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Johnny Lee Harra (born Harry Lee Lovett; July 11, 1946 – March 30, 2011) was an American Elvis impersonator. He began impersonating Elvis at the age of 11 and was cast as the 42-year-old Elvis in the 1981 docudrama This Is Elvis .
Johnny Harra as Presley at age 42 (Opening credits, August 16, 1977 death scene from extended version) Other narrators provided voice-over narrations for Vernon Presley, Gladys Presley, and Priscilla Presley. Presley's former road manager Joe Esposito and girlfriend Linda Thompson provided their own narrations. Presley receives credit only in ...
Contrary to popular belief, Elvis impersonators have existed since the mid-1950s, just after Elvis Presley himself began his career. The first known Elvis impersonator was a young man named Carl 'Cheesie' Nelson from Texarkana, Arkansas, who in 1954 built up a local following on WLAC radio with his renditions of "That's All Right, Mama" and "Blue Moon of Kentucky."
Elvis (1979) Johnny Harra: Elvis Presley, age 42 This Is Elvis (1981) Tyler Hilton: young Elvis Presley Walk the Line (2006) ... Elvis: The Tribute was an ABC TV ...
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"Elvis" by Sister Hazel "Elvis Ain't Dead" by Scouting for Girls "Elvis and I" by Denis Leary "Elvis and Andy" by Confederate Railroad "Elvis and His Boss" by The Residents "Elvis and Me" by Jimmy Webb "Elvis Ate America" by Passengers (an alias for U2) "Elvis Died Today" by Paul and Storm "Elvis Died for You" by Zodiac Mindwarp & The Love Reaction
Elvis, his band, Stoker, and Ben and Brock Speer, recorded "I Was The One" (the B-side of "Heartbreak Hotel") in January and "I Want You, I Need You, I Love You" in April. [11] After the April session, Presley asked Stoker if the full group could join him in the studio for the next sessions.
Elvis' former wife Priscilla, family friend Jerry Schilling and others discuss details, including some personal experience, concerning the triumpant comeback performance for Elvis which aired on national television on December 3, 1968 and proved to be a gamble, but would result in his music career being revived following a long period of being more recognized for acting in feature films.