Loving You -- Paramount 1957 |
Elvis' second movie
and his first in color was the 1957 Paramount film
'Loving You'. In 1956, producer
Hal Wallis bought the film rights to a story
written by Margaret Agnes Thompson. It had appeared in
the June 1956 issue of 'Good Housekeeping' magazine and
was a story set in Oklahoma about a young singer called
Lonesome Harris and his journey to stardom. Wallis
thought it would be a perfect vehicle for Elvis. |
The executive producer for 'Loving
You' was Paul Nathan, who had worked on films such as
'The Rainmaker' and 'Gunfight At The O.K. Corral'.
Nathan worked as associate producer on eight other Elvis
films:
' King Creole', 'GI
Blues', 'Blue
Hawaii', 'Girls!
Girls! Girls!', 'Fun
In Acapulco', 'Roustabout',
'Paradise,Hawaiian
Style', and 'Easy
Come, Easy Go'.
Hal Pereira was the art
director. His set designs can be seen in over 250
productions, including the Elvis films mentioned above.
He received twenty-three Academy Award nominations for
his work in such films, including 'Sabrina', 'The Ten
Commandments', 'Funny Face', 'Vertigo', and 'Breakfast
at Tiffany's'. He won the Academy Award for his work in
'The Rose Tattoo'.
Musical director for 'Loving
You' was Walter Scharf. He also worked on Elvis's 1958
film 'King Creole' and the 1981 documentary
' This Is Elvis'.
Scharf received a Golden Globe award for the song 'Ben'
from the movie of the same name. Among his career
achievements were ten Academy Award nominations.
Elvis enjoyed working with choreographer Charles
O'Curran, who was married to popular singer Patti Page
at the time. O'Curran hung out with Elvis and his band
off the set, often inviting them to his home. He staged
musical numbers for five more Elvis films: 'King
Creole', 'GI Blues', 'Blue Hawaii', 'Girls! Girls!
Girls!' and 'Fun In Acapulco'.
Wally Westmore had
charge of makeup for 'Loving You', as he did for all of
Elvis' Paramount films.
Lizabeth Scott played Deke Rivers' manager,
Glenda Markle, who was a essentially a female version of
Elvis' real-life career manager, Colonel Parker, the supreme promoter. Ms. Scott,
a sultry blonde with a husky voice, was discovered by
Hal Wallis in 1945 and was often compared with actress
Lauren Bacall. She appeared in many films between 1945
and 1957, most of them for her mentor Mr. Wallis and
Paramount. Among her film credits are: 'You Came Along',
'The Strange Love of Martha Ivers', 'Dead Reckoning',
'Desert Fury', and 'I Walk Alone'. Except for a role in
1972's 'Pulp', 'Loving You' was her last film. Ms. Scott
is generally regarded as one of the queens of the 'film
noir' genre of movies. Among her honors is a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Wendell Corey played
Walter (Tex) Warner, the leader of the band that Deke
joins. Mr. Corey, son of a minister, was born in
Massachusetts in 1914. He was a stage actor in the
1930's and 40's until he signed with Hal Wallis in 1946.
'Loving You' reunited him with Lizabeth Scott, with whom
he had worked in 'Desert Fury' and 'I Walk Alone'.
During his career, Corey served stints as president of
the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and
president of the Screen Actors Guild. He served on the
Santa Monica California City Council in 1965. He was
defeated in 1966 in his run for the House of
Representatives. Elvis once named a pet cat Wendell in
his honor.
played Deke
Rivers' love interest Susan Jessup. Ms. Hart was born
Dolores Hicks in Chicago in 1938. Coincidentally, her
uncle was Mario Lanza, a singer Elvis admired. Hart
worked with Elvis a second time when she co-starred with
him in 'King Creole'
in 1958. Among her other credits are the films 'Where
the Boys Are', 'Francis of Assisi', 'Sail A Crooked
Ship', and 'Come Fly With Me'. She decided to become a
nun and, in the 1960s, walked away from a successful and
promising acting career before it had peaked. She is now
Mother Dolores, but is still a voting member of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Jana Lund has the distinction of being the first actress
to share an on-screen kiss with Elvis. Her character
Daisy Bricker stole that kiss when she snuck into Deke
Rivers' dressing room on a dare. (Dolores Hart, later in
the same film, shares the first on-screen kiss initiated
by an Elvis character.) Ms. Lund's character is also the
catalyst for the big fight scene between her boyfriend
Wayne and Deke. Lund also had roles in the films 'High
School Hellcats', 'Hot Car Girl', and 'Married Too
Young'.
The character of Wayne, who loses the
fight in the diner, was played by Kenneth Becker. Mr.
Becker can also be seen in the Elvis films 'G. I.
Blues', 'Girls! Girls! Girls!' and 'Roustabout'. Mr.
Becker also had a number of guest roles on TV western
series such as 'Gunsmoke', 'Bronco', 'Bonanza', and
'Wanted Dead or Alive'.
Paul Smith played
Skeeter, the band mate who loans Deke his guitar. In the
film Deke always breaks the strings on Skeeter's guitar
until Deke's growing importance with the group prompts
bandleader Tex to buy Deke a guitar of his own. (That
bit in the script was an inside joke that writer Hal
Kanter picked up on as Elvis actually did often break
his guitar strings.) Among Paul Smith's film credits are
'Cowboy Blues', 'The Westward Trail', 'Battle At Apache
Pass', 'All That Heaven Allows', and 'Funny Face'.
Booking agent Carl Meade was played by James Gleason,
who was born into a New York theater family in 1882.
After serving in the Spanish-American War, he joined the
stock theater company that his parents were running in
Oakland. He and his wife toured in road shows until he
enlisted during World War I. When he returned to the
stage after the war, he tried his hand at writing and
producing and then focused on being a character actor.
Mr. Gleason appeared in over 125 movies. He received an
Academy Award nomination in 1942 as Best Supporting
Actor for the 1941 movie 'Here Comes Mr. Jordan'.
Ralph Dumke, another well-known character actor, played
Jim Tallman. He had a recurring role as Mr. McAfee in
'The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show' on television.
His movie credits include 'All The King's Men', 'Daddy
Long Legs', 'Artists and Models', 'The Solid Gold
Cadillac', 'The Buster Keaton Story', 'Wake Me When It's
Over', and 'Elmer Gantry'.
Charles Lang was the
cinematographer for 'Loving You'. In 1961 he also film
the lush scenery seen in Elvis's movie 'Blue Hawaii'.
Mr. Lang received 18 Academy Award nominations for his
work in such films, including 'Butterflies Are Free',
'How The West Was Won', 'Some Like it Hot' and
'Sabrina'. He won for the movie 'Farewell to Arms'.
Joan Bradshaw had an unaccredited bit part in 'Loving You'
and several other movies in 1957. She went on to become
a producer on such films as 'Mrs. Doubtfire', 'Cast
Away', and 'Road To Perdition'.
Carole Dunne
played as a teenage extra in 'Loving You' and is today
an award winning hair stylist for film and television.
As in many Elvis movies, the cast of 'Loving You'
included a number of veteran character actors, including
Joe Gray, Irene Tedrow, William Forrest, Madge Blake and
Skip Young.
Joe Gray, a former boxer, was a fight
coordinator and a longtime film double for Dean Martin.
Among his credits are the Elvis movies 'Loving You', 'GI
Blues' and 'Kid Galahad'. Other credits include 'Rio
Bravo', 'Ocean's Eleven', 'Breakfast At Tiffiany's',
'Robin And the Seven Hoods', and 'Bye Bye Birdie'.
Irene Tedrow played Mrs. Jessup. Among her hundreds of
roles in film and television, two earned her Emmy Award
nominations - one for the TV show "James at 15" and
another for the TV mini-series 'Eleanor and Franklin'.
William Forrest played Mr. Jessup. He too had hundreds
of roles, including one in the Elvis film 'Jailhouse
Rock'.
Madge Blak played a hired crowed
agitator in 'Loving You'. She is perhaps best recognized
for her TV roles as Aunt Harriett Cooper on 'Batman' and
as Larry Mondello's mother in 'Leave It To Beaver'.
You also might recognize Skip Young, who played
Teddy, a friend and co-worker of Deke Rivers (Elvis) in
the opening scenes of 'Loving You'. Mr. Young was a
regular on the TV series 'The Adventures of Ozzie and
Harriet' in which he played a buddy of Rick Nelson's.
Yvonne Lime played Sally in 'Loving You'. She also
briefly dated Elvis and visited him in Memphis for
Easter in April 1957. At the time Elvis and his family
were renovating Graceland and had not yet moved in. Elvis brought her out to see
his new home. Ms. Lime previously had a longtime role as
Dotty on the TV series 'Father Knows Best'. She
continued to act after 'Loving You' until her marriage
to TV producer Don Federson, when she turned her
energies to children's charities. She and fellow actress
Sara O'Meara founded International Orphans Inc.,
building orphanages in Japan and Vietnam, as well as
starting Childhelp USA for abused and neglected children
in the U.S.
Elvis' parents Vernon and Gladys and
their friends Carl and Willy Nichols came to Hollywood
for a month of vacation and to see where their son
worked. They spent time sightseeing and both ladies
bought pet poodles. Mrs. Nichols named her poodle Pierre
and Mrs. Presley named hers Duke after John Wayne.
Scotty Moore and his wife Bobbie took the Presleys to
see the filming of the Tennessee Ernie Ford weekly TV
show. They were introduced from the audience and went
back stage to meet Mr. Ford. Elvis and his date
Joan
Blackman took them to see the movie "The Ten
Commandments". (Blackman was Elvis' leading lady in 'Blue
Hawaii' a few years later in 1961 and then again
in 1962's 'Kid Galahad'.)
Vernon and Gladys also visited Elvis on the set of
"Loving You". It was on a visit to the studio that Hal
Kanter got the idea to include them as extras in the
Grand Theatre audience. They can be seen sitting on the
aisle with Mr. and Mrs. Nichols next to them. The
Presleys clapped with the music and applauded proudly
for their son. It is said that after his mother's death
the following year, Elvis couldn't bring himself to
watch 'Loving You'.
Soundtrack
Mean Woman
Blues
Teddy Bear
Loving You
Got A Lot O' Livin' To Do!
Lonesome Cowboy
Hot Dog
Party
Recorded at
the Paramount Scoring Stage and Radio Recorders,
Hollywood. Engineers: Phil Wisdom and Thorne Nogar.
January - February 1957
Musicians: Guitars:
Scotty
Moore, Tiny Timbrell, Elvis Presley. Bass: Bill Black. Drums: D.J.
Fontana. Piano: Dudley Brooks, Gordon Stoker,
Hoyt Hawkins. Harmonica: George Fields. Vocals: The Jordanaires.
Loving You -
Paramount 1957
Directed
by: Hal Kanter
Writing Credits: Herbert Baker, Hal Kanter
Producer: Hal Wallis
Technicolor and Vistavision.
Cast Overview
Elvis Presley .... Jimmy Tompkins
(Deke Rivers) Lizabeth Scott - Glenda Markle, Wendell Corey .... Walter (Tex) Warner,
Dolores Hart .... Susan Jessup James Gleason
.... Carl Meade Ralph Dumke .... Jim Tallman Paul Smith
.... Skeeter Kenneth Becker .... Wayne Jana Lund ....
Daisy Bricker Vernon Rich .... Harry Taylor David
Cameron .... Mr. Castle Grace Hayle .... Mrs. Gunderson
Dick Ryan .... Mack Steve Pendleton .... Mr. O'Shea
Sydney Chatton .... Ed Grew