How in the heck did I miss this?
These uploads are just terrific, and so often contain crucial information. Thanks, as always,
The fool!
It is VERY interesting to learn Judy made "a tape recording of every TV show he has been on." And then she goes on to say they "play back his old TV appearances and talk about them"! What!?!
This is further proof Elvis was
very aware of how he came off on TV, and knew
exactly what he was doing!!
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BONUS JUDY SPRECKELS INFO!The "personal nickname" Elvis gave Judy, "Sugar," is obviously taken from her brief marriage to Adolph
Spreckels II, heir to the
Spreckels sugar fortune. Presley may have remembered the wedding, it was front-page news exactly 59 years ago:
540202_Toledo Blade p1.JPG
Toledo Blade, Tuesday February 2, 1954What happened next sounds like something out of a crazy movie.
Judy married the 42 year-old socialite on January 31, 1954. It lasted all of 32 days. They separated on March 4 and Adolph filed for divorce on March 8, claiming that she treated him "in a cruel and inhuman manner." For example, he told the judge that he had to cook his own meals ...
Judy had her arm in a sling and told reporters that her husband broke her arm in a fight the previous Thursday. During a property settlement a few days later, she signed an agreement that she had not received any physical injury from him.
Interestingly, the same day Elvis cut "That's All Right" in Memphis, Judy and her ex-husband were in the news again.
540705_Pittsburgh Post-Gazette p2.JPG
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Monday, July 5, 1954Spreckels was by many accounts a troubled man, with a history of drinking and broken relationships; Judy had been his sixth wife.
Adolph died seven years later of a brain hemorrhage; he was 49. Police said he fell and hit his head after leaving a Phoenix cocktail lounge.
611029_Spreckels II Dies.jpg
Adolph Spreckels II, AP wire news report, Saturday, October 29, 1961Judy remarried in Las Vegas on September 10, 1958, just days after Elvis left for Germany. And it wasn't to the fiancée she speaks of in the magazine article, Jim Couthen, but a fellow named B. E. Blackwell, 46, a Southland sportsman and heir.
Judy's still with us today, living quietly in California's San Fernando Valley.
The stories she could tell!
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