Colonel Tom Parker and Loanne Parker Finding ElvisElvis story by Rita Index Bio A.C. van Kuijk 1927 Parker's involvement in the music industry began as a music promoter
in the late 1940s, working with such country music stars as Minnie
Pearl, On August 18, 1955, Parker became Presley's manager officially, by contract, and in November he convinced RCA Records to buy Presley out from Sun Records for $35,000, big money for its time. With his first RCA single, Heartbreak Hotel, Presley graduated from rumor to bona-fide recording star.
It's debatable whether Presley would have become the superstar he became without Parker, and it's likewise debatable to what extent Parker's management of the King of Rock and Roll was Svengali-like. Parker held the reins of Presley's singing and acting career for the rest of Presley's life and was said to be instrumental in virtually every business decision that Presley made—including his decision to cut back on recording and stop touring after returning from his stint in the United States Army in 1960, in favour of a film career (from 1960 to 1967-68) that was lucrative in terms of his bank account but, to many critics and no few fans, bankrupting in terms of Presley's music quality. It took the energetic 1968 television special, Elvis, and a subsequent series of stellar recording sessions in Memphis, Tennessee, to restore Elvis Presley's musical reputation. To his credit, though it's open as to whether he was allowed much choice in the matter, Parker allowed both to happen with little impediment. In the Army Hawaii 1946 A.C. van Kuijk Surviving ElvisAfter Presley's death in 1977, Parker became embroiled in legal disputes with the singer's estate and with his daughter, Lisa Marie Presley. Parker eventually agreed in 1983 to sell his masters of some of Presley's major recordings to RCA for $2 million and to drop any claims he had to Presley's estate. Parker moved to Las Vegas in 1980 and worked as an "entertainment adviser" for Hilton Hotels, but the disputes with the Presley estate didn't alienate him entirely from his most legendary client. Parker appeared at posthumous events honoring Presley, such as the ceremonies marking the tenth anniversary of the singer's death and the 1993 issuing of the United States Postal Service stamp honoring the King of Rock and Roll. Presley's enduring legend and the continuing, often obsessive interest in him, provoked Parker in 1993 to say on the record, "I don't think I exploited Elvis as much as he's being exploited today." Personal lifeAs Presley's fame grew, people became interested in Parker as well. For a while he lied about his early years, claiming to have been born in Huntington, West Virginia and that he had run away at an early age to join a circus run by an uncle. The truth about his early years was revealed when his family in the Netherlands recognized him in photographs of him standing next to Elvis; it was confirmed when Parker tried to avert a lawsuit in 1982 by asserting that he was a Netherlands citizen. He was actually born in Breda, Netherlands. Parker fled his native land at about the age of 18, joined the United States Army, then changed his name to Tom Parker and became part of the circus world sometime after leaving the Army. He also worked as a dogcatcher and a pet cemetery proprietor in Tampa, Florida, in the 1940s. Elvis fans have speculated that the reason he
never performed abroad, which would likely have been a highly lucrative
proposition, may have been that Parker was worried that as a non-citizen, he
would not be readmitted to the United States. However, this argument neglects
the fact that Presley toured Canada in 1957 with concerts in Toronto, Ottawa,
and Vancouver. It also neglects that as a U.S. Army veteran, Tom Parker would
have been entitled to United States citizenship, although whether or not he
claimed it is unknown. |