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Cultural depictions of Elvis Presley

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Cultural depictions of Elvis Presley

Elvis Presley has inspired artistic and cultural works since he entered the national consciousness. From that point, interest in his personal and public life has never stopped. Some scholars have even studied many aspects of his profound cultural influence. Billboard historian Joel Whitburn declared Presley the "#1 act of the Rock era".

Contents

The following lists cover various media which include items of historic interest, enduring works of high art, and recent representations in popular culture. Only people and works with Wikipedia articles are included.

For purposes of classification, popular culture music is a separate section from operas and oratorios. Television covers live action series, TV movies, miniseries, and North American animation but not Japanese anime, which appears with manga and graphic novels.

Advertising

  • 2001 Audi Wackel-Elvis campaign
  • 2015 State Farm "Magic Jingle Elvis" commercial, directed by Roman Coppola
  • Art

  • Andy Warhol's sikscreens:
  • i) Double Elvis, 1963, sold in 1989 by the Estate of Albert Grossman (previous owner, Bob Dylan), to the NY's MOMA for US750,000. Another 21 copies are said to exist.
  • ii) Campbell' s Elvis, 1964, sold at Christie's on 9 November 2010 for US$1.45 million
  • iii) Red Elvis, 1961, sold privately in February 2000, for US$2.9 million
  • iv) Elvis X2 , 1963, sold at Christie's in November 2007 for US$15.7 million.
  • v) Double Elvis, 1963, sold at Sotheby's in May 2012 for US$37.1 million (not the same silkscreen as in i) above.
  • vi) Triple Elvis, 1963, sold at Christies's in November 2014 for US$81.9 million.
  • vii) Eight Elvises, 1963, sold privately, in December 2008, for US$100 million.
  • viii) Gold (en) Boot (Slippers) Elvis Presley, 1957, (price paid and year of sale unknown)
  • Guy Peellaert: Elvis Presley's Last Supper, Rock Dreams (1970-1973)
  • 24 Hour Church of Elvis
  • Velvet Elvis
  • See also: Elvis + Marilyn: 2x Immortal Geri DePaoli (Ed.), Rizzoli (1994), ISBN 0-8478-1840-3

    See also: Elvis in Art Roger G. Taylor, St. Martin's Press (1997), ISBN 0-3120-1381-7

    Celebrities

  • Elvis Costello adopted Presley's first name
  • Elvis Crespo, Elvis Dumervil, Elvis Mitchell, and Elvis Stojko were named after Presley
  • Elvis Blue indirectly took Presley's first name when he got his stage name from an African orphan he was close with, named Elvis Bleauw.
  • Junichiro Koizumi released a CD of his favorite Presley songs
  • Kaizers Orchestra has a stagehand who dresses like Elvis
  • Led Zeppelin tribute band Dread Zeppelin covers Led Zeppelin songs with a reggae beat, sung in the style of Elvis
  • Comics

  • Dark Future by Kim Newman: Elvis is a major character
  • Richie Rich/Jackie Jokers: two-part series "Happy Times"
  • Films

  • A Brighter Summer Day: Sir and his friends send tapes to Elvis; film's title is from "Are You Lonesome Tonight?"
  • Bubba Ho-Tep
  • Elmo in Grouchland: Huxley points to a Velvet Elvis as one of his possessions
  • Elvis & Nixon
  • Elvis Meets Nixon
  • Elvis Has Left the Building
  • Finding Graceland
  • Happy Feet: The character Memphis is based on Presley's personality and vocals, and he is named after Presley's infamous hometown Memphis, Tennessee. Hugh Jackman, who provides the speaking and singing voice of the character, did his own Elvis impersonation for the film's soundtrack.
  • Honeymoon in Vegas: Jack is aided by a band of Elvis impersonators
  • Hounddog: Lou gives Lewellen some Elvis records
  • Kiss Kiss Bang Bang: Harry briefly brings Elvis back to life
  • Looney Tunes: Back in Action the song "Viva las Vegas"upon arrival in Las Vegas.
  • Heartbreak Hotel: Elvis is kidnapped by a fan's son
  • Independence Day: upon escaping the Mother Ship, Hiller declares "Elvis has left the building!" to which Levinson imitates Elvis saying "Thank you, thank you very much"
  • Let's Make Love: Elvis is satirized in an off-Broadway revue
  • Lilo & Stitch: during a sequence, Stitch plays ukulele to the guitar solo of "(You're the) Devil in Disguise" twice, the second time while impersonating Elvis; Lilo, Stitch, Nani, and David pose before Graceland; Presley's songs and images are featured. All three sequel films in the franchise have also featured Presley's songs and/or images. Stitch also regularly impersonates Elvis in the TV series of the same name and makes a few references to Presley in some Disney crossover video games.
  • Man on the Moon: Andy Kaufman impersonates Elvis
  • Mystery Train: Elvis's ghost appears in a dream to Luisa; every room in the hotel has an Elvis portrait
  • Oblivion: Jack has an Elvis bobble-head doll
  • The Outsiders: the Greasers emulate Elvis
  • Pulp Fiction: an Elvis impersonator performs at Jackrabbit Slim's
  • This is Spinal Tap: the band visits Graceland
  • 3000 Miles to Graceland: a group plans a robbery in Las Vegas dressed as Elvis impersonators
  • Top Secret!: Nick performs "Are You Lonesome Tonight?"; film parodies Elvis's musicals
  • Tropico: Elvis is shown in the Garden of Eden alongside Adam, Eve, Jesus, the Virgin Mary, John Wayne and Marilyn Monroe
  • True Romance: Elvis's ghost mentors Clarence
  • Wild at Heart: Sailor and Powermad perform "Love Me"
  • Wired: John Belushi impersonates Elvis
  • Literature

  • The Armageddon trilogy by Robert Rankin
  • Biggest Elvis by P. F. Kluge
  • Elvissey by Jack Womack
  • Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy: Mostly Harmless
  • The Kane Chronicles: Carter has to rob Elvis's tomb to obtain an important clue
  • King Clone by Ted Harrison
  • Nightmares & Dreamscapes: "You Know They Got a Hell of a Band"
  • The Odd Thomas series by Dean Koontz
  • Southern Vampire Mysteries by Charlaine Harris
  • Music

  • Elvis Radio
  • List of songs about or referencing Elvis Presley
  • Plays/Musicals

  • Are You Lonesome Tonight?
  • All Shook Up
  • Beach Blanket Babylon
  • Bye Bye Birdie: hysteria ensues when an Elvis-like singer is drafted into the Army
  • Cooking with Elvis
  • Grease: Rizzo references Elvis in the song "Look at Me, I'm Sandra Dee"
  • Happy Days
  • Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat: Pharaoh is acted in the style of Presley
  • Million Dollar Quartet
  • Nunsense II: Sister Mary Hubert impersonates Elvis
  • Picasso at the Lapin Agile
  • Smokey Joe's Cafe: features the Elvis songs "Trouble" and "Treat Me Nice"
  • "Elvis has left the building"
  • Elvis Herselvis
  • Elvis impersonator
  • Elvis sightings
  • Memphis Mafia
  • Television

  • Alf: "Suspicious Minds", Alf and Willie suspect their new neighbor is Elvis
  • Boy Meets World: "Danger Boy", Elvis eats at Chubbie's and plays poker with Alan
  • Civil Wars: "Pilot", an Elvis impersonator is served with divorce papers
  • Crossing Jordan: "Miracles & Wonders", Nigel thinks a dead Elvis impersonator may actually be Elvis
  • CSI: Crime Scene Investigation: "Blood Moon", the team encounters an Elvis vampire
  • Designing Women:
  • Charlene is an Elvis fan
  • "E.P. Phone Home", the ladies travel to Memphis for a tour of Graceland
  • "Shovel Off to Buffalo", Mary Jo's shovel has Elvis's face impressed on it
  • E Street: "Episode 385", Ernie and Sally are married by an Elvis impersonator
  • Eerie, Indiana: Elvis walks of out his home to get the newspaper in several episodes
  • Elvis TV series
  • Elvis TV mini-series
  • Father Ted: "Competition Time"
  • Fireman Sam: a firefighter is named Elvis
  • Full House : Uncle Jesse once had a job as an Elvis impersonator
  • Give My Head Peace: Uncle Andy is an Elvis fan
  • Hannah Montana: the title character's brother, Jackson, is an avid impersonator of celebrities, most notably of Elvis Presley and Ozzy Osbourne.
  • The Golden Girls:
  • "The President's Coming! The President's Coming! Part 1", the ladies encounter an Elvis impersonator
  • "Sophia's Wedding: Part 1", Sophia is married before an audience of Elvis impersonators
  • The Killing: "Unraveling", Holder references a Velvet Elvis
  • Las Vegas: theme song is "A Little Less Conversation"
  • The Last Precinct: King is an Elvis impersonator
  • Married... with Children: "I'm Going to Sweatland", the Bundys are inundated with fans when a perspiration stain on Al's shirt resembles a silhouette of Elvis
  • Miami Vice: Crockett owns an alligator named Elvis; Switeck is an Elvis fan
  • The Miraculous Mellops: several episodes features Elvis impersonators
  • The New WKRP in Cincinnati: "Long Live the King", Les's editorial denouncing a rival station's Elvis look-alike contest prompts a call from a man who claims to be Elvis
  • Nightmares & Dreamscapes: "You Know They Got a Hell of a Band", Elvis is the Mayor of Oregon
  • Nip/Tuck: "Joyce & Sharon Monroe", an Elvis impersonator wants to look more like Elvis
  • Pizza: "Dangerous Pizza", a group of Elvis impersonators get into a fight with a group of KISS impersonators
  • Quantum Leap: "Memphis Melody - July 3, 1954", Sam leaps into Elvis
  • Red Dwarf: "Meltdown", Elvis is part of a group Rimmer and Kryten lead against Adolf Hitler, who has taken Lister and Cat prisoner
  • Renegade: "The King and I", Reno thinks a stranger who helped him during a fight may be Elvis
  • Saturday Night Live:
  • "Jackie Chan/Kid Rock", played by Karen Lynn Gorney
  • "Matthew Broderick/The Sugarcubes", played by Kevin Nealon
  • "John Madden/Jennifer Holliday", played by Andy Kaufman
  • "Shelley Duvall/Joan Armatrading", played by John Belushi
  • 7th Heaven: "The Heart of the Matter", an anesthetized Eric thinks he's Elvis
  • Shake, Rattle and Roll: An American Love Story
  • The Simpsons:
  • "Viva Ned Flanders"
  • "Viva Los Simpsons" 2005 DVD episode collection, Homer apes Elvis on the cover
  • Sledge Hammer: "All Shook Up", Hammer goes undercover as an Elvis impersonator to catch an Elvis impersonator killer
  • Sliders: "Pilot", Quinn sees a billboard of an elderly Elvis in Las Vegas
  • Spitting Image: Elvis parody "I'm Sure Livin' Since I Died"
  • The Twilight Zone: "The Once and Future King"
  • Vinyl, Richie Finestra president of record label American Century, attempts to bring Elvis to AC. The Colonel gets furious when he finds out Richie was going behind his back has Elvis point a gun at him.
  • Walker, Texas Ranger: "Suspicious Minds", the daughter of an Elvis impersonator witnesses a murder
  • The X-Files: "Never Again", Mulder travels to Graceland
  • See also: imdB Elvis Presley Character Page

    Toys

  • McFarlane Toys line of Elvis action figures
  • Video Games

  • Fallout: New Vegas: one faction is called "The Kings", raiders who come across an Elvis Impersonator School.
  • Bill & Ted's Excellent Video Game Adventures: Elvis is one of sixteen "historical dudes" who can be rescued.
  • The SNES game Wayne's World Elvis appears as a level boss.
  • Miscellaneous

  • Elvis died three days before Groucho Marx; Groucho fans blamed Elvis's death for Groucho's death not getting as much publicity. Elvis and Groucho were next door neighbors in Beverly Hills, California. In 2006, Elvis's teddy bear Mabel, made in 1909 by Steiff, was on display at a children's museum near Wookey Hole Caves when an Doberman destroyed it. The insurance company had insisted that the teddy bears be protected by guard dogs.
  • According to several non-music magazines and publications, Presley ranks among the most significant icons, both in America and worldwide:

  • In 2005, BBC 2 explored how photography had influenced world events and named the people who had been photographed the most in a 10 episode television series entitled The World's Most Photographed. Other than Presley, no musician merited a separate episode, which comprised four women among a list of political leaders, thinkers, heads of state and actors.
  • Also in 2005, LIFE Magazine highlighted Elvis's advent in 1956, and the rock and roll revolution he ignited and included them in a special issue published in September 2005 and which they named "The 100 events that shook our world: a history of Pictures in the last 100 years".
  • In 2006, the Atlantic Magazine ranked him the 66th most influential American ever. No other individual involved in entertainment, other than Walt Disney, ranked higher.
  • In 2008, the MIT-launched "Pantheon" programme, which maps cultural production, ranked him the 117th most significant person of any nationality in recorded history. Only the Reverend Martin Luther King, a Nobel Peace prize winner, outranks him among all persons born in the United States of America.
  • In 2010, LIFE Magazine ranked him #96 in their list of the 100 people who changed the world. Only Charles Chaplin and Louis Armstrong ranked higher among entertainers.
  • In 2014, the Smithsonian Magazine issued a listing of the 100 most significant Americans of all time, which included Presley as well as another six singers and musicians. No rankings were provided.
  • Also in 2014, Wikipedia made a study on the most popular historic figures, insofar as the number of internet searches, with Presley landing in the #69 position, a rank higher than that of any entertainer from the 20th Century.
  • In 2015, National Geographic Magazine deemed his advent (and that of Rock Music) in 1956 an event of such importance, that it ranked 79th in their list of the 100 most significant events that changed the world since time began. No other entertainer is listed separately.
  • References

    Cultural depictions of Elvis Presley Wikipedia