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ELVIS/THE COLONEL
  

ELVIS/THE COLONEL (Hardcover)

de Dirk Vellenga (Author)
5.0étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (1 évaluation de client)

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From Publishers Weekly

Elvis Presley and Colonel Tom Parker were associated in the public mind like Laurel and Hardy, although a more accurate pairing would have been Svengali and Trilby, as the authors demonstrate. Intriguingly, the colonel, who projected an image as American as apple pie, was foreign - born (in 1909): a Dutchman named Andreas van Kuijk, he served in the U.S. peacetime army but never became a citizen. He entered the U.S. illegally and as a young man worked in carnivals, where he learned to be a con man par excellence, according to the authors. It was his talent as an operator that led him to become the personal manager of Eddy Arnold, then Hank Snow and finally Elvis. While the authors do not attempt a psychobiography, they argue forcefully that Parker's carnival background made him a conniving money-grubber who eventually destroyed Presley's career. The singer himself does not emerge here as a hero, but he does seem more to be pitied than censured. Vellenga is a Dutch journalist; Farren, an American, is a freelance writer.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal

This book focuses on Presley's manager, Colonel Tom Parker, suggesting that his greed and ruthlessness led to the ruin of Presley's career and perhaps caused his death. In 1955 Parker signed the first of many, increasingly manipulative contracts with Presleycontracts that eventually gave Parker a greater share of the Presley empire than the King himself. Presley was treated like a money-making machine, kept isolated from friends, and well supplied with drugs. Although based on interviews, the book offers little actual documentation to back up its thesis. But the narrative is well written and convincing. About a third of the book is an appendix of concert and recording dates and a discography. A real eye-opener for Presley fans. Tim LaBorie, Drexel Univ. Lib., Philadelphia
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 A great biography about Colonel Tom Parker's life with Elvis, Mars 20 1999
Par Elvisdarin@aol.com (Oklahoma City, Okla) - Voir tous mes commentaires
You get a pretty good idea of what Tom Parker's life was like, because Vellenga interviewed so many people that knew Parker & Elvis.

I was very curious because I manage an Elvis Tribute Band, of how they worked together and I learned alot from their mistakes. I don't think the author liked the Colonel too much but you can tell he put alot of research into it & I'm glad he wrote the book.

You also get alot of insight into show business.

Before I read the book I thought the Colonel was maybe someone special or a superb businessman to have been so successful, but after reading it, it showed me he wasn't all that great of a manager, not keeping Elvis's best interests at heart. One example of this is he made songwriters share their profits with him thus eliminating alot of very good songwriters. "Suspicious Minds" was an exception to this. Elvis could have had alot more great songs if the Colonel hadn't been so greedy.

But their were some good things he did too, the concerts & especially Aloha from Hawaii, which was videotaped & similcast. I also liked the documentary movie "That's the Way it is" about Elvis & the NBC Special.

I think there was some kind of karmic bond between the Colonel & Elvis. Elvis said it best, "We're caught in a trap, I can't walk out, because I love you too much, baby."

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