The Commercial Appeal

‘NEW ERA’ OPENS AT GRACELAND

Official: Complex is like ‘you’re walking in Elvis’ footsteps’

- BOB MEHR WAYNE RISHER

Though he’s been gone 40 years, the life and legacy of Elvis Presley added another chapter on Thursday morning, as Graceland officials formally opened a new entertainm­ent complex dedicated to the singer. Public ceremonies marked the start of a four-day grand opening celebratio­n for “Elvis Presley’s Memphis,” a 200,000-square-foot, $45 million project across from Presley’s mansion in Memphis’ Whitehaven neighborho­od.

Graceland finally has museum-quality space to display the best of its 1.5-million item archive. Elvis the Entertaine­r and Presley Motors exhibits anchor the complex, styled after a lifestyle retail center, and give fans expanded access to Elvis’ cars, motorcycle­s — even a ski boat named Gladys after his mother. Director of archives Angie Marchese estimated the amount of Graceland’s collection on display has gone from 10 percent to 25 percent.

Several hundred fans and a throng of media gathered at the freshly completed plaza grounds west of Elvis Presley Boulevard to watch Graceland executives, includingJ­ack Soden, Elvis Presley Enterprise­s president, and Graceland Holdings managing partner Joel Weinshanke­r, along with Presley’s former wife, Priscilla, speak and cut the ribbon dedicating the complex.

“It’s the beginning of a new era at Graceland,” Weinshanke­r said. “Elvis Presley has hundreds of millions of fans and he treated each fan as a friend. We thought: What would Elvis do for his fans ... and what he would do is (let them) walk in his footsteps. With the opening of this complex, you’re walking in Elvis’ footsteps. You’ll be able to walk through the streets of his Memphis and see all the things that he loved.”

Elvis Presley’s Memphis flows like a lifestyle retail center, with the publicfaci­ng exhibit areas facing to the interior and the complex resembling the back of a shopping mall from outside.

Anchoring the complex are Presley Motors, the updated, expanded automobile museum; Elvis the Entertaine­r, which looks at the singer’s career; and Graceland Soundstage, a venue for movies and live performanc­es. Gift shops and restaurant­s fill in the spaces between exhibits.

Nothing has changed for visitors in the mansion itself, but there are big changes to out buildings, a racquetbal­l court and a hall of trophies that adjoin the mansion, Graceland spokesman Kevin Kern said.

The racquetbal­l court, a 1970s addition, has been restored to its original purpose. The trophy room has been converted to an exhibit about Elvis’ family and friends, covering how the Presleys came to Memphis from Tupelo, Mississipp­i, why he bought Graceland mansion and other storylines.

At the new complex, space for cars, motorcycle­s and other conveyance­s has grown to 20,000 square feet from the old car museum’s 10,000 square feet.

A purple, 1956 Cadillac El Dorado occupies a prominent corner facing the new ticketing center, and several items have been brought out of storage, including two ski boats, a purple 1975 Lincoln and a 1969 Mercedes two-door coupe.

Sequined capes, jump suits and other performanc­e costumes that were packed into about 1,000 square feet in the former trophy hall have been moved to the 20,000-square-foot Elvis the Entertaine­r exhibit.

Visitors used to have to look at the costumes from one angle, from behind a glass wall. Now they’re in display cases that fans can walk around and view from all angles.

In the archives, artifacts can be examined on shelves and in drawers, with little if any interpreti­ve text. There’s a TV with a bullet hole in it, from Elvis’ Palm Springs, California, house, baseballs autographe­d for Elvis by legends Willie Mays and Willie McCovey, and a desk pen set from Col. Tom Parker’s desk, featuring the RCA Victor dog Nipper.

The archives includes about 3,000 square feet dedicated to Elvis’ stint in the Army, a story that was told in one small display case previously, Marchese said.

Richard Kenyon, a fan from Grand Prairie, Texas, was impressed. “They’ve just opened up a new view of Elvis. Compared to the old setting, this is going to be phenomenal.”

Kenyon said he and his wife, Shirley, will return in August to renew their wedding vows on their 50th anniversar­y. They’ve booked Graceland’s wedding chapel.

Graceland officials said the project was substantia­lly completed, but there were constructi­on workers busy at the complex taking care of punchlist items. David Beckwith, a spokesman for Elvis Presley Enterprise­s, said completion will come “in a matter of days.”

The old Graceland Plaza, the early 1980s retail strip that housed ticketing, restaurant­s, gift shops, car museum and other functions, should be torn down by June or July as Graceland prepares for the 40th anniversar­y of the entertaine­r’s death.

The plaza will be replaced by landscapin­g and lawn, through which a new entry drive will connect the ticketing center to the mansion driveway.

Priscilla Presley noted the expansion will allow fans to finally experience the great wealth of the Graceland archives. “You’ll be able to go through and see the things we we’ve wanted to show for many many years,” she noted. “(Elvis) loved to share the things he was able to accomplish in his lifetime. So we think this is a very exciting time for all the fans and all of us.”

The new complex will house the Elvis Presley Automobile Museum; Elvis: The Entertaine­r Career Museum; Elvis Discovery Exhibits; Elvis’ Custom Jets, as well as Elvis-connected musical displays, including “Mystery Train: The Sam Phillips Exhibit” and “The Country Road to Rock.”

The area has also added restaurant­s — including a ‘50s-themed diner and a BBQ eatery, Vernon’s Smokehouse, named in honor of Presley’s father — and retail shops. The project represents the largest expansion at Graceland since it was first opened to the public in 1982.

“Elvis Presley’s Memphis” is the second phase of Graceland’s current expansion after constructi­on of the 450-room resort hotel, The Guest House at Graceland, with both projects totaling more than $130 million.

“Even though 20 million people have visited Graceland,” Weinshanke­r said, “if you haven’t visited Graceland lately, you really haven’t visited Graceland.”

 ??  ?? There is a collection of Elvis Presley’s jumpsuits inside the Elvis the Entertaine­r Career Museum at Elvis Presley’s Memphis.
There is a collection of Elvis Presley’s jumpsuits inside the Elvis the Entertaine­r Career Museum at Elvis Presley’s Memphis.

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