Home Invasion

Don Siegel directing Dana Wynter and Kevin McCarthy

My buddy D.F. Rogers and I have been watching Elvis’ TV appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show from 1956-57, and thinking how everybody except Elvis really did seem to be Pod People. This weekend the umpteenth remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers is out, so I thought this would be the perfect opportunity to show a clip from the original movie.
[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/AUG07/BodySnatchers.flv 430 340]

In an interview done back in the 70’s, director Don Siegel (at left in the picture above) commented on the scene that’s in the video clip.

Allied Artists had an old-fashioned credo that horror pictures couldn’t have humor. I had a great deal of humor in the picture and though they cut out a lot, they didn’t totally succeed. As in the barbecue scene. King Donovan, Carolyn Jones, [Kevin] McCarthy and Dana Wynter have an outdoor barbecue even after they have accepted mentally that something is terribly wrong. Only when they see the pod do they panic.

Sgt. Pepper 15 Years Ago

Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band is 40 years old. Fifteen years ago it was only 25 years old! Amazing.

From 1992, here is part 1 of a 45-minute TV special on the making of the album. It’s taken from VHS, and looks it.

[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/AUG07/MakingSgtPepper1.flv 400 300]

Note: I’m trying something new, by using the Dog Rat icon to label videos that I have transferred, edited, and converted myself. In this instance it runs for 60 seconds.

And here is part 2.

[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/AUG07/MakingSgtPepper2.flv 400 300]

Elvis livEs

One more Elvis post on the 30th anniversary of his death. From October 28, 1956, Elvis’ second appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, he sings “Love Me”…
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… and taken from an LP with solid sound is the studio recording of the song, which is one of my top 3 favorites by Elvis.

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Audio/AUG07/ElvisLoveMe.mp3]

But wait! There’s more — Elvis performing “Love Me” live, at Pearl Harbor, March 25, 1961.

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Audio/AUG07/ElvisLoveMeLive.mp3]

August 16, 1977

Remembering exactly when and where I learned that Elvis had died is easy. I was a radio disc jockey at a small AM station, making a very modest living but livin’ the dream. All alone in the building, sort of like Wolfman Jack at the end of American Graffiti, I was on the air when I heard the AP teletype alarm bell ringing in the hall. Whatever the news was, it was obviously big, so I ran out to see what it was while a record was playing.

I read the terse announcement, went back to the console, turned on the mic, and did a stunned “rip and read.” Giving the news all of the gravity that I could muster, putting some emotion in my voice, I announced the news from Memphis, Tennessee, that Elvis Presley was dead, at age 42.

Immediately I cued up “Heartbreak Hotel,” then I ran to a closet where the BBC History of Rock and Roll set on reel-to-reel tape was stored. I grabbed the Elvis tape then ran to the production studio. After that I was frantically jumping between the on-air studio, the AP machine, and the production studio. Soon, I had a bunch of carts (cartridges, sort of like 8-track tapes but much better and very rugged) with sound clips from various artists like Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins, talking about Elvis. I played these in between Elvis songs while reading the updates as they came across the wire. I thought my impromptu Elvis tribute came off pretty well. The next day the program manager said he “liked it and thought it was really good.”

(An aside for Cactus Lizzie, who worked with me at the station: Can you believe that Mike Dion actually said that? It was the only time he ever praised me.)

OK, so let’s hear some Elvis Presley. This is Elvis live at the New Frontier Hotel in Las Vegas, May 6, 1956, taken from a black piece of plastic with grooves that I own. The classic Elvis line-up is Scotty Moore — guitar; Bill Black — bass; D. J. Fontana — drums. Thirteen minutes of Elvis in his prime, playing it loose for an audience that must have thought the kid was from Mars. Note the celebrities that Elvis points out.