museum. Traditional tour guides will remain on staff at the mansion to answer questions or offer other services.

Elvis Treasures [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 20 when I wrote this article back in 1995 for The Elvis Beat #12, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


1995 marks the return of Elvis Presley on tour. Well, sort of. A nine-state tour of Elvis memorabilia made ten stops across the nation from April 28 to June 22. The tour, known as “Elvis Treasures: The Great Road Show Of ’95,” featured a $150,000 collection.

The collection included an authentic Elvis jumpsuit, a TCB necklace, guitars, and other items. The tour began on April 28 in New York City and concluded on June 22 in Colonial Heights, Virginia.

Viewers of the exhibit had the opportunity to win various Elvis prizes, including the grand prize of a trip to Graceland.

“Elvis Treasures” promoted the newly released Official Price Guide To Elvis Presley Records And Memorabilia by Jerry Osborne.

RCA to release 70s MASTERS boxed set [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 20 when I wrote this article back in 1995 for The Elvis Beat #12, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


RCA plans to release The 70s Masters boxed set in September. The 5-CD set will contain a studio version of “My Way,” a song previously available only in live performances. According to Graceland Express, “This studio recording gets a much softer vocal treatment from him, and seems more intimate, and in its quiet way maybe even more powerful” than the live versions.

Possibly my most eagerly anticipated release since Elvis’ death, right up there with the Elvis: The Lost Performances video, The 70s Masters CD set follows the 1992 release of ELVIS: The King Of Rock ‘n’ Roll – The Complete 50s Masters and 1993’s ELVIS: From Nashville To Memphis – The Essential 60s Masters I, both of which were also 5-CD boxed sets. The sets are part of RCA’s commitment to release all of Elvis’ songs, from the best available masters, in the CD format. However, cassette versions are also available.

Scheduled to be released on July 18, ELVIS: Command Performances – The Essential 60s Masters II will contain 62 of his movie tunes from 1960 to 1969. An RCA press release stated, “Whereas the previous volume focused on Elvis Presley’s secular studio sessions (in the 1960s), Command Performances documents the highlights of his movie recording career.” Elvis made 27 movies in the 1960s. [. . . .] The set also comes with a 24-page booklet of liner notes.

ELVIS: Command Performances – The Essential 60s Masters II seems to be following rather closely on the heels of the Elvis Double Features soundtracks, which were also devoted to his 1960s movie tunes. In March, three new Elvis Double Features CDs were released:

  • Flaming Star/Wild In The Country/Follow That Dream
  • Easy Come, Easy Go/Speedway
  • Live A Little, Love A Little/Charro/The Trouble With Girls/Change Of Habit

With the new CDs completing the series, there are now ten CDs in RCA’s Elvis Double Features collection. So, is it really time for the ELVIS: Command Performances – The Essential 60s Masters II set? Probably not, but RCA has been doing such a great job the last five years that they can be easily forgiven for one small mistake, especially since The 70s Masters is finally almost here.

Lisa Marie appears on PrimeTime with Michael Jackson [The Elvis Beat newsletter]

I was 20 when I wrote this article back in 1995 for The Elvis Beat #12, my official Elvis Presley Fan Club newsletter.


A national audience of sixty million people tuned in to see Lisa Marie Presley-Jackson and Michael Jackson in their first televised interview together. Hosted by Diane Sawyer, the ABC PrimeTime Live special easily beat out the final game of the NBA basketball championship to win the time slot and also was the highest rated program of the week.

Lisa Marie, 27, rarely grants interviews, and this was her first to be televised. She and Jackson, 36, were secretly married outside the United States on May 26, 1994. Although rumors soon spread through the press, the news was not confirmed until August of that year.

On June 14, at the Sony Pictures Studios in Los Angeles, the couple fielded a variety of questions on their controversial marriage and Jackson’s controversial life.

“When we first met, she was 7 years old, and I was 17,” said Jackson. “This was in Las Vegas. She used to come and see my show all the time. We had the only family show on the Strip, the Jackson 5. She used to come, as a little girl, and sit right up front, and she came quite often. She came with a lot of bodyguards. Then she’d come backstage, and I’d talk and say, ‘hi,’ and then she’d come again, and I thought she was sweet and loving. And I always hoped I’d see her again,” he said. [. . . .]

“We didn’t stay in touch after that,” said Lisa Marie.

Jackson continued the story: “When she was 18, I used to tell my lawyer . . . ‘Do you know Lisa Marie Presley?’ He’d go, ‘Well, I represent her mother.’ I’d go, ‘Can you get me in touch with her, because I think she’s really cute.’ And he’d laugh every time. He’d go, ‘I’ll do my best.’ . . . . Then, he’d come back, and I’d say, ‘Well, did you find out?’ He said, ‘No, there’s nothing.’ So I would worry him about this all the time. And the next thing I noticed there was a picture on a magazine cover where she’s married, which really tore me to pieces because I felt that was supposed to be me.”

This is the second marriage for Lisa Marie. She has two children from her marriage to musician Danny Keough, Danielle, who is now six, and Benjamin, who will be three in October.

Lisa Marie spoke about Jackson’s marriage proposal. “On the telephone, he first asked me. We were dating now for four months,” she said. “We were spending a lot of time together. I don’t know how it didn’t manage to get in the press, because we weren’t hiding it. I was separated for four months, and he said, ‘What would you do if I asked you to marry me?’ And I said, ‘I would.'”

Lisa Marie appeared hesitant to answer some of the questions, and when she did, she often immediately apologized, as if she was speaking out of turn. Although she was understandably nervous, she maintained her composure all evening. It was obvious that she was serious about setting the record straight, but at times she could not help but laugh at some of Sawyer’s oddly-styled questions. [. . . .]

Sawyer asked for information about any prenuptial arrangements involving the Presley and Jackson fortunes. Jackson replied, “We’ve worked out things, and we’ve signed certain things, but, of course, that’s very confidential.”

Lisa Marie added, “We made (prior) agreements.”

Lisa Marie is a member of the Church of Scientology, which follows ideals established in the book Dianetics by L. Ron Hubbard. Some members of the media speculated that the church ordered her to marry Jackson, in an attempt to lure him and his money into their organization.

“That’s ridiculous,” said Lisa Marie. “First of all, you can’t get influenced by anything like that. Under the terms of a marriage, I’m not going to marry somebody for any reason other than the fact that I fall in love with them, period. Period. And they can eat it if they want to think anything different.”

“I believe in spirituality, and I believe in a higher source, such as God,” said Jackson. “But I’m not a Scientologist. I read everything, and I like to read. I love to study.”

Lisa Marie also spoke about other controversial aspects of their marriage. “We don’t live in separate houses. That’s ridiculous. Where are the cameras?” she said, and later added, “No, we don’t sleep in separate bedrooms. Thank you very much.”

In 1993, there were reports that Lisa Marie was pursuing a singing career, with her then-husband Keough as her songwriting partner. People magazine even likened her voice to Bonnie Raitt.

There were plans for Lisa Marie and Jackson to sing a duet in the Elvis: The Tribute concert they attended in Memphis last year, but they eventually decided not to perform.

“I did sing,” said Lisa Marie, “but that’s not why I married Michael. I don’t need that. If I wanted it, I’m not going to marry someone for a recording career – just to clear that up as well.” [. . . .]

Recently, Jackson’s new album, HIStory, was released. The 2-CD set contains a disc of greatest hits and a disc of new songs.

Jackson said, “I don’t care to stay in America anymore. I will always have Neverland because I love (it). . . . (However,) I’d like to go abroad. As a matter of fact, I am. I haven’t decided the exact place yet. Probably South Africa, maybe Switzerland.” [. . . .]

Sawyer asked Lisa Marie her feelings about possibly moving overseas, and she replied, “I think it’s a nice place to visit. I would like to have a house over there. We would be completely and utterly harassed beyond belief, but–”

And then, as she did frequently during the hour, Sawyer interrupted Lisa Marie to ask another question. Many of Sawyer’s questions were halting, and she seemed to be self-consciously trying to project the image of a tough, investigative journalist. Oprah Winfrey, who interviewed Jackson two years ago, would have done a much better job.

Lisa Marie’s closing remarks were, “I just want people to know what they’re dealing with before, and understand that . . . the jokes, the degrading comments, and that kind of stuff, it’s really irritating.”