CURRENT NEWS & EVENTS JULY, 2023

COPYRIGHT LINDAHOODSIGMONTRUTHCONTD.COM MAY, 2009 – 2023 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS COPYRIGHT COVERS ALL OF MY ORIGINAL MATERIAL CONTAINED ON EVERY PAGE OF THIS WEBSITE.

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SUNDAY, JULY 2, 2023

I want to wish everyone who visits our website a most happy, festive, safe, and blessed July 4th as we commemorate the birthday of our great nation of America.

youtu.be/BhGqw_vpr-c

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TUESDAY, JULY 4, 2023

Unfortunately, despicable David Stanley is out there once more telling the same filthy lies that he has spread before.  This time he has embellished his lie that Elvis committed suicide with some even nastier, evil, and scurrilous details which I will not include here.

Joe Esposito set the record straight in no uncertain terms way back in June 1990 when Stanley appeared on the Geraldo show telling his suicide lies about Elvis.  

Please take time to watch the two below clips from this show.  You will hear Joe state “…and that’s how Elvis FEELS about this situation.”  

Jesse later asked me during one of our phone conversations “Did you hear what Joe said on the Geraldo show?”  Of course, I certainly did hear Joe.  We were watching and recorded the whole show.  Thus, my below portions of the show.

The whole Stanley family has proven themselves to be liars of the worst kind about Elvis.  David’s brother Billy published another book last year which I will not read even though he gave it a fairly intriguing title about Elvis’ faith.  I have NOT even glanced thru this book but I am told that Billy recounts his own near-death experience during which he claims to have met Elvis on the other side.  This is a blatant lie because, thank the Lord, Elvis is not on the other side…he is right here still on this side with all of us. 

So, watch Joe Esposito as he slapped David Stanley and Albert Goldman down on this Geraldo show which dealt solely with the question “Did Elvis Presley Commit Suicide?”  The answer was “NO!

I don’t think that Jesse will mind my writing here that he and I both absolutely detest Geraldo for all the damage he did and tried to do to Elvis’ image and the people close to Elvis like Dr. Nick.  On the day this above show aired, I wrote a scathing letter to Geraldo and confronted him with his gross error in not even catching what Joe said.  As you will have just seen above, what Joe stated went right over Geraldo’s head.  

After 45 years of truth…and people still won’t accept the fact that Elvis did not die.

Interestingly, I had these two videos on YouTube for many years beginning in 2009 until an unknown someone contacted YouTube to demand that they be taken down.

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THURSDAY, JULY 6, 2023

My best friend MJ received the below article from our friend Anne after they saw the beautiful gift which Jesse sent to Tom and me…the statue that Sammy Davis gave to Elvis in 1969  (see June page – current-news-events-june-2023/).

Also, after some research, I learned that the purpose of that lovely brass item is a votive holder.

I thoroughly enjoyed this article which includes the complete story of how Sammy Davis converted to Judaism and how very important his faith was to him.  This completely explains why he so much wanted to share his faith and beliefs with Elvis.

My sincerest thanks to MJ and Anne for sharing this with me for my website.

The real story behind Sammy Davis Jr.’s conversion to Judaism

Jewish comedians made racist jokes about him. Some Black audiences booed him. But his faith was genuine.

Sammy Davis Jr. was a short and skinny Black man with one eye. His wife was white, his mother was Puerto Rican and he was a convert to Judaism. In the crass and racist world of mid-20th century comedy, he was a walking punchline, even in his own routines.

“When I move into a neighborhood, I wipe it out,” was his standard self-deprecating gag. The line received knowing laughs in the 1950s and ’60s when many towns forbade property sales to Blacks and Jews, and whites often fled when Black families moved into their neighborhoods.

Jokes by his fellow entertainers were crude. In a live skit at the Sands in Las Vegas in 1963, Dean Martin physically lifted Davis up (he weighed a mere 120 pounds) and said, “I’d like to thank the NAACP for this wonderful trophy.” At a Friars Club roast, comedian Pat Buttram said that if Davis showed up in Buttram’s home state of Alabama, folks “wouldn’t know what to burn on the lawn.”

Jewish comedians got their licks in, too. Milton Berle cross-dressed as Davis’ white wife, May Britt, and sang, to the tune of “My Yiddishe Mama,” “My Yiddish Mau-Mau,” a reference to an anti-British rebellion in Kenya.

At another roast, Joey Bishop said he’d “never been so embarrassed” in his life as when he met Davis in synagogue. When the rabbi came in, Bishop said, “Sammy jumped up and hollered, ‘Here come the judge!’”

This cringeworthy line was delivered by Davis himself in a show at the Copa: “I don’t know whether to be shiftless and lazy, or smart and stingy.”

Some of these jokes implied that it was preposterous for a Black man to convert to Judaism. But for Sammy Davis Jr., being Jewish “was the most logical thing in the world,” historian Rebecca L. Davis told me. “Over and over again, he made this analogy between being Jewish and African American. He was very admiring of the Jewish millennia-long struggle against oppressors and overcoming all kinds of obstacles.” He saw himself as “an outsider and very marginalized, and he could see in the Jewish experience a similarity that really drew him in emotionally.”

Davis, a history professor at the University of Delaware (and no relation to Sammy), has done extensive research on the entertainer’s conversion, his career and how he was perceived. Her article, “‘These Are a Swinging Bunch of People’: Sammy Davis, Jr., Religious Conversion, and the Color of Jewish Ethnicity,” appeared in the American Jewish History journal in 2016, and she included a chapter about him in her 2021 book, Public Confessions: The Religious Conversions That Changed American Politics. Her take is that Davis was not only one of the most successful entertainers of the 20th century despite the many racist barriers in his way, but that his Jewish faith was utterly genuine.

The fateful accident

Davis lost his eye when he crashed his car driving home to California from Las Vegas in November 1954. One of several stories about what sparked Davis’ path to conversion originates with the aftermath of the accident. He wrote in his 1965 autobiography, Yes I Can, that his friends Tony Curtis, who was Jewish, and Janet Leigh, who was not, arrived at the hospital and Leigh gave him a religious medal with St. Christopher on one side and a Star of David on the other. “Hold tight and pray and everything will be all right,” Leigh told him.

Davis later told Alex Haley in a Playboy interview that he gripped the object so tightly that the Star of David left a scar on his hand, “like a stigmata.” He took it as a sign that he should convert.

Davis also felt that he owed his career to a Jewish man, Eddie Cantor, who ironically had been one of vaudeville’s best-known blackface performers; Cantor’s act earned him a spot with the Ziegfeld Follies. Decades later, Cantor gave Davis his first big break, a solo televised appearance on the Colgate Comedy Hour in 1952, and became a father figure to him. “He saw Cantor’s Jewishness as part of what made Cantor a good person,” said Rebecca Davis.

In another version of how his car accident led to his conversion, Sammy Davis said that a mezuzah Cantor gave him had mistakenly been left behind in a hotel room the day of the crash. That story transformed the mezuzah “into a talisman,” Rebecca Davis observed, another signpost on the road to his conversion.

Identifying as a Jew

Sammy Davis Jr. praying at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem. Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images

In his memoir, Sammy Davis recalled Rabbi Max Nussbaum, of Temple Israel in Hollywood, telling him, “We cherish converts, but we neither seek nor rush them.” But he began to publicly identify as Jewish before formally converting. In 1959 he refused to film scenes for the movie Porgy and Bess on Yom Kippur, while Ebony ran a photo of him holding Everyman’s Talmud.

He also repeatedly compared the oppression of Jews to that of African Americans. In his 1989 book, Why Me?, he wrote that he was “attracted by the affinity between the Jew and the Negro. The Jews had been oppressed for three thousand years instead of three hundred but the rest was very much the same.” When he visited the Wailing Wall in 1969, he said Israel was his “religious home.”

The reception from Black audiences

American Jews by and large loved him, and his reception in the Jewish press, including the Forward, was also positive, Rebecca Davis said. But it was more complicated for Black media. On the one hand, she said, he was “this exemplar of Black success, very wealthy, very famous, very successful” in an era of rampant racism.

On the other hand, there was “confusion and anger” about why — as a prominent Black activist who joined marches, raised money and was the United Negro College Fund’s largest donor — Sammy Davis so often connected the civil rights cause to Judaism. While there were a “disproportionate number of Jews who were passionate about civil rights and were willing to put their personal safety on the line to stand up for civil rights,” at the same time, Jews were part of a “broader American culture that saw African Americans as inferiors. That was the prevailing cultural norm among white people in the 1950s,” Rebecca Davis said. Other critics felt that he had converted to ingratiate himself with whites as a way to get ahead.

And when he “let himself be the joke” as part of the Rat Pack — a loose ensemble of performers that included Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra and Peter Lawford — that “really angered a lot of African Americans who saw him more as performing for white audiences than for Black audiences.”

He formally converted with Britt shortly before their wedding in 1960. She was as serious about it as he was, making sure, even after they were divorced, that their children went to Hebrew school and that their son was bar mitzvahed.

Disinvited from JFK’s inauguration

But their marriage also resulted in one of the most painful episodes of his life, when he was disinvited from John F. Kennedy’s presidential inauguration. The Democratic coalition that elected JFK included Southern white Democrats, and they did not want a Black man married to a white woman performing at the celebration. “They forced Davis out,” Rebecca Davis said. “He was so stung by that. Here he was on stage and on film with Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra and the biggest stars of the day, and they all got to go to the inauguration, but he didn’t.”

Sammy Davis Jr. with President Richard Nixon in the Oval Office, Washington, D.C., 1975. Photo by Afro American Newspapers/Gado/Getty Images

That rejection helps explain Davis’ subsequent embrace of Richard Nixon. “Nixon, who was politically very devious, figured he could use Sammy Davis as a token African American supporter by overdoing it and inviting him to sleep in the Lincoln bedroom,” Rebecca Davis said. That made him the first Black man to spend the night as a guest in the White House.

Some African Americans saw Davis’ alignment with Nixon and the Republicans as a betrayal. Harry Belafonte and Sidney Poitier stopped returning his phone calls, Rebecca Davis wrote, and a year or two after he performed at the 1972 Republican National Convention, he was booed at an event organized by Jesse Jackson.

He responded to the boos by saying, “I get it. I understand. But I need you to know, I always did it my way. It’s the only way I’ve got,” Rebecca Davis said. “Then he sang ‘I’ve Gotta Be Me,’ and they gave him a standing ovation.”

A steadfast Jew until the end

His third wife, Altovise, was a churchgoer, but Sammy Davis remained a steadfast Jew until the day he died. Everything he said about Judaism “was said with the utmost sincerity,” Rebecca Davis said. “He never once looked back and said, ‘Oh, that was just a phase I was going through.’ And he never talked about it in terms of his career. He only talked about it as something that spoke to him on a deep level.”

Davis died of throat cancer in 1990 at age 64. Sinatra, Berle, Liza Minnelli, Stevie Wonder, Dionne Warwick and many other celebrities were among thousands of mourners who backed up traffic for 8 miles en route to the funeral at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in LA. Rabbi Allen Freehling presided at the service, but the eulogy was given by Jesse Jackson.

“To love Sammy was to love Black and white, Black and Jew,” he said, “and to embrace the human family.”

The service also included one last standing ovation for Davis, when they played a recording of – what else? – “I’ve Gotta Be Me.”

https://forward.com/culture/537431/sammy-davis-jr-conversion-jewish-judaism-racism-comedy-rat-pack-jesse-jackson/

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SENT TO JESSE THRU THIS POINT 

ON THURSDAY, JULY 6, 2023

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TUESDAY, JULY 11, 2023

Jesse’s book has increased in price so much that I seldom see a listing for it at a lower price.  Today, I see that there is a reasonably priced copy on Abe Books as shown below.  Also, below is the link to visit this book offer.

https://www.abebooks.com/Truth-Elvis-Aron-Presley-Own-Words/31565989220

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As a follow-up to my above article regarding the despicable lies told by David Stanley recently in an Amazon documentary about Elvis, below is what Billy Smith’s son, Danny, had to say about David Stanley’s lies.  I am certainly in agreement with Danny Smith…rip-roaring mad for sure! 

Elvis Presley performing in the 'Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite', televised concert at the Honolulu International Center, Hawaii, 14th January 1973.
CELEBRITY

Elvis Presley’s Cousin Calls Claims the Singer Overdosed on Purpose ‘The Biggest Bunch of S***’

Rumors that Elvis Presley took his own life on purpose are being slammed by his cousin, Danny Smith.

Rumors regarding Elvis Presley‘s death continue to follow the late singer 46 years after his death in August 1977. However, a new claim from someone within Elvis’ inner circle has his cousin Danny Smith rip-roaring mad. He calls claims Elvis intentionally overdosed, “the biggest bunch of s***.”

Elvis Presley performing in the 'Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite', televised concert at the Honolulu International Center, Hawaii, 14th January 1973.
Elvis Presley performing in the ‘Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite,’ televised concert at the Honolulu International Center, Hawaii, Jan. 14 1973 | Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images

Elvis Presley’s cousin Danny Smith defends the king of rock and roll against claims he overdosed on purpose

In a video uploaded to his YouTube channel Memphis Mafia Kid, Danny Smith defended Elvis Presley against claims made by Elvis’ stepbrother, David Stanley, against the singer. Smith was furious that Stanley insinuated that Elvis took his life on Aug. 16, 1977.

“This has been a big question that numerous people have asked,” Danny Smith said in response to a question from one of his YouTube viewers. “I’ve heard it from enough people that apparently, he [Stanley] said something along those lines. Just let me say this. I think it’s the biggest bunch of s***.”

Smith continued, “Excuse my grammar. For him or anybody else to say that [shakes head].”

“Did Elvis take prescription drugs? Sure, he did. We all know that. Maybe a mixture or overdose was part of his death? It’s possible that could have caused his death,” he stated.

However, Smith believes that Elvis did not purposely or intentionally take his own life. “There’s just no way he would have taken his own life. I don’t know what makes David think that or anybody else, but everybody has a right to their opinion as I do mine. That just wasn’t Elvis Presley.”

What did David Stanley say about Elvis Presley that caused the ire of Elvis Fans worldwide?

Vernon and Dee Presley, with Elvis Presley and Dee's sons, David, Billy and Ricky Stanley.
Vernon and Dee Presley, with Elvis Presley and Dee’s sons, David, Billy, and Ricky Stanley | Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

In the documentary Elvis’ Women, Stanley alleged that Elvis Presley died at his own hand. “He premeditated taking the medications that killed him. Love, hurt, pain, exposure — he couldn’t take it anymore,” he said, as reported by the Irish Mirror.

In a since-deleted Instagram post, Stanley expressed his regrets regarding his remarks. “To all the Elvis Fans and associates that follow me here on Facebook and beyond. I am sorry for the derogatory comments I made in a documentary about Elvis filmed last year.”

He continued, “There is no excuse for my comments, and I can fully understand why you would be angered. I love and will always love Elvis and being part of his family. He is more than worthy of the love you have for him. He loved you. I love you, and all I can ask of you is for you to forgive me for my irresponsible actions.”

Who is David Stanley to Elvis Presley?

David Stanley is Elvis Presley’s stepbrother. He is one of Dee Presley’s three sons.  Dee married Elvis’ father, Vernon, in 1960. They were married until 1977.

Dee had three sons: David, Billy, and Ricky Stanley. Although Elvis was reportedly unhappy that his father married the much younger Dee so soon after Gladys’ death. Elvis would eventually welcome his stepbrothers into his private enclave of friends called the “Memphis Mafia” that worked with the singer at his Graceland home.

Elements of this article were first reported by Page Six.

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 2023

I have some news to share!!  Jesse called me tonight and we had a good, but not too lengthy, chat.  He said he has been thru a very difficult time last week.  He did not have time to explain to me during this call.  He said he would call me again soon.  I am so very, very, very relieved to hear from him.  

He is the sweetest “Big Brother” anyone ever had.

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THURSDAY, JULY 13, 2023

My friend Chris Mc shared the below rare early photo of Elvis which he and I really like.  Great photo!!!  Thank you so much for sharing, Chris.

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SENT TO JESSE THRU THIS POINT

ON THURSDAY, JULY 13, 2023

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SUNDAY, JULY 16, 2023

I have more news.  Jesse called me again this afternoon and we did have time for a good and lengthy chat.  He has had to have surgery to remove cancer from his neck/back which alarmed me greatly.  It is not expected to present a dangerous outcome though as it is a squamous cell which is not an aggressive type of skin cancer.  Though it did require a deep removal.   He should have a good outcome from this as the survival rate for cancers of this type is 99%.  He has some more Dr. visits to go so let’s all keep him in our thoughts and prayers.

Other than that, we had a happy phone visit and it sure did mean the world to me to get to visit with him today.

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TUESDAY, JULY 18, 2023

Today marks a very important anniversary in the life of Elvis and in the history of America’s musical heritage.

My friend Chris McC shared the below article with me and I am so glad that he did as I had not thought of the importance of this date until I followed Chris’ link.

Thank you so very much, Chris.

One of the most remarkable careers in music history got off to an inauspicious start on July 18, 1953, when an 18-year-old Elvis Presley walked into the Memphis Recording Service to cut his first demo.

Memphis Recording Service shared a building with Sun Records, the independent label that Sam Phillips founded in 1952 to record R&B, country and, eventually, rock ‘n’ roll artists. Phillips had previously licensed his recordings to other labels, such as Chicago’s Chess Records and Los Angeles’ Modern Records, but when his relationships with those companies soured, he launched his label out of necessity.

Presley walked into the Memphis Recording Service and shelled out approximately $4 to record two songs on an acetate disc. For the A-side, he chose the pop music standard “My Happiness,” popularized by Jon and Sondra Steele in 1948. For the B-side, he recorded “That’s When Your Heartaches Begin,” which became a hit for the vocal group the Ink Spots in 1941.

Some accounts claim that Presley wanted to make a record to give to his mother, Gladys Presley, as a birthday present. But it would have been a late gift, as Gladys’ birthday was April 25. (It also would have been a bad gift, as Presley’s family didn’t own a record player at the time.) It’s more likely that Presley, then less than two months out of high school, paid for his studio time with the hopes of being noticed and plucked out of obscurity by Phillips.

Listen to Elvis Presley’s ‘My Happiness’

youtu.be/yUvFRTNMdRI

Subscribe to Ultimate Classic Rock on YouTube

Yet it wasn’t Phillips who initially worked with Presley. That honor went to his assistant, Marion Keisker, who was reportedly running the studio alone on that fateful day. Keisker’s exchange with the future star has since become the stuff of legend.

“It was a busy Saturday afternoon,” Keisker told Q magazine in 2000. “The office was full of people wanting to make personal records. He came in, said he wanted to make a record. I told him he’d have to wait and he said OK. He sat down. While he was waiting, we had a conversation. He said he was a singer. I said, ‘What kind of singer are you?’ He said, ‘I sing all kinds.’ I said, ‘Who do you sound like?’ He said, ‘I don’t sound like nobody.'”

Presley recorded his two songs to little fanfare and went on his way. “After he’d sung his song, for which we charge $4 for recording, we said maybe we’d call him over sometime to cut a commercial disc,” said Phillips’ brother and Sun Records co-founder Jud Phillips. “He didn’t seem too enthusiastic, but I think that was because he wasn’t at all sure of his own ability.”

Listen to Elvis Presley’s ‘That’s When Your Heartaches Begin’

Elvis Presley-That’s When Your Heartaches Begin.(private 1953).

The singer returned to Sun Records in January 1954 to cut another two-song acetate disc — “I’ll Never Stand in Your Way” and “It Wouldn’t Be the Same Without You” — which once again failed to turn heads. Several months later, Phillips called him back to record a ballad called “Without You” that he thought would suit Presley. It didn’t work out, but the frustrating sessions eventually yielded Presley’s debut single, a cover of Arthur Crudup’s “That’s All Right,” kick-starting the singer’s career and an entire genre.

In the wake of Presley’s groundbreaking success, his debut recording became a highly sought-after piece of rock ‘n’ roll memorabilia. The record sold for $300,000 at a Graceland auction on Jan. 8, 2015, which would have been the King’s 80th birthday.

Read More: 70 Years Ago: Elvis Presley Launches Recording Career for $4 | https://ultimateclassicrock.com/elvis-presley-first-recording/?utm_source=tsmclip&utm_medium=referral

https://ultimateclassicrock.com/elvis-presley-first-recording/

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SENT TO JESSE THRU THIS POINT

ON THURSDAY, JULY 20, 2023

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THURSDAY, JULY 20, 2023

The very interesting coincidence of the date July 19…first single released and the final album released.

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SATURDAY, JULY 22, 2023

Going to be some interesting events at Graceland coming up in less than a month!

LEE MAJORS TO
APPEAR AT CONVERSATIONS

Graceland is excited to announce that actor Lee Majors will be joining the Elvis Week line-up at Conversations on Elvis on August 15. He will share his favorite stories and memories of his friendship and time spent with the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll. Lee Majors is an actor and producer, best known for his roles as Steve Austin in the television series The Six Million Dollar Man, and Colt Seavers in the series The Fall Guy.

NEW ELVIS RADIO SHOW
INSIDE GRACELAND

Joel Weinshanker, managing partner and majority owner of Elvis Presley Enterprises, launched a new monthly show on SiriusXM’s Elvis Radio (Channel 75) this week. Inside Graceland will feature exclusive celebrity interviews, in-depth music exploration, and unparalleled access to the most famous rock ‘n’ roll home on the planet. Joel will also be answering Elvis fan questions.

The first show debuted July 19 with encores throughout the week and available to listen anytime on the SXM app when you search “Inside Graceland.”

DETAILS

Still can’t make to Memphis for Elvis Week this year? Don’t worry, you don’t have to miss a thing with Virtual Elvis Week 2023! Watch all the exciting Graceland Soundstage events from anywhere in the world. Virtual pass options and details are available now at VirtualElvisWeek.com!

BUY YOUR PASS

Elvis Presley’s Graceland <info@graceland.com>

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SUNDAY,  JULY 23, 2023

Several years ago my husband and I attended a theater showing of a film similar to the one described in this article and we did enjoy it very much.  Don’t know if this will be the same film we saw then or a brand new one.  Either way, it should be very enjoyable.

Revealing Documentary About Elvis Presley’s Comeback Special To Hit Big And Small Screens

Just in time for Elvis Week.

PHOTO: 

MICHAEL OCHS ARCHIVES / STRINGER/GETTY IMAGES

The night of December 3, 1968, nearly half of America’s TV audience tuned in to see Elvis Presley deliver some of his greatest performances from a studio in Burbank, California. The most-watched television event of the year was a critical turning point for the King of Rock and Roll–in fact, PBS has said it “saved his career.” Crooning in front of adoring fans in a black leather suit, the King revisited his old hits from the 50s and debuted a new chart-topper, “If I Can Dream.”

Now Elvis fans will get a chance to revisit that iconic moment with the new documentary Reinventing Elvis: The ’68 Comeback. On July 30, Reinventing Elvis will appear on movie screens worldwide for one day only (look for showtimes and tickets at www.ReinventingElvis.com.) You’ll get to hear the recollections of the special’s original director, Steve Binder, interviews with Elvis experts, memories from Elvis’ audience members, and all-new versions of the King’s hits by musicians Darius Rucker, Maffio, and America’s Got Talent finalist Drake Milligan. Plus, fans can see scenes that were cut from the original special.

“The world is filled with stories about Elvis and his historic 1968 Comeback Special, but no one has ever told this story the way only I can tell it—because I was there for every moment of it,” Binder stated in a press release. “I’m so proud of this film and am really excited that a legion of Elvis fans worldwide is going to have an opportunity to first experience it in theaters.”

Documentary director John Scheinfeld added that “Elvis had an amazing career in the movies—he really was a movie star, and a star in every sense of the word. So, it’s incredibly fitting that our film will first be available to fans on the big screen, before coming to streaming, where audiences worldwide will be able to discover this amazing story that changed more than Elvis Presley—it changed the trajectory of popular culture.”

Reinventing Elvis will begin streaming on Paramount+ on August 15, one day before the anniversary of his death.

What a fitting way to honor Elvis Week from home.

https://www.southernliving.com/reinventing-elvis-documentary-7561510

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TUESDAY, JULY 25, 2023

Below is a very nice article from the blog of Jack & Dodie Dennis.  Thank them so much for sharing these wonderful photos along with their generous permission given to everyone to reblog their article.

Elvis Presley: Rare Shots From the 1970s

By 1970, Elvis Presley had revived his music career with record breaking live concerts in Las Vegas.

Colonel Tom Parker booked Elvis at Houston Rodeo for more shattered attendance records in the Astrodome.

Fueled with enthusiasm playing to live audiences and free from Hollywood movie contracts, Elvis wanted to get back to his roots: performing across the country so more fans would have the opportunity to see him live. He absolutely loved it.

Here are some not often seen photos of Elvis Presley during the 1970s:

I took this from first row, center stage at Hemisfair Arena in San Antonio. (Jack Dennis, August 1976)

The morning after I met and interviewed him in the wee hours of the night, Elvis was riding out of Graceland as I stood on the curb about 20 feet inside the gates. (Jack Dennis, 1976).

San Antonio (Jack Dennis, August 1976)

https://cleverjourneys.com/2020/05/23/elvis-presley-rare-shots-from-the-1970s/

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Even with all the proof that Jesse has permitted me to share here on my two websites over the past 14 years, there are still those who refuse to look, read and listen to all the proof.  Recently, I have seen that there are still those on social media who tell lies about me and Jesse.  That is unfortunate for the liars and for those who fall prey to the lies and miss out on the wonderful knowledge that Elvis did not die and is still here with us to this day.  The below image speaks volumes about such people.

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 2023

Just a note to let everyone know that Jesse called me for just a few minutes this afternoon.  We were only able to speak for a little bit.  But, I knew that everyone would be happy to know that he is OK and that he called.  He is having trouble with his phone again.  Though it was brief, it was a happy few minutes for me.

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Amen & amen!

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SENT TO JESSE THRU THIS POINT

ON THURSDAY, JULY 27, 2023

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I HAVE CREATED THE NEW PAGE FOR THE MONTH OF

AUGUST 2023

CURRENT NEWS & EVENTS AUGUST, 2023

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COPYRIGHT LINDAHOODSIGMONTRUTHCONTD.COM MAY, 2009 – 2023 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS COPYRIGHT COVERS ALL OF MY ORIGINAL MATERIAL CONTAINED ON EVERY PAGE OF THIS WEBSITE.