El Dorado News-Times

Graceland opens vault for Elvis documentar­y to air on HBO

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A new television documentar­y about Elvis Presley takes advantage of the vast collection of footage, pictures, documents and music from his estate to give a behindthe-scenes look at the king of rock 'n' roll.

"Elvis Presley: The Searcher," a two-part, three-hour documentar­y, will premiere April 14 on HBO. Director Thom Zimny, who worked on several Bruce Springstee­n documentar­ies, had full access to Graceland's vault and made ample use of it to unearth little-seen footage.

"That was one of the exciting parts because every day I was discoverin­g new gems of Elvis Presley's archives," Zimny said.

"He came up with pieces of footage that Priscilla and I had never seen before, and we grew up with Elvis," said Jerry Schilling, one of Elvis' longtime friends and an executive producer on the documentar­y along with Priscilla Presley, his ex-wife.

Along with his family and friends, Zimny interviewe­d studio musicians, producers, engineers and directors, as well as artists like Springstee­n, Tom Petty and Emmylou Harris. Zimny uses only voiceovers for the narration instead of seeing the interviewe­es' faces to keep the focus on the music and footage of Elvis over his career.

"Most documentar­ies, you see people talking, and I think that takes you out of the film," Priscilla Presley said. "So you do get distracted, where here, you take on the flow, you can see what's going on visually and you're not taken out of that moment, and I think that's brilliant."

Zimny makes heavy use of footage from Elvis' 1968 television special, considered his comeback to music after a long period of movie acting.

"He had been out of performing for years, almost 10 years," Presley said. "This to him was the make or break of his career."

Zimny said he had no limitation­s on addressing any aspect of Elvis' career, and the film does touch on the controllin­g influence of his manager Colonel Tom Parker as well as Elvis' prescripti­on drug abuse.

Priscilla said Presley began using prescripti­on drugs when he was given them during his Army stint. Even after years of using medication­s, she said Elvis never realized his addiction.

"He didn't think he was addicted," Presley said. "It was a part of his life, really. There was no Betty Ford. There were no rehab centers. But he didn't think he had to go to a rehab center. There were prescribed to him. The doctors knew what they were giving to him. So that was pretty much a part of his life."

Presley said there's still a lot for music fans to learn about the star, who died in 1977.

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