|
The real Elvis
Presley - a short biography
Elvis Aaron
Presley, in the humblest of circumstances, was born to Vernon
and Gladys Presley in a two-room house in Tupelo, Mississippi on
January 8, 1935. His twin brother, Jessie Garon, was stillborn,
leaving Elvis to grow up as an only child. He and his parents moved
to Memphis, Tennessee in 1948, and Elvis graduated from Humes High
School there in 1953.
Elvis Presley’s
musical influences were the pop and country music of the time, the
gospel music he heard in church and at the all-night gospel sings he
frequently attended, and the black R&B he absorbed on historic
Beale Street as a Memphis teenager. In 1954, he began his singing
career with the legendary Sun Records label in Memphis. In late 1955,
his recording contract was sold to RCA Victor. By 1956, he was an
international sensation. With a sound and style that uniquely
combined his diverse musical influences and blurred and challenged
the social and racial barriers of the time, he ushered in a whole new
era of American music and popular culture.
Elvis
Presley starred in 33
successful films,
made history with his television appearances and specials, and knew
great acclaim through his many, often record-breaking, live concert
performances on tour and in Las Vegas. Globally, he has sold over one
billion records,
more than any other artist. His American sales have earned him gold,
platinum or multi-platinum awards for 131 different albums and singles, far more than any other artist.
Among his many awards and accolades were 14 Grammy nominations (3
wins) from the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, the
Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, which he received at age 36, and
his being named One of the Ten Outstanding Young Men of the Nation
for 1970 by the United States Jaycees. Without any of the special
privileges his celebrity status might have afforded him, he honorably
served his country in the U.S.
Army.
His talent, good looks,
sensuality, charisma, and good humor endeared him to millions, as did
the humility and human kindness he demonstrated throughout his life.
Known the world over by his first name, he is regarded as one of the
most important figures of twentieth century popular culture. Elvis
died at his Memphis home, Graceland, on August 16, 1977.
Overview of Elvis
Presley's Achievements
Record Sales
It
is estimated that Elvis Presley has sold over one billion record
units worldwide, more than anyone in record industry history. In
America alone, Elvis has had 141 different albums and singles that
have been certified gold, platinum or multi-platinum by the Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA), with more certifications
expected as research into his past record sales continues and as
current sales go on. Research is also underway to document his record
sales achievements in other countries. It is estimated that 40% of
Elvis' total record sales have been outside the United States.
International Acclaim
Elvis Presley’s trophy room
at Graceland is filled with gold and platinum records and awards of all kinds from
around the world. Some of the countries represented are: Norway,
Yugoslavia, Japan, Australia, South Africa, England, Sweden, Germany,
France, Canada, Belgium, and the Netherlands. It is interesting
to note that, except for a handful of movie soundtrack songs, Elvis
did not record in other languages, and, except for five shows in
three Canadian cities in 1957, he did not perform in concert outside
the United States. Still, his recordings and films enjoyed, and
continue to enjoy, popularity all over the globe, and he is known
throughout the world by his first name.
Record Chart
Statistics
Elvis Presley has had no less than 149 songs to
appear on Billboard’s Hot
100 Pop Chart in America. Of these, 114 were in the top forty, 40 were in the top
ten, and 18 went to number one. His number one singles spent a total
of 80 weeks at number one. He has also had over 90 charted albums
with ten of them reaching number one. These figures are only for the
pop charts, and only in America. He was also a leading artist in the
American country, R&B, and gospel fields, and his chart success
in other countries was substantial.
Historic Television
Guest Appearances
In 1956, Elvis made his network television
debut with the first of his six appearances on Stage Show, a weekly
variety program hosted by Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey. He followed these
with two appearances on The Milton Berle Show, the second of which
included a performance of Hound Dog that was so provocative (for that
time, anyway) that it caused a national scandal. Elvis next appeared
on The Steve Allen Show, with Allen mocking the sensation of the
Berle appearance by having Elvis dress in a tuxedo, eliminate his
usual physical gyrations, and sing 'Hound Dog' to a Basset Hound.
Ed Sullivan had
once said he would never have the controversial singer on his
top-rated show, but that was before the week that Elvis' appearance
on Steve Allen had surpassed Sullivan’s ratings. Sullivan paid
Elvis $50,000 to make three appearances on his show, which
was, at the time, more money than any performer had ever been paid to
appear on a network variety program. When Elvis made his third
Sullivan appearance in January of 1957, Ed Sullivan surprised Elvis
by telling him on camera that his show had never had a better
experience with a name act, and said 'I wanted to say to Elvis and
the country that this is a real decent, fine boy'. It was on this
very same Sullivan appearance that Elvis was shown on camera from the
waist up only, one of early television history’s most memorable
moments. Elvis’ next network television appearance was in 1960,
when Frank Sinatra gave his variety show a 'Welcome Home, Elvis'
theme to herald Elvis' return from the army. Elvis was paid $125,000
to appear - again, making history.
The Silver
Screen
Elvis Presley starred in 31
feature films as an actor and two
theatrically released concert documentary films,
all of which enjoyed financial success. For a number of years he was
one of Hollywood’s top box office draws and one of its highest-paid
actors. His two most critically acclaimed films, Jailhouse Rock
(1957) and King Creole (1958) have become classics of their era. His
movies and concert films enjoy a healthy life today in television
syndication and home video sales and rentals. Some of his top-selling
music came from his movies. Eleven of his movie soundtrack albums
went to the top ten, and of those, four went to number one. The
soundtrack for G.I.
Blues (1960), was number one on the Billboard Top 100 album chart for 10
weeks and remained on the chart for 111 weeks. The album from Blue
Hawaii was number one for 20 weeks and was on the chart for 79 weeks.
Television
Specials
Elvis Presley’s three network television
specials - Elvis (1968), Elvis:
Aloha from Hawaii, via Satellite (1973), and Elvis
in Concert (1977) - stand among the most highly rated specials of their time.
His 1968 special, Elvis , is one of the most critically acclaimed
music specials of all time. His 1973 special, Elvis - Aloha from
Hawaii, via Satellite , was seen in 40 countries by 1 billion to 1.5
billion people and made television history. It was seen on television
in more American homes than man's first walk on the moon.
The
Concert Stage
When Elvis returned to the live stage after the
success of his 1968 television special and the wrap-up of his
Hollywood movie contract obligations, he opened at the International
Hotel in Las Vegas in the summer of 1969 for a 4-week, 57-show
engagement that broke all existing Las Vegas attendance records. He
returned to the International a few months later in early 1970,
during the slow winter season in Vegas, and broke his own attendance
record. Right after that came a record-breaking six-show engagement
at the Astrodome in Houston, where Elvis played to a total of 207,494
people.
Elvis took his
elaborate live show on the road in the latter part of 1970 for his
first concert tour since 1957. Throughout the 1970’s Elvis toured
America, breaking box office records right and left, and continued to
play an engagement or two per year in Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe. Among
the outstanding highlights of this period was in 1972, when Elvis
performed four sold-out shows at Madison
Square Garden.
During his 'concert
years' from 1969 to 1977,
Elvis gave nearly 1,100 concert performances.
Elvis Presley's
Grammy Awards
Elvis received 14 Grammy nominations from the
National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS). His three
wins were for gospel recordings - the album How Great Thou Art
(1967), the album He Touched Me (1972) and his live Memphis concert
recording of the song How Great Thou Art (1974). In 1971, NARAS also
recognized him with their Lifetime Achievement Award (known then as
the Bing Crosby Award ... in honor of its first recipient). Elvis was
36 years old at the time. Five of Elvis' recordings have been
inducted into the NARAS Hall of Fame - his original 1956 recordings
of Hound Dog (inducted 1988) and Heartbreak Hotel (inducted 1995),
his original 1954 recording of That's All Right (inducted 1998), his
original 1969 recording of Suspicious Minds (inducted 1999), and his
original 1956 recording of Don't Be Cruel (inducted 2002). The Hall
of Fame recognizes 'early recordings of lasting, qualitative or
historical significance', with many inductees being recordings that
were created and released before the 1958 inception of NARAS and the
Grammy Awards.
One of the Ten
Outstanding Young Men of the Nation
The United States Junior
Chamber of Commerce (the Jaycees) named Elvis Presley One of the Ten
Outstanding Young Men of the Nation for 1970 in a ceremony on January
16, 1971, one of Elvis’ proudest moments. This award has been given
since 1938 and has honored men of achievement in all areas of
endeavor - sports, government, science, medicine, entertainment, etc.
It recognizes outstanding personal achievement and the
exemplification of the opportunities available in the free enterprise
system, along with patriotism, humanitarianism, and community
service. (In the 1980's, eligibility was opened to women as well as
men, and the award has since been presented to the year's Ten
Outstanding Young Americans.)
Charitable
Endeavors
Elvis Presley was famous for giving away
Cadillacs, cash and jewelry, often on the spur of the moment. But,
the true depth and breadth of his generosity and community
involvement is not so widely known.
In 1961, Elvis gave a
benefit concert at Bloch Arena in Hawaii that raised over $65,000
toward the building of the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor.
The resulting publicity gave new life to the fund-raising effort,
which had, by then, lost its momentum. The memorial opened a year
later.
Audience tickets for
his 1973 Aloha from Hawaii television special and its pre-broadcast
rehearsal show carried no price, as each audience member was asked to
pay whatever he or she could. The performances and concert
merchandise sales were a benefit raising $75,000 for the Kui Lee
Cancer Fund in Hawaii.
Each year, for many
years, Elvis gave $1,000 or more to each of fifty Memphis-area
charities, but also continually made many other charitable donations
in Memphis and around the country.
Most of Elvis’
philanthropic endeavors received no publicity at all. Throughout his
adult life, for friends, for family, and for total strangers, he
quietly paid hospital bills, bought homes, supported families, paid
off debts, and much more.
Elvis' legacy of
generosity continues through the work of the Elvis Presley Charitable
Foundation, which is the philanthropic branch of Elvis Presley
Enterprises, Inc. and the creator of the Elvis Presley Endowed
Scholarship Fund at the University of Memphis. The tradition of
giving also continues through the work of the Elvis fan clubs
worldwide, most of which are heavily involved in charitable endeavors
in Elvis' memory.
Elvis Presley's
Graceland
Graceland, Elvis Presley’s home and refuge for
twenty years, is one of the most visited homes in America today, now
attracting over 600,000 visitors annually. It is also the most famous
home in America after the White House. In 1991, Graceland Mansion was
placed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Elvis Presley
Stamp
In 1992, the U.S. Postal Service announced that Elvis'
image would be used for a commemorative postage stamp. The Postal
Service narrowed the artwork choices down to two images - one of
Elvis in the 1950’s as a sizzling young rocker, and one of him as a
still-svelte concert superstar in his 1973 Aloha from Hawaii special.
In an unprecedented move, the USPS put the decision to the American
people and distributed ballots coast to coast. Over 1.2 million votes
were cast, and the image of the young rocker won. The stamp was
released on January 8, 1993, with extravagant first day of issue
ceremonies at Graceland. The Elvis stamp is the most widely
pub
|
|