Lisa Marie Presley passed away last week. She was 54. Fans poured out sympathy for the Presley family online and celebrated Lisa Marie’s life.
“She was the most passionate, strong, and loving woman I have ever known,” Priscilla Presley said in a statement.
“She was very loving 2 me,” tweeted Billy Idol. “In Memphis in the [’90s] she gave me a viewing of the private sections of Graceland which was very special.”
“So sad to hear of Lisa Marie’s passing,” tweeted Julian Lennon. “She was so lovely when I met her. My heart goes out to Priscilla. I’m so sorry.”
“Rest in peace, beautiful Lisa Marie,” tweeted Yoko Ono. “Our love and deepest condolences go out to Priscilla, Riley, Finley, and Harper and all the Presley family — our hearts are with you. love, yoko.”
“There is not enough love to share for Lisa Marie,” tweeted Kid Rock. “Please pray for her, her children, and family. Only god knows why.”
Lisa Marie Presley, the only child of legendary singer Elvis Presley, died Thursday in a Los Angeles hospital at the age of 54. Press reports state that the cause of death was a cardiac arrest.
Lisa Marie’s mother, Priscilla Presley, issued the following statement: “It is with a heavy heart that I must share the devastating news that my beautiful daughter Lisa Marie has left us. She was the most passionate, strong and loving woman I have ever known.”
Presley was the mother of four children and was formerly married to Michael Jackson and Nicolas Cage. She had been in Memphis as recently as January 8th, to help commemorate her late father’s 88th birthday at Graceland.
“Priscilla Presley and the Presley family are shocked and devastated by the tragic death of their beloved Lisa Marie,” Elvis Presley’s Graceland posted on Facebook. “They are profoundly grateful for the support, love and prayers of everyone, and ask for privacy during this very difficult time.”
Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland issued the following email: “I am saddened to learn of the untimely death of Lisa Marie Presley. She will always be beloved in Memphis, and my thoughts and prayers are with Priscilla and the Presley family during this difficult time. I share my condolences with everyone who knew and loved Lisa Marie.”
The Flyer will update this story as more details emerge.
U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) released the following statement:
“I am terribly saddened. She was much too young. She was just here in Memphis on Sunday for her father’s birthday and talked about how energizing it was to be among his fans.
“She looks so much like her father. I was pleased to see her Tuesday night on the Golden Globes where she saw her father’s bio-pic recognized.
“I remember 1977 when Elvis died and how I was affected. When he died, it was personal because we’d grown up with him. This is a sad day for Elvis fans, including myself. I extend my deepest condolences to Lisa Marie’s mother, Priscilla, and to her children.”
If Priscilla Presley gives her seal of approval to your portrayal of Elvis in a movie, that’s all you need.
And that’s exactly what Priscilla, who was married to The King and is the mother of their child, Lisa Marie Presley, did during the Memphis premiere of the Baz Luhrmann movie Elvis, which stars Austin Butler as Elvis, on June 11th at The Guest House at Graceland.
“Elvis morphed into you,” Presley told Butler on stage before the movie started. “You had his guidance.”
Stars from the movie, director Luhrmann, and members of the Presley family, including Lisa Marie and her daughter, Riley Keough, and Elvis’ buddy and business associate, Jerry Schilling, were at the premiere. They all gathered on stage at one point. The movie is slated to open nationwide June 24th.
Earlier, I talked to Priscilla and people involved in the film.
I asked Priscilla what sets Elvis apart from other movies and documentaries about the performer. “It’s very sensitive to me and the family,” she says. “Baz has done an amazing job in this film. This has been two years. I know he’s been wanting to do this forever, do a movie on Elvis. But, with Baz, I get a little nervous because Baz does what he wants. He’s got an eye. He’s got such style. But now dealing with such a sensitive story was a bit worrisome [as to] where he’s going to take it.”
But, she says, “It is a true story between the ups and downs of Elvis and Col. Parker, but with his stylized way, beautiful way. Especially with Austin Butler, who plays Elvis so realistically. He had him down pat to the point of a gesture. He studied him for two years. And the story will prove it. When you see it, you think you’re seeing Elvis Presley. But, again, he is not Elvis Presley. He is an actor playing Elvis Presley. And that’s what I like about it, too. He’s not trying to be Elvis. He is his own person.
“But the story is a wonderful story and I think it’s a different take on what we normally see.”
I asked Butler, who described Elvis as “such a complex human being,” what was the most difficult part of Elvis for him to play. “One of the most challenging things is the fact that he has been held up as either a god-like iconic figure or as this caricature that is not the real man,” Butler says. “So, for me, it was stripping all that away and getting down to his humanity.
“And the challenging part about that is you want to be incredibly technical. You want to be meticulous about all the details. But it could never be the details sacrificing the humanity.”
Luhrmann told me Elvis movies were shown at the theater in the small town where he grew up. “The matinees were the Elvis movies,” he says. “So, like as a 10-year-old, he was the coolest guy in the world. And then I grew on and all that. He was always present.”
As for making Elvis, Luhrmann says, “I didn’t do this so much out of fandom, although I have a great respect for him. I did this because I really believe he is at the center of America in the ’50s, ’60s, and the ’70s. And he is a way of exploring America. To understand that he was this rebel in the ’50s and it was dangerous to do what he was doing. And his relationship to Beale Street and people like B. B. King and then him being put in a bubble in Hollywood and then finding himself again in the [Elvis] ’68 [Comeback] Special and reconnecting with gospel, his great, great love. And then, to put it bluntly and to quote one of his songs, being caught in a trap in Vegas. That’s the sort of tragedy of that.
“And yet, what he’s left behind, as you see in that last great performance of him is still the voice and still the spirit. To me, whatever you say about Elvis, he was a spiritual person. And that comes from his love of gospel.”
Kelvin Harrison Jr., who plays B.B. King in Elvis, told me what drew him to the role. “For me, it was just how smart he was and how savvy he was with his business,” he says. “This was a very strategic man, in my opinion, but also [he had] so much heart and soul. And a simple man. He literally was working in the fields, and literally put up a wire on a post and started learning how to play and find sounds playing one string. That is so incredible to me. So I was just so inspired by the tenacity that he had, and just the rawness.”
In the movie, Elvis is astonished at the stage presence, complete with the most amazing moves, of Little Richard. Alton Mason plays Richard in the film. What attracted him to the role was “how powerful, how outspoken and loud he was,” Mason told me. “How sexy he was. How fly he was. And his aura.”
Mason, who said the revered gospel singer Mahalia Jackson is his great-great-great-great aunt, also told me, “I had to develop empathy for not only who he was, but the period and the time that he was in. And him being that in that time, it takes a lot of power, a lot of fearlessness, to choose to be so different in a time like this. It was an amazing learning experience for me, too.”
I loved what Tom Hanks, who plays Col. Tom Parker, said on stage before the movie began: “As an actor I found myself shooting in castles in which kings once lived in. I shot in palaces that have been turned into museums that were the homes of kings. I shot in museums in which kings and queens have lived in.”
But he told the audience to notice that all of those kings and queens “have an ‘s’ on the end of them. Meaning that there were more than one. At Graceland, we are visiting the home of The King.”
The London Daily Mail online posted a story today critiquing Lisa Marie Presley’s appearance and compared her father Elvis’ “bloated period.”
From the Daily Mail: Only last summer Miss Presley – who includes Michael Jackson and Nicolas Cage among her four former husbands – appeared trim and fit.
Publicity shots of her singing “In The Ghetto” in a virtual reality duet with her father showed her looking the image of her mother, the slim and elegant Priscilla, when she was in her 20s.
But Miss Presley, who was pictured this week at a charity to feed the homeless, has a long way to go before she is in danger of emulating her father’s gross weight gain before his death at 42 in 1977 …
It’s Fashion Week in New York and that means skulking models, star designers, and celebutantes.
New York magazine’s fashion blog reports that at the Anna Sui show, the “last-second arrival of the afternoon was awarded to Elvis spawn Lisa Marie Presley, her eclectically dressed husband, daughter Riley Keough, and Riley’s tiresome boyfriend Ryan Cabrera. … Lisa Marie is blonde enough now that at first we thought it might be Jessica Simpson.”
Okay, first: Elvis’ granddaughter is dating Ashlee Simpson’s ex? Ugh. And second, Lisa Marie was mistaken for Jessica Simpson? How much plastic surgery has that woman had?