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This volume contains a true treasure trove of spontaneous and completely unrehearsed photographs of The King of Rock n Roll. Elvis both famous pictures and some that have never before been published. In 1956, a twenty-one-year-old Elvis Presley was at the
beginning of his remarkable and unparalleled career and
photographer Alfred Wertheimer was asked by Presley's new label, RCA Victor, to photograph the rising star. With
unimpeded access to the young performer, Wertheimer was able to capture the
unguarded and everyday moments in Elvis' life during that crucial year.
This was a year that took Presley from Tupelo, Mississippi
to the silver screen, and to the verge of
international stardom and to his coronation as "
The King of Rock 'n' Roll." As
Alfred Wertheimer photographed Elvis during 1956, and again in
1958, he created
classic images that are
spontaneous,
unrehearsed and completely
without artifice.
Wertheimer's photographs of Elvis are extraordinary and he appears almost
ethereal, whether
reading a newspaper while waiting for a cab, or washing his hands during one of his many
train trips. After 1958 and Elvis' induction into the army, the world seemingly forgot about
Wertheimer's magical photographs - for nineteen years - until Aug 16, 1977, the day Elvis died and
Time Magazine called. "The phone hasn't really stopped ringing in the last thirty years," observes Wertheimer.
Many of the photographs in this visual treasury are
previously unpublished and some have become
almost as famous as the man himself.