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Baby, Let's Play House-Elvis Presley And The Women Who Loved Him - by Alanna Nash
""By far the best study of Elvis Presley I have read. ‘The King’ emerges more clearly from this mosaic of his troubled love life than from any linear biography to date ... Impressively researched, written – and felt.”
(Philip Norman, New York Times bestselling author of John Lennon and Shout!)
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Alanna Nash returns to the Elvis world with her latest stunning book, Baby, Let’s Play House: Elvis Presley and the Women Who Loved Him.
Spanning more than 700 pages and based largely on exclusive interviews with many of the women who were Elvis' friend, lover, sweetheart, peer or family member, it is a book which enlightens, challenges and confronts.
Baby, Let's Play House lives up to its pr of revealing Elvis as 'a charming but wounded Lothario who bedded scores of women but seemed unable to maintain a lasting romantic relationship'. It is also the most comprehensive female perspective on Elvis ever attempted.
The names are familiar and some unfamiliar and their perspective on Elvis is always enthralling. Baby, Let's Play House also details important early girlfriends and provides the stories behind those women who dared to turn Elvis down.
Be it Ann-Margret, Linda Thompson, Cybill Shepherd, Petula Clark, Tanya Tucker, Karen Carpenter, Tempest Storm, June Juanico, Mary Ann Mobley, Carol McCracken, Regis Wilson or Carolyn Bradshaw, the accounts offered are a searchlight which explores and reveals things hidden well below the carefully constructed outer facade Elvis so often put on for his fans and the media.
As always, Nash’s narrative is written with verve and vigor, exhibiting a strong writing style which engages and illuminates the reader.
The story is detailed in chronological order with the book taking on a seminal, evolutionary account of the rise and fall of Elvis on an emotional and spiritual level. For some, it will be viewed as a sad and poignant portrait of Elvis’ emotional fracture and decline. For others, it will be a unique gateway to Elvis’ inner feelings, his thoughts, desires and reaction to handling fame.
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Quote:
I was married for 36 years, and I've got two beautiful children and beautiful grandchildren.
I've been blessed in many ways. But I have just never been able to stop loving Elvis
(June Juanico)
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Throughout the book there are moments of exhilarating highs and pockets of despairing lows. At times Baby, Let’s Play House is factual, at times it is visceral, and on occasion it confronts. A quite graphic account from Sheila Ryan of having sex with Elvis is likely to affront many fans; while the story behind the infamous scene in Girls! Girls! Girls! where ‘little Elvis” becomes noticeably erect is also revealed with a great one liner from Elvis about the unfortunate occurrence.
Many readers will be particularly interested in the author’s writing on Priscilla Presley. Not surprisingly, Ms Presley was not interviewed for the book and instead, Nash relies on material previously published in the controversial book by Suzanne Finstadt, Child Bride. Importantly, Nash presents never-before-published legal information about Priscilla’s lawsuit against Currie Grant, the man who introduced her to Elvis.
Nash also repeats narrative from her controversial article for Playboy featuring claims by Byron Raphael.
These inclusions need to be considered in context. Sheila Ryan’s account of her intimacy with Elvis is what she wanted to express (we do live in a progressive society); Finstadt’s book was a strong release, arguably featuring truths, half-truths, pure fabrication (by some of those interviewed) and reasonable conjecture – all potent ingredients for a great read! (In some respects Baby, Let’s Play House shares similar engrossing and saleable elements). Raphael’s claims were published as a discrete article in Playboy and some level of criticism was to be expected given the sensational nature of several of his claims.
It is very important to appreciate that Baby, Let’s Play House offers a much broader canvas, a multi-layered landscape which pierces the Elvis emotional psyche and its complex textures. In so doing it provides us with a long missing pathway to his innermost desires, wants and fears. That pathway is littered with glorious revelations, fractured feelings and our own indelible emotional reaction to what we are reading. As one window to the inner Elvis, it is powerful stuff!
There are also other accounts recorded in Baby, Let’s Play House which may sit uneasily with some fans, for example, challenging one of the myths in the Elvis world, Jo Smith (wife of Elvis’s close cousin, Billy), comments that Elvis did not pay much attention to Lisa Marie; and the contention that Elvis experienced prolonged grief disorder (complicated grief) which stunted his emotional and psychological growth as an adult.
However, overwhelmingly, the accounts of the many women who encountered Elvis on one or more levels, is not about the sensational, it is about Elvis the human being – a person, like all of us, with hopes, dreams, fears and internal weaknesses; a compassionate man with incredible talent who struggled to understand his fame and handle his demons. Elvis’ ability to befriend, love and what he really wanted in a woman but was unable to find, are all explored in-depth throughout the book. It is through these elements that Nash's narrative is at its most powerful.
Elvis scholars will welcome the recently discovered letters from the 1938 prison file of Vernon Presley, including one from Gladys Presley, who pleads for his early release.
Elsewhere, Raquel Welch describes how "they took the sex out of Elvis" and we learn that to some it appeared Elvis considered the women in his life to fall into two categories: the girls at home (virginal and innocent, to be protected and molded into Elvis' ideal of young womanhood), and the girls on the road (sexually eager fans, showgirls, and strippers).
At the center of Nash's findings are a number of psychologically driven motifs, particularly:
•Gladys the mother figure;
•the importance of family;
•Elvis' ongoing focus on the death of his twin brother, Jesse Garon; and
•Priscilla as the Madonna figure.
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Quote:
I think he put women in two categories. You were either one of the girls, or you were a lady. Once Priscilla had Lisa Marie in 1968, she became a Madonna figure for him. And I think that may be one reason why they split up. In Mississippi he was taught to be kind and take care of ladies, and then he had the other constantly thrown at him.
(Mary Ann Mobley)
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What is most evident about these recurring themes is that they reveal Elvis communicated very differently with the women in his life than he did with men, and in the context of the Southern fundamentalist religious ethic Elvis was conditioned within, their influence on his life was especially powerful and decisive in his life:
When they got to Graceland, the guys unloaded the bus, and as Marty started to leave, he went in the hallway to see if Elvis needed anything. He was near the front door, next to his parent' bedroom, kneeling on one knee, his head in his hands sobbing. Larry was standing over him, trying to console him.
"Elvis, what's wrong?" Marty said.
"Marty, I saw my mama."
"What do you mean?"
"I walked in the door, and I saw her standing there. I saw her, man."
Nash’s research reaffirms the belief that the only place where Elvis was truly happy was on stage experiencing the undying adulation of his audience.
There are also many moments of humor throughout the book:
On Elvis wooing Shelley Fabares, Sonny West says:
“He went after her from the first picture. He thought she was adorable. But she said to him, ‘I’m dating someone,’ and she said it was serious, so he backed off. But that chemistry was still there. So the next picture he went after her again. He said, ‘Are you still goin’ with that same guy?’ She said, ‘No, I’m not.’ Elvis said, ‘Great!’ Then she said, ‘I’m engaged to him now.’ So the final picture: ‘Are you still engaged to that guy?’ She said, ‘No, I married him.’ After a while he said, ‘You were weakening, weren’t you?’ And you had to get married to stop it, right?”
Photo Source: mypresleygallery.com
It is also fascinating to read how Elvis related to women on different levels. From friendship to playfulness, affection and deeper intimacy, Elvis had a special connection with the opposite sex. Sadly, he was unable to cement that connection at its strongest level - a weaknes
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