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The Art of Graceland Too at Crosstown Arts

Every square inch of Graceland Too was covered in Elvis memorabilia. The Holly Springs attraction had Elvis piled on every surface. The King dripped from the ceilings and was plastered across every wall. The collection never stopped growing, and no two tours with the museum’s live-in curator, Elvis mega-fan Paul MacLeod, were alike. His intense patter might include off-color jokes, snippets of his favorite songs, some obscure bit of trivia about Presley, or a personal story from one of the 120 Elvis concerts he claimed to have attended. He might rant about the price of a gallon of paint. On one of his better days, when his false teeth weren’t slipping too much, MacLeod could cram every bit of that into his opening paragraph.

Outsider art and the Elvis devotee

Tragically, this one-of-a-kind, 24-hour roadside attraction is no more. The museum that never closed went dark forever after MacLeod died in 2014. The enormous collection was sold at auction shortly thereafter. Still, some sense of what the full Paul MacLeod experience was like can be gleaned from the Jeffrey Jensen and Geoffrey Shrewsbury documentary The Rise and Fall of Graceland Too. Clips of the still-unreleased film will be on display at Crosstown Arts Wednesday, September 23rd, as part of the Gonerfest-sponsored exhibit, “No Brag Pure Fact: the Art Of Graceland Too.”

“No Brag Pure Fact,” is named for one of MacLeod’s more endearing and frequently deployed catchphrases. The exhibit also includes some of his notebooks and examples of his Elvis-themed outsider artwork.

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News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1362

Verbatim

State Representative Micha Van Huss (R-Jonesborough) doesn’t want people giving President Barack Obama or the nonexistent King of England too much credit. Van Huss recently explained why he wants to amend the Tennessee constitution crediting “Almighty God, our Creator and Savior” as the source of our civil liberties. “As a nation, we are drifting from the morals of our Founding Fathers,” Huss was quoted as saying. “I think it’s important to reaffirm that our liberties do not come from the King of England. It does not come from Barack Obama. They come from God.”

Take Too

Were you sad that you didn’t get a chance to bid on that set of dust-crusted Elvis-themed Christmas lights at the Graceland Too auction last May, when the contents of the whole weird roadside attraction were purchased by an online bidder? Well, you’ve just been given a second chance. Problems with the winning online bid have resulted in Graceland Too announcing a second estate auction. “I deal with a lot of estates, and this is not the worst thing that has ever happened,” Graceland Too’s attorney Philip Knecht was quoted as saying.

Bad Santa

Ladarius Robinson’s underworld friends should start calling him the Grinch. Robinson was caught on camera attempting to steal more than $1,000 of designer jeans from Icon on South Highland. Robinson was wearing a Santa hat.

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Graceland Too — Revisited

On the evening of July 15, 2014, Paul B. MacLeod, age 70, shot and killed the 28-year-old man who tried to enter MacLeod’s house in Holly Springs, Mississippi. Two days after the shooting, MacLeod himself was found dead on his front porch, the cause of death ruled to be natural causes. But the crowd that gathers at 200 E. Gholson in Holly Springs on Saturday won’t be there just to remember the late Paul MacLeod. They’ll be on hand for an auction not only of the house’s contents but of the house itself, a house known as Graceland Too.

Since opening his door, any hour of the day or night, to the public, MacLeod acted as the onsite guide to his cluttered collection of Elvis memorabilia, a collection that ran from front porch to backyard and from floors to walls to ceilings. Elvis busts and full-figure cutouts; rooms wallpapered in Elvis albums and album covers; Elvis concert photos, curtains, and wall hangings: It was Elvis everywhere, and never mind the kitsch factor. This was more like folk art run riot and raised to the level of room-size art installation. There was a pink limo parked out back. There was a faux electric chair wired to a (working?) DieHard battery and inspired by Jailhouse Rock. But there were non-Elvis decorative touches too: fake Christmas tree branches, Mardi Gras beads, chain-link fencing, and barbed wire. The house itself (including the glass in its windows) could be painted a bright blue one year and a combination brown/white the next — with little to no rhyme or reason why the colors went where. But the tourists were certainly there. They could be drunken college students by night or foreign tourists by day, and they weren’t just treated to one man’s fixation on all things Elvis. They met the man himself, Paul MacLeod, who claimed to drink a case of Coke a day.

Among the visitors were journalists and publishers Darrin Devault, who teaches at the University of Memphis, and Tom Graves, who teaches at LeMoyne-Owen College. Devault and Graves are amateur but accomplished photographers too, and they’ve documented MacLeod’s collection in Graceland Too Revisited (Devault-Graves Digital Editions), subtitled “Images from the Home of the Universes*, Galaxys*, Planets*, Worlds*, Ultimate #1 Elvis Fan.”

In recent phone interviews, Devault called the house “the wackiest place I’ve ever seen.” Graves — borrowing from music writer and cultural critic Greil Marcus — called it a fine example of a vanishing species: “the old weird America.” But Graceland Too isn’t just endangered. It’s soon to be extinct, and the exact date is that auction date: January 31st. No telling how high the bids on individual items could go, but MacLeod claimed his collection was worth millions, though, judging from Devault’s and Graves’ images, it’s hard to spot the rarities. Impossible, however, not to recognize MacLeod’s single-mindedness.

“Graceland Too was a two-part attraction,” Devault said. “The first was the artifacts. The second was Paul. He was a raconteur of the highest order.”

“A dyed-in-the-wool Elvis guy” is how Graves described him. “Bric-a-brac chaos” is what Graves called Graceland Too — chaos captured in the color-saturated imagery of Graceland Too Revisited.

The publishing team visited Holly Springs twice to take photos: the first visit during Graceland Too’s “Blue Period” in July 2011; then in August 2014. The end result, so far as the authors know: the only evidence in book form of MacLeod’s collection. “We want readers to be able to touch the pages, get a good sense of the color,” Graves said of the book, which differs from the digital editions normally produced by the Devault-Graves Agency.

“We looked at Paul MacLeod as a man who devoted his life to something he believed in,” Devault said against any charges that Graceland Too Revisited is simply a spotlight on an eccentric individual. But the book already puts those possible charges to rest. On the dedication page, it’s there for all to see: “To the memory of Paul B. MacLeod, an Elvis fan who showed us how to chase our dreams.”

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News The Fly-By

Graceland Redux

Memphians have a weird relationship with Graceland. Those who have never passed through the gates hold it as a point of native pride; and those who have been there try to justify it with excuses about visiting relatives.

But there’s another Graceland, located an hour south of Memphis in Holly Springs, Mississippi. It’s Graceland, Too, one man’s six-decades-running residential homage to all things Elvis.

For the uninitiated, Graceland, Too isn’t meant to be a re-creation of the real thing. Instead, it’s a smallish house stuffed to the gills with Paul McLeod’s massive collection of Elvis memorabilia (among other things). McLeod will welcome you into his house anytime, day or night, for the low, low price of $5. After you’ve been to Graceland, Too three times, you’re eligible for a lifetime membership, which entitles you to free admission.

Once inside, McLeod presents his collection, room by overstuffed room. There are records and photos and binders full of notes cataloging each time Elvis has been mentioned on TV in the past 20 years. There are three TVs that run constantly, each on a different channel. There are records and books and Elvis-themed tchotchkes of every imaginable kind. Nearly every surface is wallpapered with newspaper clippings and neon sheets of paper printed with quotes from visitors.

Though the house is devoted to Elvis, very little of the tour is. The tour is more about McLeod’s monument: its creation, its visitors, its upkeep, and its constant changes (like building a replica of the “Jailhouse Rock” set in the backyard, largely out of kitchenware).

Visits to Graceland, Too are a rite of passage for curious Memphians, tipsy college students, and Elvis fans looking for something a little different. But in the past few years, this already-strange attraction seems to have gotten weirder. Now, with its owner in poor health, a few Memphians are trying to ensure the collection’s preservation.

“When our group traveled down to Graceland, Too for the first time, we had no intention of doing anything but drinking some beers and getting some laughs from Paul and his eccentric collection,” University of Memphis graduate student Amy Gregory told me via email. “However, we stuck around after the tour and started talking to Paul and got a feeling that he was trying to reach out to us for some kind of help.”

Gregory and her friends Joe Sills, Matthew Nolen, Meredith Nolen, and Brandon Allen followed McLeod to Annie’s, a Holly Springs diner, where he told them that he was concerned about people stealing from him and that it was getting harder to run Graceland, Too in his old age.

“It’s rare to come across a college kid from Memphis, Ole Miss, or Mississippi State who hasn’t heard of Graceland, Too. But a lot of those kids go and they do what kids do — they steal things from him, make fun of him and all of that,” Sills told me via email. “Paul has a lot of crap inside that place; but he also has some very real treasures, and, at one point, he had many more that have since been stolen.”

Moved by McLeod’s story, the group put together the Blue Suede Benefit, scheduled for December 14th, to raise money for McLeod’s medical bills and other expenses. The benefit will be held at Annie’s in Holly Springs, with entertainment from (what else?) an Elvis tribute band and a silent auction featuring items from Graceland, Too.

While the benefit will help McLeod in the short term, Gregory and Sills are hoping to find a way to make sure that the Elvis collection finds a lasting home. They admit that not everything in the collection is worth saving but want to make sure the most valuable items are kept.

“Our group has tried to tap all of the resources we have to help preserve some of it,” Sills said. “We’ve reached out to the Library of Congress, the University of Memphis, and Ole Miss, but we haven’t gotten very far with any of them yet. Cataloging that place would be a monumental task, but I do think it’s a real piece of Americana that should be preserved somehow.”

Tickets for the Blue Suede Benefit are $20 in advance and $25 at the door and can be purchased at gracelandtoo.org.