Where Did the Real Elvis Go? The Elvis Impersonator Who Lost Himself

Where Did the Real Elvis Go? The Elvis Impersonator Who Lost Himself

Elvis impersonator - Wikipedia

The flashy jumpsuits, ring laden fingers, and gyrating hip thrusts all made Elvis Presley larger-than-life. But behind the flamboyant stage persona, Elvis struggled deeply in his final years before his untimely death at just 42 years old.

So where did the real Elvis go? How did the authentic artist get lost in the glittery impersonation…becoming more caricature than the musical genius who changed popular music forever?

As fame intensified for the ‘Hillbilly Cat’ turned ‘King of Rock and Roll,’ the Memphis maverick felt increasingly trapped…prisoner both emotionally and artistically. Elvis continued performing live, raking in millions for his managers with years of sell-out tours and Las Vegas residencies.

But the grueling schedule exhausted his soul. And rather than nurturing his creative spirit, Elvis was creatively stifled – forced to sing the same hits night after night, like a Circus animal wheeled out to perform the same routine.

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The Impersonator Who Lost Himself

As the money rolled in, Elvis Presley emotionally withdrew, depressed by the hollow direction his fame took him. No longer the rebellious rocker with slicked back hair and a guitar (deemed too controversial)…the real, authentic Elvis got replaced by an exaggerated version – the campy, self-parodying Vegas showman in sparkling jumpsuits, pretending “to have a good time” as he later admitted.

Elvis felt trapped as a commodity harvester rather than a genuine artist…and with creative purpose stripped away, an emotional void grew, which Presley tried escaping through excessive drug use.

What his millions of fans around the globe didn’t realize was that The King had becoming deeply disconnected from his core self in order to be the profitable persona his handlers envisioned – another casualty of the ruthless music machine.

Elvis’ Existential Crisis

Hidden underneath the flamboyant facade, Elvis struggled profoundly internally as his musical passions were suppressed. Session musicians were brought in, strips of double-sided tape placed on the floor instructed Elvis where to stand…every move orchestrated like a stage production.

After his pivotal 1968 comeback special on NBC, Elvis reconnected to his musical heritage jamming with friends at Graceland, imbued with creative fervor once again. But his managers schemed to quash this organic musical liberation, designing an endless treadmill of Tour dates, Las Vegas seasons, and repetitive acting roles in objectively bad movies doing predictable schlock numbers.

The exiled King wandered his Graceland mansion emotionally adrift and existentially empty. Binging junk food and drugs was pure escapism from his suffocating cage. The creative hunger that Elvis once channeled into pioneering rock music was devastatingly stifled in his final decade.

And as Presley further retreated from the glitzy circus he unwillingly perpetuated, the authentic, truthful artist faded depressingly further from sight…tragically replaced by the soulless impersonator he’d ultimately become.

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