Saturday, January 22, 2011

January 22 - Elvis And Nancy Spinout

Welcome To The Jungle - Way Down - Out Now


Released today by the Venus Productions import label is the new installment in the Welcome to The Jungle series titled "Way Down". 

Good To Be Out

Gravel Road Music import label released the CD "Good To Be Back" containing the complete soundboard recording of December 13, 1975 Midnight Show. The package is an 28 page booklet which covers everything, the photo's, the facts and specially written liner notes. The lucky ones who decided quickly to buy this set received one of the limited concert tour photo folio books (full color 20cm x20cm on heavy glossy stock paper).



Elvis And Nancy Sinatra On The Speedway

JAT Publishing released the front-cover of the new book which has March 1, 2011 as the release-date.




Spinout Duesenberg auctioned for $1,237,500

The 1929 Duesenberg Model J Dual Cowl Phaeton driven by Elvis in "Spinout" has been auctioned off in Arizona. The estimate was $1,000,000-$1,300,000 US and it went for $1,237,500.

The car was owned by businessman Tim Durham and seized by the FBI in connection with an investigation due to suspicion of Durham's company, Fair Finance, being run as a Ponzi scheme.



Boxcar Set Reboxed






According to a posting of the FECC forum "The Final Curtain" box-set will be  bootlegged. Some of the details:




- 1 DVD digi-pack CBS special in NTSC + book (unreleased pictures - not in the box set book);
- 2 DVD digi-pack Omaha / Rapid City in NTSC + book (unreleased pictures - not in the box set book);
- the new soundboards also packed as digi-pack with a small book.


Frank Lieberman Died At 68

Former Siegfried & Roy publicist Frank Lieberman, one of Elvis Presley's closest newspaper pals during the singer's Las Vegas comeback years, died Saturday at Summerlin Hospital.

Lieberman, who had been in declining health in recent years, was 68.

His son, Adam, said his father broke a shoulder during a fall on Tuesday, a setback that may have been too much for his weakened heart.

"His heart has been working at 40 percent," Lieberman's son said. "Doctors felt after he started dialysis that he had six months to live. That was 2½ years ago."

Lieberman, who was 14 when his family moved from New York City to Los Angeles, worked as a sportswriter on the Lakers beat for a Los Angeles area newspaper before joining the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner to cover the entertainment beat.

Elvis liked Lieberman's review of his show at the Las Vegas Hilton and sent Joe Esposito out one night to fetch the journalist. Elvis thanked him and agreed to a rare one-on-one interview.

One night in Elvis' suite, Elvis asked Lieberman why he wasn't wearing his TCB (Taking Care of Business) necklace, which was reserved for Elvis' inner circle. Lieberman said he didn't have one.

Elvis presented one to Lieberman and a TLC (Tender Loving Care) bracelet to Lieberman's future wife, Karen. The Liebermans wore the mementos the day they got married in 1972, Karen Lieberman said.

"One night in the restroom at the Hilton a man saw the necklace on Frank and offered him $10,000," Karen Lieberman said. No way, her husband said.
Funeral services are set for 1 p.m. Tuesday at Eden Cemetery in Mission Hills, a Los Angeles suburb. An entertainment columnist for The Israelite in recent years, he will be buried in the New York Yankees jacket he wore to most functions.

(Longtime Las Vegas journalist Frank Lieberman holds a printed copy of his interview with Elvis, which appeared in the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner on February 8, 1970).

(Source: ElvisNews / ElvisMatters / Elvis Unlimited / FECC / Las Vegas Sun)