Elvis Presley’s granddaughter Riley Keough, who owns the Graceland estate, successfully blocked the auction of Elvis’s former home by the company Naussany Investments, which may have fraudulently initiated the foreclosure by claiming that Lisa Marie Presley used Graceland as collateral for a loan. What do you think?
“Good compounds are hard to come by these days.”
Joint Pathologist, Klay Mcneil
Arlington National Cemetery Boosts Tourism By Adding Zipline
“It’s a shame, Graceland would have made a great Airbnb.”
The actor has signed on to star opposite Liam Neeson in Paramount Pictures’ untitled remake of Naked Gun, based on the crime spoof comedies that were released in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Akiva Schaffer is directing the comedy, which has a script by Dan Gregor, Doug Mand and Schaffer. The trio were behind the popular and Emmy-winning Disney+ movie Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers.
The original movie, written and directed by Jerry Zucker, Jim Abrahams and David Zucker and based on their television series Police Squad! that lasted only six episodes, spoofed the tropes of police shows and films that had ingrained themselves into audience’s minds over the decades. It centered on an inept and clueless detective named Frank Drebin, played by Leslie Nielsen, who still somehow managed to solve the crime and save the day.
Plot details are being locked away with other police files but it known that Neeson is playing Drebin.
Anderson will be love interest, akin to the role played in the original by Priscilla Presley, with a mix of sexiness and goofiness.
Seth MacFarlane and Erica Huggins are producing via their company Fuzzy Door. Schaffer is exec producing along with Daniel M. Stillman.
Paramount has penciled a July 18, 2025 release for the feature.
Anderson is famously the Playboy model who parlayed her beauty into international stardom thanks to the syndicated hit, Baywatch. A sex tape scandal in the mid-1990s brought her a level of notoriety. She made her big-screen debut starring in Barb Wire, a high-profile adaptation of a Dark Horse Comics titled that bombed and was savaged by critics. She dusted herself off though and went on to lean into her image with shows such as V.I.P. and in horror movie spoof Scary Movie 3. She has also appeared in numerous reality TV series.
Anderson was back in the spotlight thanks to 2022’s high-profile Hulu mini-series Pam & Tommy, which featured Lily James as the Baywatch star and focused on the tumultuous sex tape era. She had her rebuttal with the Netflix documentary Pamela, A Love Story.
Her return now to a big-studio comedy opposite an Oscar-nominated actor is the latest marker of a winding and varied journey.
Anderson is repped by Independent Artist Group, Hanson Jacobson, and Boulevard Management.
He was the king of Rock & Roll, but what about Elvis and marijuana
He changed music and had a huge impact in the industry. He captured the emotions of a generation and lead the way for the Beatles, Queen, Sting, all the way up to Taylor Swift and Drake. He still holds the record for Most Top 40 hits at 114 total and has sold over one billion records worldwide. Elvis’s music has more than 30 million monthly Spotify listeners. In December, his music climbed to No. 1 on the Rock Streaming Songs Chart with his favorite “Blue Christmas.”
But what about Elvis and marijuana? The Musican had a troubled history with drugs, but what about his relationships with cannabis? Growing up in Tupelo, Mississippi, he was brought up in a faith background. He won three Grammy awards during this lifetime, all for gospel music. His death in 1977 shook the world. At the time he was bloated, sad, and overusing drugs…but was marijuana in the mix?
Elvis was part of the mainstream culture, but he started the move from strait-laced to a more open mindset. His swinging hips was the first step on the path to sexual freedom and a more robust love of daily life. But for Elvis it came at a price. Quickly becoming an icon, he struggled with the fame, the tour, and how his image didn’t always match what he felt as his true self.
He definitely experimented with illicit drugs. Elvis and then wife Priscilla tried LSD together and spent quite a while giggling and looking at Elvis’s fish tank. But they didn’t like the after effects and didn’t try it again. In Alana Nash’s book he consumed marijuana for medicinal purposes after his eye trouble, and also probably smoked it other times. Priscilla shared he occasionally had edibles.
But his true love was legal prescription pills. When he went to the army, he was already addicted to amphetamines and later on opioids and barbiturates were added to help him sleep and come down from the amphetamines.
Presley, with his music and dancing, represented sexual liberation. He also brought traditionally black music to the mainstream which became a thread in the civil rights movement. Despite a conservative upbringing, he wound up opening the path for modern thinking. While he didn’t endorse marijuana, he changed the mindset which also started a change in the way the public, especially the younger set, thought about cannabis.
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Sofia Coppola is getting candid about making films on low budgets because, as a female director, she doesn’t tend to get the massive budgets her male counterparts do.
In a conversation with BBC News, the Priscilladirector opened up about how she had to get creative with the Priscilla Presley biopic, based on the biography Elvis and Me, because of its relatively low budget of $20 million.
“I just see all these men getting hundreds of millions of dollars, and then I’m fighting for a tiny fraction of that,” she said. “I think it’s just left over from the way the culture of that business is. It’s frustrating, but I’m always fighting to get it, and I’m just happy to get to make my movies independently and find people that believe in them.”
Despite how frustrating it can be, the filmmaker admitted it does have an upside: She doesn’t have to deal with a lot of feedback from higher-ups because they don’t have as much invested in her projects.
“There’s a challenge and a freedom in making things small because if you have a big budget, you have a lot of input from studio executives, and I would never be able to make a movie like that,” she continued. “So, I have that freedom, and then you have to be really crafty, and it was really hard, but I had the best team.”
She and her team reused a lot of sets and were able to make many costumes, which Coppola attributes to her creative department heads who took what they could get and ran with it. Due its financial constraints, Priscillawas shot in 30 days and on digital, instead of film like the helmer wanted, because they had to move so fast.
Another issue they faced was being unable to use Elvis Presley’s music in the project. The Marie Antoinette director originally wanted to have three of the King of Rock and Roll’s songs, but she knew there was a chance she wouldn’t be able to get the rights. So, she turned to another legendary musician’s tune instead.
“To me, it is really important to have Dolly Parton at the end, to have a woman’s voice at the end,” Coppola explained of the film playing out to Parton’s “I Will Always Love You.”
Sources: YouTube Screenshots, Piers Morgan Uncensored, Pop Culture Club
Priscilla Presley is speaking out to defend the late legendary singer Elvis Presley for initiating their relationship when he was 24 and she was only 14.
Priscilla Presley addresses 10-year age gap with Elvis and meeting him at 14-years-old:
“Even though I was 14, I was older in life than in years…. I never had sex with him. He was very kind, very soft, very loving. But he also respected the fact I was only 14 years old” pic.twitter.com/5cQ3XeaSrw
Fox News reported that Priscilla was only 14 years-old when she met Elvis at a party in Germany, where the 24 year-old was stationed while serving in the U.S. military. Backlash has grown in recent years over both their 10 year age gap and Priscilla being a minor when they met, but she was quick to defend Elvis in a new interview.
“My relationship with Elvis, you know, people go, ‘Oh my god, how could this happen?’ It was not a sexual relationship, being 14 years old,” Priscilla, now 78, told Fox 32 Chicago. “What I think really attracted him to me was the fact that, and I’ve gone over this many times, ‘Why me? Why me?’ was because I was like the listener. He poured his heart out to me in Germany. He was very, very lonely.”
Priscilla went on to explain that Elvis had recently lost his mother when they met, something that she described as being “a big issue for him.”
“He just trusted me with a lot of things that he shared,” she explained.
Priscilla further opened up about her and Elvis’ age gap earlier this year.
“It was very difficult for my parents to understand that Elvis would be so interested in me and I really do think because I was more of a listener,” Priscilla said back in September, according to Entertainment Weekly. “Elvis would pour his heart out to me, his fears, his hopes, the loss of his mother which he never ever got over, and I was the person who really really sat there to listen and to comfort him.”
“I was a little bit older in life than in numbers and that was the attraction,” she continued. “And you know, people think, Oh, it was sex… Not at all. I never had sex with him. He was very kind, very soft, very loving. But he also respected the fact that I was only 14 years old. We were more in mind and thought. And that was our relationship.”
Some of Priscilla’s fondest memories of Elvis are spending Christmases with him at his Graceland estate in Memphis, Tennessee.
“Yes, that was his special time,” she said of these holidays. “He loved all the decorations. I would do the tree, I would put all the lightbulbs on the tree and the lights, and he would take the tinfoil and stand in the back where the dining room table is and curl it all up, squish it together and throw it. And I go, ‘No, that’s not how you put tinsel on and so I would take it and put a little bit and he would just take it and throw the tinsel on.”
Priscilla and Elvis were married from 1967 until they divorced in 1973, and he tragically died four years later from a heart attack at the age of 42. Despite their split, Priscilla still views Elvis as the love of her life, and she has never remarried in the decades since his passing.
“To be honest with you, I never wanted to marry after him. I never had any desire,” Priscilla told People Magazine last month. “No one could ever match him.”
Page Six reported that this came days after a judge signed off on official documents stating that after her death, Priscilla will be buried near Elvis and their daughter Lisa Marie in Graceland’s Meditation Garden in Memphis, Tennessee.
“That’s what I want and wanted,” Priscilla told the British media personality Piers Morgan afterwards of these burial plans.
“So you will be buried there?” Piers asked, to which Priscilla replied with an emphatic, “Yes.”
Do you think Elvis deserves backlash for beginning a relationship with Priscilla when she was only 14, or should people let this one go? Let us know in the comments section.
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Turning a short-lived parody TV series into a feature film was always going to involve taking a chance, but as the team behind the Naked Gun franchise learned, it wasn’t quite on the level of sticking your face in a fan.
Following the breakout success of the 1980 smash hit Airplane!, that film’s writer-director team — David Zucker, Jim Abrahams and Jerry Zucker — found themselves grounded when ABC promptly canceled their police-spoofing show Police Squad! in 1982. But the series’ co-creators refused to let the concept die and went on to adapt it for The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!, which Paramount Pictures released theatrically on Dec. 2, 1988. The movie, featuring Leslie Nielsen reprising his Police Squad! lead role as accident-prone police lieutenant Frank Drebin, also starred Priscilla Presley, Ricardo Montalbán, George Kennedy and O. J. Simpson.
To celebrate the 35th anniversary of the original Naked Gun film that collected $78 million ($204 million today) on its way to becoming an endlessly quotable comedy classic that spawned two sequels, The Hollywood Reporter chatted with director David Zucker and co-writer Pat Proft, who both worked on the script with Abrahams and Jerry Zucker. Interviewed separately, the pair explain why they immediately regretted making the project as a TV series, how Presley landed as the romantic lead instead of initial choice Bo Derek, the drama surrounding the filming of the pivotal baseball game, and why they aren’t involved in the planned Naked Gun reboot that Paramount is developing with producer Seth MacFarlane, filmmaker Akiva Schaffer and star Liam Neeson.
O.J. Simpson, Leslie Nielsen and George Kennedy in Naked Gun
Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection
What inspired the series Police Squad!, and how did the movie materialize several years after the show’s cancellation?
David Zucker: We loved this 1950s black-and-white television series called M Squad, which stars Lee Marvin, and it’s the exact same thing as Police Squad! Our first idea was actually to do a movie based on M Squad, but we couldn’t figure out a plot. Instead, Paramount’s Michael Eisner — who was the only one who had seen any potential in Airplane! — said, “I can get you six episodes on the air if you do it as a half-hour TV show.” That’s what we decided to do, but we immediately thought better of it and said, “What are we doing? We don’t want to do a TV show.” So we came back to Eisner the next day and said, “We don’t want to do this,” and Eisner said, “No, I’ve already pitched it to ABC — they’re going to do it.” And we believed him.
Pat Proft: I was a story editor on Police Squad!, and I wrote an episode of it. The show [only lasted] six episodes, and I get a call about three weeks after that saying, “We’re going to do a movie version of this, and we want you to join us.” So that’s how we began writing films together.
Zucker: ABC couldn’t cancel it fast enough. It was canceled after four episodes. So then we did Top Secret! in 1984, and then Ruthless People in ’86. We really wanted to go back to doing what we most enjoyed, which was the Airplane!-style spoof. I thought we should do a movie of Police Squad! We just needed to reformulate it so that there was a love interest, and then by that time, we realized that you needed a character arc. We went in and pitched the idea for a movie to Frank Mancuso at Paramount. Easiest pitch we ever had.
What was the writing process like for the film?
Zucker: Jerry, Jim, Pat Proft and I wrote the first draft of the first script, and I wrote the 20 subsequent drafts on the set. Pat and I would rewrite every day on the set.
Proft: We just made each other laugh all day long. When “nice beaver” came up, we laughed for a day and a half. That was one of the stupidest things we ever came up with.
Leslie Nielsen in Naked Gun
Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection
What made O.J. Simpson right for Nordberg?
Zucker: We always cast people in our movies precisely because they had not been in a comedy. When we cast Leslie Nielsen in Airplane!, he was the fourth choice; other actors turned the part down, and he was unknown. But we wanted somebody who had never been in a comedy. As a person, he was a very nice guy, a great actor, a prankster, kind of a closet anarchist.
What do you remember about working with Priscilla?
Zucker: First of all, a wonderful person, girl next door, the sweetest person. She was with Elvis, but she was like any girl that I knew in my high school. But what I remember most is the first table read. She was very nervous and said, “I don’t know how to be funny.” And I said, “You don’t have to worry about that at all. Just let the lines do the work. I want exactly the character that you played on Dallas.” Once she knew that, she was very comfortable doing it and needed next to no direction. This kind of spoof that we do is, it’s not comic timing. It’s dramatic timing. What Leslie did best was, he acted as though he didn’t know he was in a comedy.
Proft: Priscilla was perfect. It was just fun to write for her. Leslie loved working with her, and it shows.
Were others considered for Jane?
Zucker: Our first choice was Bo Derek. We offered it to her because she was a bigger name at the time, [but she turned it down]. I don’t know how Derek would have been, but Priscilla was fabulous, and she never had any qualms about doing it.
Ricardo Montalban and Priscilla Presley in Naked Gun
Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection
There are moments in Naked Gun that were taken directly from Police Squad!, like Frank’s line about taking a chance when you stick your face in the fan.
Zucker: It’s one of my favorite lines. When anybody in my real life says, “Well, that sounds pretty risky,” I immediately say that line, and it only gets a laugh half the time. Usually people just don’t even know what I’m talking about. We used a lot of [Police Squad! bits]. Al, the guy who is so tall that his head is out of frame, that whole routine that was taken right from Police Squad! I just figured, in the movie, people are seeing stuff for the first time, and I loved a lot of those lines from Police Squad!
I believe you had the third act figured out before the rest of the film?
Zucker: Yeah. In all the Naked Guns, we started off first with, what was the love story? And then the next most important thing was, what was the third act? The third act had to be a very public setting. So we had the baseball game, and we worked back from that and figured out the whole Queen plot — that the Queen would be visiting a baseball game, and that the assassination was to occur during that.
In terms of portraying the Queen, did you run that by the royal family?
Zucker: No, because they would have said no. We heard later that the royal family actually enjoyed it. And we had heard before that one of Prince Philip’s favorite movies was Airplane. I think the royal family always knew that we were not being mean-spirited.
With using the baseball stadium, were there particular challenges to make that happen?
Zucker: The Dodgers were very skittish about being associated with this. They said later that they didn’t like the rhubarb at the end, that all the players were fighting — as though that never occurs. They let us use Dodger Stadium, but we couldn’t say it was Dodger Stadium. We also wanted Vin Scully to be one of the announcers, and they wouldn’t let us use Vin Scully. The Angels were fine with it. And Major League Baseball said we had to use the Mariners because the Mariners were a really weak franchise at the time, and they wanted to promote them.
Proft: I was making up the words for the National Anthem, and we were just laughing about that. Enrico Pallazzo, which people bring up when they talk about The Naked Gun, it was a stupid name that I had, and it’s now become a thing.
Did the studio have notes?
Zucker: Very few. The studio was pretty much hands-off. What the studio was most concerned about was whether I made the days because we would fall behind the schedule a lot, and they would have a guy on set who was a studio goon. Finally, I just threw a rehearsed tantrum on set, and the guy never complained again.
Was “Weird Al” the top choice for that cameo?
Zucker: He was the only choice. He was a big fan of Airplane! and Top Secret!, and he got to know Bob Weiss, our producer. And so Weiss says, “How about ‘Weird Al’ to do this cameo?” And then we used him in every Naked Gun after that.
When did you know you had something special?
Zucker: Every first screening of every Naked Gun movie has been a disaster. Once we had the second and third previews, we knew they were great, and we knew with all three of the movies, they worked great.
Does it seem tougher now than in the past to get a comedy made?
Zucker: Yes, it is hard to get a comedy made with the studios. You have to get past them gatekeepers. So Pat and I, along with our third partner, Mike McManus, we wrote this film noir comedy parody called The Star of Malta, and we’re going to shoot that in the spring, probably on the Warner Bros. lot. We’re going to start pre-production in January. Not that the studios ever would have done it — it’s totally independent financing. [For the studios,] it’s only superhero movies and big franchises, Tom Cruise movies — which by the way, I love Tom Cruise movies, but those are $200 million budgets. Ours is a $10 million budget, which is probably Tom Cruise’s catering budget.
I know that a new Naked Gun movie is in the works with Liam Neeson starring and Seth MacFarlane producing. Was it ever a possibility that you would be involved?
Zucker: Pat, Mike and I wrote a script for Naked Gun 4, and we heard Jon Gonda at Paramount had read the script and laughed all the way through it. But somewhere along the line, they decided not to go with Pat and Mike and me. So that’s when they got Seth MacFarlane, and he has Akiva Schaffer directing Liam Neeson. I was never able to meet with Seth.
Proft: I’m not happy — and there’s a story with it. But I’m not pleased. It may come out and may be great — and good for that — but I sure as fuck should be writing it. I should have done this one.
Zucker: About four years ago, Pat and I had one meeting over at Paramount with the then-head of production there. It was a woman who complained about some joke that Pat and I wrote about a police officer having to adjust her Kevlar vest or have a breast reduction or something. It’s just a stupid, mild joke, but that was too much for them. So I can’t even imagine how they’re limiting whoever does Naked Gun 4, if they’re that frightened. We’re not involved, and we’ve repurposed what was going to be Naked Gun 4 — as we called it, Counterintelijence, spelled with one L and a J — and we’re going to go out with that one.
Proft: We’ve been totally blocked out of it. The unfortunate part of it is that Paramount owns it, so they can do what they fucking want. So that’s it.
Did Seth or Akiva reach out?
Zucker: Akiva did reach out and came to my house. I had a very nice meeting with him. He’s a great guy, and we just talked about comedy. At some point, maybe they were going to give me the script. They wanted me to be involved, but I never got a script, so nothing ever came of it.
How do you feel when you think back on the original Naked Gun?
Zucker: I’m happy that it’s lasted this long. It’s still funny, or that’s what they tell me, so I’m very proud of it. I’m happy to hear that people still are watching.
Proft: When we started writing it, I just knew that this thing is going to be funny. It just really felt great, and I think it’s a great movie. It clicks on humor. It just clicks.
It’s a story that becomes harder and harder to tell in the present epoch. That of Priscilla’s overt grooming by Elvis in order to eventually make her his virgin bride. Of course, that’s not really the story Sofia Coppola wants to focus on with her eighth film, Priscilla. Just as the 1988 TV movie (or “miniseries,” to make it sound more elegant) called Elvis and Me, so, too is Priscilla based on that autobiography of the same name. And yes, the title of it should be telling of the fact that Priscilla continued to view herself as being forever stuck inside the towering shadow of Elvis. Why not Me and Elvis, after all? That her autobiography should have to include Elvis’ name in it was also indicative of the already publicly-held belief that she really was “no one” without him. Had no identity of her own. And a large part of that, as we see in Priscilla (which remains largely faithful to Presley’s book), stemmed from Elvis “getting her” while she was young. Worming his way into her mindspace and heart before she ever had a chance to fully form.
This reality is one that many still don’t want to acknowledge or look at too closely. Including none other than Elvis’ only daughter, Lisa Marie. Indeed, a leaked email that Lisa Marie wrote to Coppola shortly before her death stated, “My father only comes across as a predator and manipulative [in your movie]. As his daughter, I don’t read this and see any of my father in this character. I don’t read this and see my mother’s perspective of my father. I read this and see your shockingly vengeful and contemptuous perspective and I don’t understand why?” This form of denial about the type of man her father was is perhaps to be expected. Even questioning her mother’s “awareness” of what she hath wrought in letting Coppola go through with filming this script. So it was that she added, “I am worried that my mother isn’t seeing the nuance here or realizing the way in which Elvis will be perceived when this movie comes out. I feel protective over my mother who has spent her whole life elevating my father’s legacy. I am worried she doesn’t understand the intentions behind this film or the outcome it will have.”
But isn’t it long overdue to look at Elvis’ “dark side” (read: creep factor) with a less flattering microscope than has been done in the past? Hell, even the celebrated Baz Luhrmann biopic, Elvis, chooses to sidestep detailing much of his domestic life with Priscilla, instead focusing on his artistry and the exploitation he suffered at the hands of the Colonel. Some might even say that being exploited so blatantly was what made Elvis want to do it to someone else. That someone else being, most of the time, Priscilla. Subject to his whims and mood swings, Coppola’s adaptation of Elvis and Me shows “Satnin” slowly adjusting to the life she thought she wanted, because that’s what it would take to be with Elvis. The man she pined for from the moment they separated in March of 1960, after Elvis completed his tour of duty in the Army and went back to the U.S.
Being an impressionable young teenager prone to easy attachment and tending to amplify everything more than it actually should be, Priscilla continued to yearn for Elvis as almost two years went by. Years during which she was tortured by published accounts of Elvis’ sexual exploits with his costars. In 1960, that co-star was Julie Prowse, the fiancée of Frank Sinatra (ergo, Elvis “stuck it” to a fellow musical titan while “sticking it in” Prowse). Forced to watch Elvis’ career and personal life unfold from the sidelines, Priscilla almost gives up hope entirely that their year spent getting to know one another on the Army base meant anything at all. And then, out of the blue, just like that, Elvis calls her and invites her to Graceland. This after Coppola shows us the bittersweet passage of time through the girlhood ephemera of Priscilla’s room. For example, a string of pearls hung over a birthday card that reads, “To My Granddaughter Happy Sweet 16”—the words positioned around a blooming rose with two hummingbirds hovering over it. Symbolism indeed. But men don’t tend to have much interest in girls once they “bloom past a certain age.” Maybe, in that sense, it was best for Priscilla to leave Elvis before she turned thirty.
Priscilla’s “Sofian” foil, Marie Antoinette, on the other hand, never had such a choice. Even though she, too, was leading a life largely separate from Louis XVI. A life she made the most of by “being frivolous.” Decorating the palace, overseeing the construction of the Hamlet at Trianon and, needless to say, buying plenty of clothes and shoes. That latter “hobby” being something Priscilla was well-trained in by Elvis himself as he remade her in his image. Not like a god (though Depeche Mode’s “Personal Jesus” is based on Priscilla’s worshipful dynamic with Elvis), but more like a man playing with a Barbie doll. One he could dress up and style however he wanted. And he did, telling her what and what not to wear (patterns were an absolute no-no). Despite having gotten what she wanted when her parents concede to letting her live with Elvis full-time while she finishes high school (a Catholic one chosen by Elvis), Priscilla finds that the “real relationship” she was hoping to achieve by moving in is largely impossible to get in that Elvis is perennially absent (often mentally, as well as physically), blowing in whenever he wants with the same whimsy as a breeze. Worse still, he continues to avert any sexual consummation with her (one supposes at least he had some limits, but that was more about his own fucked-up psychology than anything resembling a moral code).
Priscilla’s privileged girlhood connection to Marie is a motif Coppola established from the outset of her career, with The Virgin Suicides. Its star, Kirsten Dunst, would go from Lux Lisbon to Marie Antoinette in a pinch. And, although mostly panned at the time, 2006’s Marie Antoinette has evolved into being something of a Coppola favorite—one of the most shining gems in her still scant canon. And, of course, it speaks to all the themes Coppola is so fond of: a teen girl’s loneliness and isolation despite living in a gilded world of privilege. One that’s ultimately a prison where she can be abused under the guise of being “taken care of.” Both Marie and Priscilla experienced this in different centuries and places, but the feeling Coppola evokes about what each woman goes through remains entirely similar. In point of fact, Coppola herself remarked of her attraction to the project, “I was just so interested in Priscilla’s story and her perspective on what it all felt like to grow up as a teenager in Graceland. She was going through all the stages of young womanhood in such an amplified world—kinda similar to Marie Antoinette.”
What’s also “similar” is the idea that both women were basically sold off to a suitor. With Antoinette, that reality was obviously more glaring and straightforward. With Priscilla, it was done with more “subtlety.” In this regard, Coppola is certain to include Priscilla’s (whose last name was then Beaulieu) parents’ initial hesitancy about succumbing to Elvis’ overtures. But, in the end, of course, no one ever says no to power. They didn’t call Elvis “The King” for nothing (a modern-day Louis XVI to Priscilla’s Marie). Which is why he had “little minions” to do his bidding for him…like, say, scouting young “talent” for his bedroom. That’s essentially what Elvis’ “Army buddy,” Currie Grant (not to be confused with Cary), did when he spotted Priscilla at the Wiesbaden, Germany “malt shop,” if you will. Seeing something that he knew Elvis would like, he invited her to a party at the house Elvis was renting. Over the course of that year, things remained decidedly Rated G (though Coppola does leave out a scene from Elvis and Me where Elvis comes up to his room to join Priscilla by lying in bed with her). As they did for Marie’s own sex life with Louis, who has the very French male problem of impotency during the beginning of their marriage.
A girl living in a beautiful location with a beautiful man who 1) does not give her any attention and 2) cannot sexually satisfy her seems to be the name of Coppola’s thematic game. To boot, Coppola “was initially drawn towards the character of Marie Antoinette as an innocent and caring character who found herself in a situation outside of her control, and that rather than creating a historical representation, she wanted to create a more intimate look into the world of the heroine.” The same goes for Priscilla Beaulieu. Who never went back to that surname after taking Elvis’—almost like she couldn’t admit that she wasn’t ever a “whole person” without him. In this sense, Priscilla focuses very little on the “transformational” period of “Cilla’s” life (packed in for a few minutes at the end of the movie), which began in the early 70s when she started taking martial arts lessons with Mike Stone. The instructor she would have an affair with (vaguely alluded to by Coppola) and who Elvis would want to have murdered upon finding out. Because, duh, only a husband can have his affairs, not a wife. One who is mostly responding to the lack of emotional and physical attention from her husband. But even when Priscilla started to talk about the sense of independence karate was giving her, she couldn’t help but relate it back to Elvis by saying, “I think he was really proud of me; very few women were doing karate at that time.”
That wouldn’t exactly track, though, considering Elvis didn’t like “his” woman to display any signs of masculine energy. So it is that Priscilla falls into her role as “trophy wife,” though often with no one to “display herself” to. To convey this type of rudderlessness—this emotional vacancy—Coppola provides so many scenes that echo the decadence-drenched loneliness of Marie Antoinette, like Priscilla sitting in isolation on a massive couch at Graceland holding her only companion, Honey. The dog Elvis gave her right when she moved in (likely in anticipation that it would be the only being in her life she could call loyal and constant). Or sitting alone (and pregnant) in the morning at the kitchen table, furnished with lavish fruits and fresh orange juice, in addition to her breakfast, only to further sink into despair upon encountering yet another gossipy headline about Elvis and Nancy Sinatra “canoodling” on the set of Speedway.
Already well-acquainted with Elvis’ affairs after the highly publicized one involving Ann-Margaret during the production of Viva Las Vegas!, Priscilla “learns her lesson” about bothering to confront him. “I need a woman who understands things like this might happen,” Elvis has the gall to scold her after she brings up his affair with Ann-Margaret. But eventually, she knows that nothing will change. Elvis “is who he is.” And “boys will be boys.”
So it is that Priscilla keeps wandering Graceland like the empty palace that it is, her bereftness enveloping the viewer. As does the emptiness of her life in contrast to the abode she haunts, so chock full of opulent furniture and decor. Seeing her life unfold under Elvis’ specter, most audience members of today would ask why and how she could stay with him for so long before realizing how toxic the relationship was. Granted, the TV movie version of Elvis and Me is way more on blast than Priscilla about that toxicity (side note: Priscilla served as an executive producer on both films). Which makes one wonder why Lisa Marie was so scandalized by Coppola’s rendering. It’s far more generous than past presentations have been, doing its best to uphold the myth that this is a love story and not a story of perverse grooming followed by a master-slave dynamic. Even the rape scene in Elvis and Me is much more direct than the one merely inferred in Priscilla. It happens at the very end, with Coppola making it the catalyst for Priscilla’s final decision to leave him the next morning.
And yet, despite all the abusiveness, all the cruelty, Coppola has the “reverence” to conclude the film with Priscilla driving away from Graceland to the tune of Dolly Parton’s “I Will Always Love You,” which comes across as altogether sick after witnessing what we just did. Nonetheless, it’s another classic case in point of Coppola’s acumen with musical selections, especially as she was forced to get creative after being denied use of Elvis’ music by his Estate. Though it was technically allowed to be used in Elvis and Me (even if “rendered” by another singer named Ronnie McDowell), an equally unflattering portrayal. But maybe that just goes to show how much public tastes have changed to reflect that the Estate wouldn’t want to be part of any project that makes Elvis look like the abusive predator he was (what’s more, even Lana “Daddy Lover” Del Rey didn’t make the time to contribute a song to a biopic about a woman she’s often been aesthetically compared to).
As for Coppola’s casting choices, Cailee Spaeny looks like a mashup of Carey Mulligan in An Education (a film that also deals with a teen girl-older man romance) and Natalie Portman circa Closer (with her vocal inflection also mirroring Portman’s), while Jacob Elordi sounds more like Elvis than he looks like him. But Coppola assessed, “I thought nobody was gonna look quite like Elvis, but Jacob has that same type of magnetism. He’s so charismatic, and girls go crazy around him, so I knew he could pull off playing this type of romantic icon.” Though “romantic” doesn’t feel like quite the right word for Elvis anymore.
To that end, while the story it tells is increasingly difficult to stomach in the modern era (Lisa Marie was right about that), Priscilla is a return to form for Coppola after she veered horrendously off course with 2020’s On the Rocks. Perhaps an indication that she’s better at telling stories about daughters and “Daddies” rather than daughters and daddies.
Lana Del Rey’s love for Elvis Presley is, by now, well-established. Which is why so many were surprised to learn she wouldn’t be in some way participating in Sofia Coppola’s Priscilla. Especially since the director outright asked her to (twice). Claiming the convenient stock excuse of “schedule conflicts,” Del Rey seemed to have no issue dragging herself to Graceland with her usual family-filled entourage. Apparently, only a direct line to Elvis himself could conjure her presence, and that was Riley Keough a.k.a. Elvis’ granddaughter and the new custodian/sole owner of the property in the wake of Lisa Marie’s death. To that end, “lineage” is definitely something Del Rey can get behind honoring (it’s a subject of particular consequence on Did You Know That There’s A Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd, though she also mentions her “karmic lineage” on Blue Banisters). Accordingly, as a means to build anticipation for the Christmas at Graceland special, she posted a picture of her niece, Phoenix, running around with Riley’s daughter, Tupelo (yes, the same name as the small Mississippi town where Elvis was born).
As though borrowing from her “How To Disappear” lyrics when she sang, “I’ve got a kid and two cats in the yard,” she stated of the photo, “Riley has been kind enough to let the kids run all around the yard.” Hmm…is it a “kindness,” really, to let kids play in a massive backyard? Evidently when you’re as legendary as Keough is by proxy. Del Rey’s caption of the photo also noted how seeing these two kids together felt “like nothing short of magic.” Maybe because now, Del Rey’s bond with Elvis and the rest of the Presleys is firmly cemented. There’s a connection forged between the next generation that makes it entirely possible that Del Rey will keep hanging out with Elvis’ progeny. After all, if she couldn’t live during the same time as the icon himself, then this will have to serve as the next best thing.
So, too, does paying homage to him during the special, aired after the Christmas in Rockefeller Center tree-lighting one (a detail Del Rey was also sure to call out on her Instagram account, though failed to highlight Cher’s presence at the event…and yes, Cher also cameos [along with her contemporary, Dolly Parton] with an Elvis anecdote during Christmas at Graceland). After all, Christmas officially starts right after Thanksgiving these days, as there’s no time to waste in getting people into the “holiday” (read: buying) spirit. Del Rey wasn’t necessarily “of that bent” when she chose to sing The Righteous Brothers’ “Unchained Melody,” one of Elvis’ favorite songs to cover. And, considering Del Rey is something of a “cover queen” herself (hear: “The Other Woman,” “Once Upon a Dream,” “Doin’ Time,” “Season of the Witch,” “Blue Velvet,” “Summer Wine,” “Chelsea Hotel No. 2,” “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood,” “For Free” and, most recently, “Take Me Home, Country Roads”—the list truly does go on), the selection made sense.
And so did going down to Graceland a few days early to get “into character,” so to speak (though Del Rey will tell you, “Never had a persona. Never needed one. Never will”). To absorb some of that “mystical Elvis energy” (including snapping a touristy photo in front of Graceland’s National Register of Historical Places sign) in time to sing for the show, commenting, “…you know you can count on me to more than likely have the somber [performance], so I’ve got you covered with that.” For someone who once declared, “Elvis is my daddy,” perhaps it’s fair to say she’s in tune with the underlying sadness within Elvis and many of his songs, thus the “somber” song choice. One that is introduced (second in the lineup after Lainey Wilson’s hoedown interpretation of “Santa Claus is Back in Town”) by none other than Keough herself as she invites the cameras in through the front door while saying, “Welcome to Graceland.” She then guides viewers through the dining room and kitchen as she gushes with a faintly Drew Barrymore lilt (and look, for that matter), “It’s so special for us to have music back in the house and I’m so excited to introduce this beautiful performance by Lana Del Rey.” The camera whip pans to the right to show the singer in question, wearing a dress fans recognized from her Norman Fucking Rockwell! Tour days. A dress that is, of course, appropriately “60s.” And so is her hairstyle and eyeliner, clearly made to give a nod to the woman whose biopic she wouldn’t contribute a song to.
Before diving into her cover, Del Rey remarks, “We particularly like his performance at Rapid City, so we’re gonna channel that and we hope everybody has a really great Christmas.” Of course, while condemnations about Del Rey’s own “fat period” have been ongoing of late, it would be impossible for her to truly channel the agony of that Rapid City performance in June 1977, just a couple of months before Elvis would die. Breathing heavily and drenched in sweat, it was plain to see that years of these live performances (paired with a steady and lethal combination of drugs) had taken their toll. And yes, he didn’t seem to care how he looked or felt once he got on that stage and was revived by the audience’s adulation. So it was that he performed “Unchained Melody” while playing a piano riddled with Coke cups (filled with water or Gatorade, it’s been said) as someone else held the microphone up to his mouth. And from the moment he began to sing, it was as though all perception of his physical appearance melted away while his voice, rich and dreamy as ever, transported the audience to another place.
The same can’t quite be said of what Del Rey does with the cover while performing it among the safety of a pre-taped show with no live audience. She never seems to reach that moment of truly belting it out with the pain and agony Elvis so readily conveys. Indeed, her performance is soft, controlled…subdued. Everything Elvis’ cover of “Unchained Melody” is not. There are even times when her declaration of “I need your love” sounds more like a question than an earnest insistence. What’s more, her decision to use a trio of backup singers for the performance is not in keeping with Elvis’ stripped-back rendition in Rapid City. Perhaps the closest she gets to “channeling Elvis” is by employing an all-Black supporting band (namely, the piano player and backup singers) for the song. While Elvis grafted from Black culture for his music, Del Rey lately seems to be relying on Black talent to “jazz up” her performances, live or otherwise. A glaring example of this occurred on “The Grants,” the opening song for Did You Know That There’s A Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd. Armed with a choir of Black women to chant, “I’m gonna take mine of you with me,” Del Rey returns to the church-y, gospel aura of her early life. Rooted in Roman Catholicism and all the devotion (mixed with opulence) that entails. Elvis had his own love of gospel a.k.a. “church” music thanks to being a Southern Baptist. A religion with, yes, decidedly more “Blackness” to it than Catholicism.
Alas, Del Rey leaning into that form of Blackness doesn’t manage to translate “Unchained Melody” into the mimicking tour de force she hoped it would be for this Christmas special. Nor does her “intimate conversation” with Keough about what their family traditions are for Christmas (she being the only performer bestowed with that kind of overt preferential treatment) do much to inspire awe. Though, at the very least, “Unchained Melody” is not as much of a botched attempt as Alanis Morissette singing “Last Christmas” in front of Elvis’ private plane, the Lisa Marie. A backdrop that did, however, offer more drama and production value to Morissette’s performance than Del Rey’s.
Cut creases and winged eyeliner are staples for a number of Priscilla Presley’s most recognizable eye makeup looks. Do you have any tips and tricks on how to re-create them?
While I generally associate cut creases with the 1960s, it’s not the first thing that comes to mind when I think of Priscilla’s makeup based on the photos I’ve seen of her. What really stands out to me about her 1960s look is the bold way she wore her eyeliner. She did double wings, inverted wings on her inner corners, and straight up outlined her whole eye in black eyeliner. She wore a generous amount of black eye shadow and liner at Elvis’s request, which actually made for a pretty intense eye look rather than the typical wide-eyed babydoll 1960s look with the big cut crease.
To do a cut crease is to create a new crease line for your eyelid. All you need is black or brown eyeliner in whichever format you are the most comfortable working with pencil, cream, liquid, or my favorite, a felt tip pen like Half Magic’s award-winning Magic Flik Calligraphy Eyeliner Pen, which is included in our Limited Edition Priscilla Makeup Set. You’re going to draw a curved line above your natural crease line.
The degree of curvature that you choose is based on personal preference. The outer tail of Priscilla’s cut crease line extends toward the tail of her eyebrow, which gives a lifted, seductive, and feline effect. Now look at Twiggy. The outer tail of her cut crease line extends toward the outer corner of her eye, which gives her more of a wide-eyed baby doll, demure look. So, it’s all about the vibe you want to channel and what you want your makeup to say!
What are some of the biggest mistakes you see with modern-day takes on 1960s makeup looks?
I don’t see any mistakes. I live for modern takes on 1960s glam and I slurp it up every time I see it.
Lisa Marie Presley apparently died hating the way Sofia Coppola’s new film, Priscilla, portrays her parents’ relationship. Variety obtained email correspondence between Presley and Coppola where Presley expressed concern over how her father was portrayed and what that would mean not only for his legacy, but for the relationship dynamics within the family and the continued scrutiny of the family by the public.
Priscilla tells the story of how a young Priscilla Beaulieu, only 14, met 24-year-old music superstar Elvis Presley in Germany in 1954 while Presley was stationed there with the U.S. Army. They begin a courtship in spite of her parents’ concerns over their age difference, though once Presley’s service is up, he goes back to the U.S. and they are separated.
They are reunited in 1963, when Elvis reaches out and asks her parents to allow her to move in with him at Graceland in Memphis and complete her senior year of high school there. This leads to their eventual marriage in 1967, after four years of Priscilla being maintained at Graceland while Elvis spends a majority of his time traveling to Los Angeles shooting films and engaging in alleged infidelity. Priscilla files for divorce in 1973.
The film is an adaptation of Priscilla Presley’s memoir, Elvis and Me, and the timeline described above features the simple facts of their relationship as given in Priscilla’s own account of those events. On their own, these details might already cause concern for a modern audience, even as the age difference between Priscilla and Elvis already caused concern back then.
Nevertheless, before her death by cardiac arrest in January of this year, Priscilla and Elvis’ daughter, Lisa Marie, was hugely concerned that these details were relayed in a script that was “shockingly vengeful and contemptuous” of her father. She sent two emails to Coppola in September of last year, before production had even begun on Priscilla. In one of her emails, she wrote:
“My father only comes across as a predator and manipulative. As his daughter, I don’t read this and see any of my father in this character. I don’t read this and see my mother’s perspective of my father. I read this and see your shockingly vengeful and contemptuous perspective and I don’t understand why?”
Is there a way to portray a 24-year-old dating a 14-year-old in a way that doesn’t make the older person look bad? Perhaps there is, but it wouldn’t necessarily be a responsible, or even honest script. Presley went on to write that she would “be forced to be in a position where I will have to openly say how I feel about the film and go against you, my mother and this film publicly.”
So, she didn’t “see [her] mother’s perspective of [her] father,” and yet she felt the need to “go against” her mother in speaking out against the film based on her mother’s version of events?
Coppola shared her responses to Presley with Variety. She wrote:
“I hope that when you see the final film you will feel differently, and understand I’m taking great care in honoring your mother, while also presenting your father with sensitivity and complexity.”
Priscilla Presley herself supported the film, whereas Lisa Marie was responding to a script that hadn’t yet been finalized or filmed. What’s more, her relationship with her mother was already strained for reasons unrelated to the film. And yet, in her emails to Coppola, she claimed a need to be protective of her mother, too. She wrote:
“I am worried that my mother isn’t seeing the nuance here or realizing the way in which Elvis will be perceived when this movie comes out. I feel protective over my mother who has spent her whole life elevating my father’s legacy. I am worried she doesn’t understand the intentions behind this film or the outcome it will have. I would think of all people that you would understand how this would feel. Why are you coming for my Dad and my family?”
She expresses a lot of concern about how Elvis will be perceived, but less concern about Priscilla’s own account of events. Variety reports that Presley copied her mother as well as her daughter, actress Riley Keough, on the emails sent to Coppola, but did she even talk to her mother about what she thought about the script’s accuracy before going right to the film’s director?
Presley talked about her 78-year-old mother (who’s lived almost her entire life in the public eye) as if she’s a child who couldn’t possibly understand the potential effect of a film’s narrative on public opinion. As if Priscilla’s relationship with Elvis didn’t already raise concerns at the time, both for the age difference between them, and for Elvis’ treatment of Priscilla when she was at Graceland. At best, there are conflicting narratives of their relationship from those adults who were there, sharing their lives.
(Penguin Publishing Group)
Priscilla herself has stated in interviews and in her memoir that she and Elvis were not sexually intimate before they were married. On page 130 of Elvis and Me, Presley writes that it was Elvis who said they should wait until they were married before having sexual intercourse. However, she writes that he said, “I’m not saying we can’t do other things. It’s just the actual encounter. I want to save it.”
Never mind that “other things” can be sexual in nature, that this is a heteronormative view of “virginity,” and that virginity as a concept is ludicrous anyway—sexual grooming doesn’t require sexual activity. Grooming in a sexual context simply means intending to prepare the way for future sexual activity by first gaining a young person’s trust, and sometimes the trust of their family. It seems that in this case, Elvis gained both Priscilla’s and her parents’ trust by reassuring them that everything that was happening was “above-board” simply because “no sex” was involved.
Even if Priscilla herself had conflicting feelings about what she experienced with Elvis, the details she revealed in her memoir already paint an unflattering picture of him on their own, even without deeper context, explanations, or disclaimers. Whether Priscilla identifies what happened in their relationship as grooming, it was. It’s textbook grooming. Just because it happened at a time and in a place where there wasn’t a name for it doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t look at it through that lens now. It isn’t just that “times were different then” either. Flags were being raised then, too.
Priscilla Presley is an adult woman who wrote a memoir detailing her life with her famous ex-husband. Lisa Marie Presley was an adult woman who loved her family, and seemingly wanted to keep her famous father’s legacy as pristine as possible, despite contradictions from the woman who knew him better. Sofia Coppola is an adult woman who wanted to tell another woman’s story in a medium that could illuminate some of the larger issues encapsulated within one famous relationship, allowing for conversations that stretch beyond celebrity gossip.
That’s what art is for. We don’t watch biopics for mere facts. If we wanted nothing but facts, we’d read books (or at least a Wikipedia page) and leave it at that. We turn to art to process those facts. We watch biopics to either to be inspired by someone’s life, or to re-contextualize someone’s life as our culture shifts. Because hearing stories helps us navigate the world.
Understandably, Lisa Marie was uncomfortable with the portrayal of her father in Priscilla. It can’t be easy hearing unpleasant things about your parent. But being The King’s daughter didn’t make her the authority on how to interpret his life, or the relationship he had with her mother. Certainly not while her mother is still alive and has written about it herself.
This piece was written during the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike. Without the labor of the actors currently on strike, the work being covered here wouldn’t exist.
Elvis Presley married Priscilla on May 1, 1967 after several years of courting. The two had a daughter, Lisa Marie born February 1, 1968. The Presleys separated in 1972 after she had an affair with her karate instructor and he had constant affairs with his co-stars. But after the “All Shook Up” singer’s death, Priscilla presided over his estate through their daughter’s inheritance until she was old enough.
Elvis & Me by Priscilla Presley
Elvis & Me by Priscilla Presley
Sofia Coppola adapted the memoir into a biopic film about their marriage in 2023. Priscilla was asked what it was like to see her life portrayed in such a way. “It’s very difficult to sit and watch a film about you, about your life, about your love,” Priscilla said, becoming visibly emotional: “Sofia did an amazing job. She did her homework, we spoke a couple of times and I really put everything out for her that I could.”
“It was very difficult for my parents to understand that Elvis would be so interested in me and why,” she said. “And I really do think because I was more of a listener. Elvis would pour his heart out to me in every way in Germany: his fears, his hopes, the loss of his mother — which he never, ever got over. And I was the person who really, really sat there to listen and to comfort him. That was really our connection. Even though I was 14, I was actually a little bit older in life — n
In January 2023, two weeks after Lisa Marie’s death, Priscilla filed legal documents to dismiss an amendment in Lisa Marie’s trust, according to TMZ. As reported, Priscilla and Elvis’ manager, Barry Siegel, were named trustees of Lisa Marie’s trust after her father’s death in 1977. Between that time and Lisa Marie’s death, there was an amendment in the trust replacing Priscilla and Siegel as trustees and appointing Lisa Marie’s eldest children, Riley and Benjamin, instead. Priscilla claimed in 2023 legal filings that the amendment may be fraudulent as it was never delivered to her. She also contended that the date seemed suspicious, the document misspelled her name, and Lisa Marie’s signature “appears inconsistent with her usual and customary signature.” Priscilla filed for the amendment to be declared invalid.
On May 16, 2023, a settlement between Priscilla Presley and Lisa Marie’s estate was made after months of legal battle. TMZ reported that the settlement was worth several million dollars. “All parties have reached a settlement and the families are happy,” Priscilla’s lawyer, Ronson J. Shamoun, told Entertainment Tonight. “They are very excited for the future.” Riley’s lawyer, Justin Gold, shared the same sentiment, telling the site, “Riley is very happy. She’s a remarkable woman and her future is bright.”
So what is Priscilla Presley’s net worth? Read more to find out.
What is Priscilla Presley’s net worth?
Image: Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images
What is Priscilla Presley’s net worth? Priscilla Presley’s net worth is around $50 million according to Celebrity Net Worth. After her divorce from Elvis, she received a $725,000 cash payment, child support, spousal support, 50% of the proceeds from the sale of their home in Beverly Hills, and 5% of the royalties from Elvis’ publishing companies, according to the net worth site. She also opened up a boutique called Bis & Beau that attracted clients like Diana Ross, Barbra Streisand and Cher.
After Elvis’ death, the beneficiaries of Elvis’ trust were Vernon; Lisa Marie; and Elvis’ grandmother, Minnie Mae Presley. Because Lisa Marie was 9 years old at the time of her father’s death, her inheritance was held until her 25th birthday. Vernon was an executor of Elvis’ will while Lisa Marie had a trust for her father’s inheritance. Elvis’ famous residence Graceland was part of the trust, but upkeeping efforts made Lisa Marie’s trust shrink. Priscilla ended up turning the residence into a very successful international tourist attraction as well as becoming president and chairwoman of Elvis Presley Enterprises. The estate reportedly earns $10 million in a typical year.
After Lisa Marie’s death in 2023, Graceland and her trust were inherited by her daughters, Riley Keough and Harper and Finley Lockwood, a representative for Graceland confirmed to People. Lisa Marie shared Riley with her ex-husband, Danny Keough, whom she divorced in 1994. She shared twins Harper and Finley with her ex-husband Michael Lockwood, whom she separated from in 2016 and divorced in 2021. Lisa Marie’s son Benjamin Keough, whom she shared with Danny, died by suicide in 2020. He was 27 years old.
Image: Courtesy of Everett Collection.
The matter escalated within the family according to a source via Entertainment Tonight on February 16, 2023. “It has been a very tense and heartbreaking few weeks for both Riley and Priscilla. Riley has been mourning the loss of her mother and is heartbroken to have to deal with a trust dispute with a family member. Priscilla is adamant that she has a valid case and that she will prevail in court. Riley and Priscilla aren’t communicating at this time, but have been in communication through lawyers,” the source shared. The source added that while “they are both gearing up for court, Riley would prefer to settle this dispute privately.”
On how Lisa Marie’s daughter feels about the situation, the source added, “She is heartbroken that this has turned into a public matter and knows her mother would never want this. Riley is very stressed at the moment and has been trying to keep a positive attitude and outlook ahead of her new series coming out,” the source says of Riley’s role in Daisy Jones & The Six. “Her daughter and husband have been keeping her in good spirits.” However, Priscilla feels that she “is right in her heart,” when it comes to her late daughter’s trust. “She is convinced that old documents had been forged,” the source confirmed.
Priscilla revealed a statement about the situation via Entertainment Tonight in January 2023. “I loved Elvis very much as he loved me. Lisa is a result of our love,” Priscilla said. “For anyone to think anything differently would be a travesty of the family legacy and would be disrespectful of what Elvis left behind in his life. There is an individual that bought their way into the family enterprise that is trying to speak on behalf of our family. This person is not a representative of Elvis or our family,” she added, without sharing whom she was referring to. “Please allow us the time we need to work together and sort this out. Please ignore ‘the noise.’ As I have always been there for Elvis’ legacy, our family and the fans, I will continue to forge a pathway forward with respect, honesty, dignity, integrity and love.”
Joel Weinshanker, a Managing Partner at Elvis Presley Enterprises, revealed that he was in favor of Riley maintaining her trustee role after her mother’s death. “When Elvis passed away, he left everything to his little girl. He did so knowing that she would be the one to keep his legacy going,” he said on SiriusXM’s Elvis Radio. “I can tell you that [Lisa Marie] has, without falter, no matter what else was happening in her life, in her career, always been the one to look at what was best for Elvis… regardless of what somebody else was trying to do, regardless of what another family member [was trying to] do.”
“We just want to think about what Lisa would’ve wanted and that’s what’s best for Elvis. She never had a doubt in her mind that that’s Riley,” Joel continued. “There’s no question on anyone’s mind [because] Lisa had spoken [about] it, there’s numerous amounts of written information, she had talked to so many of her friends about it. There was never a question, and anybody who’s speaking differently isn’t looking out for Elvis, isn’t looking out for Lisa, certainly isn’t looking out for Riley.”
After Vernon’s death in 1979, Priscilla was named as one of three trustees in Elvis’ will. The other trustees were the National Bank of Commerce in Memphis and Joseph Hanks, who had been Elvis’ accountant. After Minnie Mae’s death in 1980, Lisa Marie became the only surviving beneficiary. Lisa Marie inherited Elvis’ whole estate on her 25th birthday on February 1, 1993.
I reached out to celebrity makeup artist and creative Misha Shahzada for the scoop on how to pull of the perfect, modernized 70s-inspired look. “1970’s makeup offered a range of versatility–from bronzed skin and glossy lips to bold statement eyes and lower lashes,” she explains. “Now being 50 years later this the current products we have on the market, it’s easier to take bits and pieces of the 70s inspired looks with a simplified twist.” The ‘clean girl,’ dewy makeup look that we’ve all fallen in love with can be given a throwback treatment with the addition of a bold eye or a full beat finished with a glossy lip. When creating a retro makeup look for her clientele, Shahzada also takes hints from the era’s pop culture icons featured in film like Priscilla Presley (portrayed by Olivia DeJonge) in Baz Luhrmann’s 2022 biographical drama Elvis.
For Shahzada, focusing on one element of the face at a time is the key to keeping the look modern. Skin care takes precedent over all else to create a glowy (almost glossy) base with the help of Bubble Skincare’s Deep Dive Exfoliating Mask followed by a pump of their Slam Dunk Hydrating Moisturizer and a few drops of their bestselling Float On Soothing Facial Oil. With the skin left hydrated and dewy, additional coverage is only required where needed. “When it comes to skincare, the more consistent you are, the better,” she says. “Avoid over prepping your skin all at once, find out what your skin can tolerate and build from there.”
Creating the rest of a modernized 70s look is simple. For the eyes, Shazada opts for a vibrant blue shade (her favorite is from Victoria Beckham Beauty’s Smoky Eye Brick in Royal) all over the lid; focusing especially on the inner corners. Next, she applies a black kajal eyeliner to the top and bottom lash line to create an elongated wing that she buffs out as the works. To finish, she recommends opting for some strip lashes or adding a few coats of mascara to the top and bottom lashes for a bold, doe-eyed look.
Whether you’re drawing inspiration from Cher, Farrah Fawcett, or Donna Summer, keep scrolling to discover more beauty editor and makeup artist approved products that will bring your disco darling look to life. You’ll definitely want to screenshot these!
“By day, Priscilla went to Catholic school in Memphis for her senior year, and at night she would party with Elvis,” Coppola said. “I found that reality fascinating: She wasn’t allowed to have friends over to Graceland, and she’d hear other girls whispering about her. She was so isolated.
She continued, “It was strangely relatable: In my 20s, I remember having a crush on a guy, and part of it was, if I was with him, then I wouldn’t have to develop an identity of my own: I could just be the girlfriend of this guy, and that would be so much easier. I was devastated when that relation- ship didn’t work out.”
Coppola added, “But it forced me to find my own personality, and that’s a similar story to what happened with Priscilla—she lost herself in Elvis.”
The director also talked about her father, “The Godfather” director Francis Ford Coppola, casting her in his own films while she was growing up.
“I had a small part in ‘Rumble Fish’…I played the bratty younger sister. My father cast me because I was around, and he loved to include his family in his work,” she recalls. “Rob Lowe was in ‘The Outsiders’, and he and his girlfriend at the time, Melissa Gilbert, took me out for ice cream to Rumpelmayer’s when we were back in New York.”
A report by the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner states Lisa Marie Presley’s death in January was caused by a “sequelae of a small bowel obstruction.”
A small bowel obstruction is a blockage in the small intestine, often because of things like scar tissue, a hernia or cancer. Without surgery, it can cause bowel tissue to die or perforate, leading to death.
Presley’s autopsy report, obtained by CNN on Thursday, included the official opinion of deputy medical examiner Dr. Juan M. Carrillo, who attributed her small bowel obstruction to “adhesions (or, scar tissue) that developed after bariatric surgery years ago. This is a known long term complication of this type of surgery.”
Carrillo also stated that he reviewed the autopsy toxicology results, which showed “therapeutic” levels of oxycodone in Presley’s blood – i.e., levels that are in the range of medically helpful, and not dangerous. He added that quetapine metabolite (used to treat depression, schizophrenia or manic episodes) and buprenorphine (a painkiller that can also be used to treat opioid addiction) were present but “not contributory to death.”
“There is no evidence of injury or foul play. The manner of death is deemed natural,” Carrillo concluded.
Dr. Michael Camilleri, a consultant and professor in the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at the Mayo Clinic, told CNN on Thursday that the medications found in Presley’s may “have slowed down the motility of the intestine and would have made it perhaps more likely” for it to get “obstructed by the adhesions.”
“Unfortunately, adhesions can happen to anybody,” he added. “And just because there were these other medications on board doesn’t necessarily mean that the person was more prone to develop the complications.”
Lisa Marie Presley, the only daughter of the late Elvis Presley and Priscilla Presley, died hours after being hospitalized following an apparent cardiac arrest on January 12. The medical examiner’s report also detailed that she was complaining of abdominal pain on the morning of her death.
Dr. Folasade P. May, associate professor of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and director of the Melvin and Bren Simon Gastroenterology Quality Improvement Program, told CNN Thursday that she suspects Presley “developed a cardiac arrest because she had a severe complication from the small bowel obstruction.” Neither doctor interviewed by CNN for this report was directly involved in Presley’s case.
She was 54.
Video shows Lisa Marie Presley on the Golden Globes red carpet
“Priscilla Presley and the Presley family are shocked and devastated by the tragic death of their beloved Lisa Marie,” the family said in a statement at the time. “They are profoundly grateful for the support, love and prayers of everyone, and ask for privacy during this very difficult time.”
Lisa Marie Presley’s last public appearance just days before her death was at the Golden Globe Awards, which she attended with her mother to support the Baz Luhrmann film “Elvis,” about her late father.
Priscilla Presley, the former wife of the legendary musician Elvis Presley, is set to have her side of the couple’s love story depicted in Sofia Coppola’s upcoming biopic “Priscilla.”
The A24 film is based on Presley’s 1985 memoir “Elvis and Me,” per Variety — and from the looks of its first official trailer, released Wednesday, the movie intends to go beyond heavy eye makeup and Aqua Net.
Cailee Spaeny (“Mare of Easttown,” “Bad Times at the El Royale”) stars as Priscilla, who met the King of Rock and Roll at a party in a West Germany Air Force base in 1959 at age 14. Jacob Elordi (“Euphoria,” “The Kissing Booth”) will play Elvis, who was 24 when he first laid eyes on his bride-to-be.
“When teenage Priscilla Beaulieu meets Elvis Presley at a party, the man who is already a meteoric rock-and-roll superstar becomes someone entirely unexpected in private moments: a thrilling crush, an ally in loneliness, a vulnerable best friend,” reads A24’s synopsis for the movie. “Through Priscilla’s eyes, Sofia Coppola tells the unseen side of a great American myth in Elvis and Priscilla’s long courtship and turbulent marriage.”
Presley, now 78, was in the news earlier this year following the death of her daughter, Lisa Marie Presley, and a subsequent estate dispute with her granddaughter, the actor Riley Keough.
Elvis Presley sits cheek to cheek with his bride, the former Priscilla Ann Beaulieu, May 1, 1967.
Bettmann via Getty Images
In a 1985 essay for People, Presley wrote that she was often told as an adolescent and a teenager that she “was the prettiest girl in school, but I never felt that way.”
“I had gotten looks from boys, and once a picture of me in a tight sweater was stolen from the school bulletin board,” she wrote. “Yet I was still a child, embarrassed about my own sexuality.”
Presley also described the dynamic between herself and her much older flame.
“In 1959, after my father was assigned to Wiesbaden, West Germany [headquarters of the U.S. Air Force in Europe], I found myself deeply involved with Elvis,” she wrote. “Something in his Southern upbringing had taught him that the ‘right’ girl was to be saved for marriage. I was that girl. At the same time, he molded me into his woman. I wore the clothes, hairstyle and makeup of his careful choosing.”
She emphasized that she was still very much a child at the time of their courtship.
“My parents became confused and bewildered by our relationship. We tried to make them believe that it was proper and platonic, and they wanted to believe me,” Presley wrote. “Whenever they tried to stop us from seeing each other, I pleaded and cried and made them and myself miserable. In retrospect, I don’t think anything could have stopped me from seeing Elvis.”
Elvis and Priscilla Presley divorced in 1973. Elvis died in 1977.
Coppola has said “Priscilla” will be very different from “Elvis,” last year’s biopic of the singer from director Baz Luhrmann.
“I loved how Baz approached his story in a very collage-y way, but I’m glad it didn’t go into much of Priscilla’s story because now I can really dive deep,” Coppola told Collider.
“I love that people were so into his film about Elvis, and now in a few years there’ll be another film about Priscilla,” she added. “I think it’ll be interesting to have two completely different interpretations of the same events and time period.”
“Priscilla” is set to open in theaters this October.
Riley herself revealed that she wasn’t at the London gathering by sharing pics of her co-stars’ night out on her Instagram Story. One post was from Camila Morrone, and featured the model posing alongside Suki Waterhouse.
“Karen & Camila take London,” Camila captioned the post, referencing her and Suki’s characters in the upcoming Prime Video series.
Riley shared the post on her Instagram Story and referenced her own character, writing, “Meanwhile, Daisy has FOMO.”
Josh Whitehouse also documented the evening, sharing a shot of himself with Camila, Suki and Sam Claflin.
“Great night celebrating the upcoming release of ‘Daisy Jones & the Six’ in London last night with these absolute beauties — what wonderful company I keep,” he captioned the pic. “Thanks for such a great night and so much more to come!”
Riley shared Josh’s post on her Story, and reacted to the photo with a heart emoji.
Photo: Instagram/ RileyKeough
While Riley did not attend that particular event, she has been promoting “Daisy Jones & the Six” in the wake of her mom’s death. In fact, the actress joined TikTok and shared a giggle-filled post with Sam to do just that.
Personally, though, Riley has been dealing with an ongoing battle over her late mom’s trust. Following Lisa Marie’s death on Jan. 12, her rep confirmed to ET that Graceland, the former home of her father, Elvis Presley, would go to her three daughters: 33-year-old Riley, and 14-year-old twins Harper and Finley.
It later came to light that Riley and her brother, Benjamin (who died in 2020), were named co-trustees of Lisa Marie’s trust in 2016. However, Priscilla is contesting “the authenticity and validity” of Riley’s appointment, claiming that “there are many issues surrounding” it.
Amid the legal challenge, Joel Weinshanker, a Managing Partner at Elvis Presley Enterprises, spoke out in favour of Riley maintaining her trustee role in the wake of Lisa Marie’s death. In a follow up statement to ET, Priscilla spoke out about the situation.
“There is an individual that bought their way into the family enterprise that is trying to speak on behalf of our family. This person is not a representative of Elvis or our family,” she said, without sharing whom she was referring to. “Please allow us the time we need to work together and sort this out. Please ignore ‘the noise.’ As I have always been there for Elvis’ legacy, our family and the fans, I will continue to forge a pathway forward with respect, honesty, dignity, integrity and love.”
Later, a source told ET that Keough and her grandmother “aren’t communicating at this time.”
“It has been a very tense and heartbreaking few weeks for both Riley and Priscilla,” the source said. “Riley has been mourning the loss of her mother and is heartbroken to have to deal with a trust dispute with a family member. Priscilla is adamant that she has a valid case and that she will prevail in court.”
The source added that while “they are both gearing up for court, Riley would prefer to settle this dispute privately.”
“She is heartbroken that this has turned into a public matter and knows her mother would never want this. Riley is very stressed at the moment and has been trying to keep a positive attitude and outlook ahead of her new series coming out,” the source said. “Her daughter and husband have been keeping her in good spirits.”
As though Elvis Presley and Britney Spears needed a further connection solidified between them (what with both being pimped out for profit), Baz Luhrmann decided to make it ultra-official by sanctioning the release of a deluxe edition of the Elvis Soundtrack featuring “Toxic Las Vegas.” As the title suggests, it’s a mashup of Spears’ “Toxic” and Presley’s “Viva Las Vegas” (which does, in fact, play during the movie). For those worried that Brit might be losing out on the profits yet again, however, there’s no need to fear: Luhrmann has assured that Brit approved of the sample being used. And why shouldn’t she? Clearly the chanteuse feels a certain kinship to the problematic icon (yes, Elvis conveniently glosses over his pedo tendencies in general and with Priscilla specifically). Not only because they both had to prop themselves up for a Vegas residency that started to feel more and more like a prison, but because each one was forced to perform against their will, when it was no longer a joy to do so. But rather, an infinite torture.
Eerily enough, Britney would don the famous white jumpsuit for her Britney Spears Live from Las Vegas concert video, which showcased her performance at the MGM Grand for 2001’s Dream Within A Dream Tour. Because yes, back then, a Vegas residency would have been out of the question for a constantly rising star like her. Little did she know, Vegas would become her jail cell just thirteen years (also the amount of time she was stuck in a conservatorship) later with Piece of Me at Planet Hollywood. A jail sentence that wouldn’t turn out to be as long as Elvis’ at the International, but still long enough to break her spirit and cause her soul to drain out of her body. Elvis wasn’t really inside his body much either as the seven-year residency wore on. That’s right, seven years of being pumped full of downers and uppers just to keep the show going—just to keep “the Colonel” flush enough to pay his gambling debts.
Of course, the Colonel wouldn’t see it that way, as Luhrmann posits in the biopic (co-written with Sam Bromell, Craig Pearce and Jeremy Doner—fittingly, there is no female perspective on such a “complicated” man). Played by Tom Hanks, the Colonel is sure to insist at the outset of the film (as Jamie Spears might), “Without me, there would be no Elvis Presley. And yet, there are some who would make me out to be the villain of this story.” In short, whatever he needs to tell himself amid the headlines that swirl after his death, including a newscaster announcing, “He worked Elvis like a mule to support his own gambling addiction.”
And yet, Elvis was too young and naïve at the time of his ascent to avoid the con, it seemed. And what with being the first “pop star” of the kind, how was he to know how important and financially successful he would be? As Luhrmann said, “One minute he’s a truck driver, and the next minute he’s the most talked about, most provocative, most famous young man in the world.” Apart from the “truck driving man” description, it sounds like Britney to a tee—who was also constantly condemned for being too sexual. Because yes, women exposing their skin in a liberated manner warrants being treated like they’re still in the 1950s vis-à-vis the outrage and sexual repression front in America. Elvis’ pelvis, indeed, did break down many barriers with regard to repressed desire in the United States. Just not in a way that allowed women in entertainment (or any other arena) to relish the breaking down of those barriers. Hence, Britney being shamed at every turn for how she chose to dress and move… even in the twenty-first century and even by fellow women like Diane Sawyer.
Born into a poor family like Britney, Elvis’ parents also saw an opportunity to monetize his talent. Of course, this was at a time when conservatorships weren’t quite so pervasive (unless, of course, you were a Native American being swindled by a white man), but it didn’t keep a man like the Colonel from capitalizing on his new “product.” Which is why, in Elvis, he boasts of his gift for the “snow job” (like Stanton Carlisle in Nightmare Alley), explaining what that means on the carny circuit: “emptying a rube’s wallet while leaving him with nothing but a smile on their face.” In this scenario, Elvis is the rube in addition to his public. Only he didn’t get the benefit of a smile on his face while being swindled and forced to perform in projects he found to be as hokey as everyone else did.
Britney, at least, had more autonomy at the outset of her career. For a start, she was the one who suggested the Catholic schoolgirl uniforms of “…Baby One More Time.” Or, at least, planted the seed with comments like, “Wouldn’t I be wearing a schoolgirl’s outfit?” and “The outfits looked kind of dorky, so I was like, ‘Let’s tie up our shirts and be cute.’” Too “cute” for most pearl-clutching parents of the day. Just as it was for Elvis being deemed some sort of “instrument of the devil” for his hip-shaking maneuvers. As Austin Butler put it, “He had this animalistic fire.” As did (and does) Britney every time she performs, letting herself transcend to another plane free of judgment and accusations of being a ho (and, now that she’s older, “desperate”).
As for Elvis and Britney’s Southern roots (both were born in Mississippi), it also extended into the eventual sound of their music. While each Southern singer was, on the surface, a “pop” musician, the icons grafted elements from the Black community to whitewash the sound for greater mass consumption (for Britney, that was especially noticeable on a record like 2001’s Britney or a song like “[I Got That] Boom Boom”).
With “Toxic Las Vegas,” their separate remade-from-other-cultures sound fuses into one seamless party. Remixed by Jamieson Shaw, each pop star is given their time on the mic, with Elvis musing, “If I wind up broke, I’ll always remember that I had a swingin’ time.” Britney, unfortunately, had a far less “swingin’ time” in Las Vegas, as she’s sure to constantly repeat the story of how 1) she was never able to go out and enjoy the nightlife of the city at any point during her Piece of Me sentence and 2) all of her hometown “friends” were allowed to go to the spa while she was forced to keep “focusing on the show” and given no such outlet or release for the enjoyment of her own money.
Upon the release of “Toxic Las Vegas,” Luhrmann would diplomatically say of the bond between Elvis and Britney, “She’s a gifted and talented artist, and all gifted and talented artists walk a high wire. What she’s been through—this is probably not the forum for me to comment on it, but others have said that there is a direct line between Elvis’ journey and Britney’s journey. They both had to contend with very, very complicated relationships. Let’s just leave it at that.” But let’s not. Let’s just say what happened: they were both fucked over by the people closest to them, carrying everyone else (in their inner circle) on their backs with the talent they had. The talent that should have ensured their wealth, not anyone else’s. And Las Vegas was a peak of the “toxicity” point for that harsh reality. So yes, a song and title like “Toxic Las Vegas” brings it all full-circle for both maltreated stars.
A public memorial has been planned at Graceland for Lisa Marie Presley.
The singer and songwriter died last week after being hospitalized following an apparent cardiac arrest.
She was 54.
According to a statement on Graceland’s website, the memorial is open to the general public and will be held at 9 a.m. on January 22 on the front lawn of Graceland Mansion in Memphis, Tennessee.
“In lieu of flowers, the family encourages all who wish to send something to do so in the form of a donation to The Elvis Presley Charitable Foundation,” a notice on the site reads.
The Elvis Presley Charitable Foundation supports arts, education and efforts on behalf of children in the Memphis area.
Elvis Presley purchased the estate in 1957 when he was just 22 years old.
He died in the mansion from cardiac arrest in 1977 and is buried on the grounds of Graceland, which is now a museum and a popular tourist attraction. Lisa Marie Presley will be buried there as well, alongside her son Benjamin Keough, who died by suicide in 2020 at the age of 27.
The Graceland estate was held in trust for Lisa Marie Presley, the only child of Elvis and Priscilla Presley, until her 25th birthday.
“Lisa Marie Presley became more closely involved with the management team of The Elvis Presley Trust and its business entity, Elvis Presley Enterprises, Inc.(EPE), of which she was owner and Chairman of the Board until February 2005 when she sold a major interest in the company,” according to the Graceland website.
“She had countless invites for the weekend, but for her, there were only three important ones: being at her father’s birthday celebration, spending time at her son and father’s grave after the tours left Graceland, and meeting with a recently bereaved mother,” Kessler wrote.
Presley was active in helping others deal with their grief, he wrote, including co-hosting grief groups with him at her home for other bereaved parents.
Kessler wrote that their time visiting Graceland was “so much fun and she was optimistic” and that “Graceland was her happy place and the employees who all knew her shared that she was looking so much better.”
“She looked more at peace and was so proud of the Elvis movie. Saturday night we sat at the graves of her father and son,” he wrote. “We talked about the heartbreak she grew up with and the more recent devastation of her son’s death. She showed me where she would be buried someday. I said a long time from now …and she said yes, I have so much to do.”
Presley is survived by her three daughters, actress Riley Keough and twins Finley and Harper Lockwood. A rep for Graceland confirmed to People that they will inherit the estate.
Lisa Marie Presley, singer and only child of Elvis, died Thursday at 54 after being hospitalized for cardiac arrest.
“It is with a heavy heart that I must share the devastating news that my beautiful daughter Lisa Marie has left us,” Priscilla Presley said in a statement Thursday evening. “She was the most passionate, strong and loving woman I have ever known.”
Pricilla Presley, confirmed she was in the hospital and receiving care on Thursday and a police spokesperson told Entertainment Tonight that police were called to Presley’s Los Angeles home Thursday morning.
Reaction to the death of singer-songwriter has poured in since her death.
“Over the last year, the entire Elvis movie family and I have felt the privilege of Lisa Marie’s kind embrace. Her sudden, shocking loss has devastated people all around the world. I know her fans everywhere join me in sharing prayers of love and support with her mother, Priscilla, and her wonderful daughters Riley, Finley and Harper,” “Elvis” director Baz Luhrmann said on Instagram.
“Lisa baby girl, I’m so sorry. I’ll miss you but I know I’ll see you again,” said John Travolta on Instagram.
“I’m heartbroken over the passing of Lisa Marie Presley. Lisa did not have an easy life, as some might think. May she be at peace, resting with her son and father now,” said Actor Leah Remini on Instagram.
“Priscilla Presley and the Presley family are shocked and devastated by the tragic death of their beloved Lisa Marie. They are profoundly grateful for the support, love and prayers of everyone, and ask for privacy during this very difficult time,” said a statement released by a family spokesman at Graceland.
“Our hearts are broken with the sudden and shocking passing of Lisa Marie Presley tonight. Tom and I had spent some time with the family during the Elvis movie promotional tour. Lisa Marie was so honest and direct, vulnerable, in a state of anticipation about the movie. She spoke so eloquently about her father,” said Rita Wilson, actor and wife of “Elvis” star Tom Hanks, on Instagram.
‘Elvis’ is in the building with Austin Butler & Baz Luhrmann
“There is heartbreak and then there is sorrow. This would be sorrow and on more levels than I can count,” the Smashing Pumpkins member wrote. “Please send your prayers out for her family and children at this difficult time. I truly cannot find the words to express how sad this truly is,” said Smashing Pumpkins singer Billy Corgan on Twitter.
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“It’s hard to take when someone so young and full of life passes on. I feel so bad about Lisa Marie and I wish the best for her children and her family,” said Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys, on Twitter.
“Dear God, #LisaMariePresley has died; I’m in shock. So beautiful and only 54 years old; I can’t actually comprehend it,” Bette Midler said on Twitter.
“lisa marie presley? how heartbreaking. i hope she is at peace in her dad’s arms. my heart goes out to her family. too much grief in just a couple of years. #riplisamarie #LisaMariePresley,” said singer LeAnn Rimes on Twitter
“So sad that we’ve lost another bright star in Lisa Marie Presley. My condolences to her loved ones and multitude of fans,” Octavia Spencer said on Twitter.
“This is such horrible news. The entire world is sending love and prayers to Priscilla and Lisa Marie’s children right now. May it give you strength,” said songwriter Diane Warren on Twitter.
“Rest In Peace, Lisa Marie. A sweet and gentle sou;,” said Actor Cary Elwes on Twitter.
“I had the chance to know Priscilla Presley when I was on Dancing With the Stars and as a mother, I can’t imagine the pain she must be going through with the untimely passing of Lisa Marie,” said actor Marlee Matlin on Twitter.
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The songwriter’s health emergency comes just two days after Presley – the daughter of Priscilla Presley and the late Elvis Presley – attended the Golden Globe Awards to watch Austin Butler win the award for Best Performance in a Motion Picture (Drama) for his role as the late King of Rock ‘n’ Roll.