I think people would be
hard-pressed to find an event in pop culture with two such huge
American figures that could top this." What Alan Rosen is
referring to is the 1970 three-day trek during which a gun-toting
Elvis Presley, decked out in a purple velvet suit complete with
matching cape and huge gold belt buckle, broke free from the
confines of Graceland alone without knowing his own phone number
or how to use a credit card to eventually land in front of
President Richard Nixon requesting that he, Elvis, be made the
country's first Federal Agent at Large in order to steer the
day's youth away from drugs.
The fateful meeting of
The King of Rock and Roll and the Commander in Chief was recorded
in former Nixon White House aide Egil "Bud" Krogh's
1994 fond remembrance The Day Elvis Met Nixon. But Rosen,
writer and producer of the Showtime film Elvis Meets Nixon
takes it a step further, or, rather, many steps back and forward,
following Elvis, who is traveling under the name of Richard
Burroughs, from the time he leaves Memphis on a Saturday night to
go to Washington, D.C., through his off-the-cuff overnight trip
to L.A., and back again to Washington the next day.
Elvis Meets Nixon is labeled as a
mockumentary, with Rick Peters playing Elvis and Bob Gunton as
Nixon. Included among the scenes of Elvis' great adventure are
interviews with the likes of Dick Cavett, Wayne Newton, and Nixon
staffperson Alexander Butterfield. And while there are
disclaimerish lines such as Cavett's, "If what you're about
to see didn't happen exactly this way, it should have,"
Rosen swears that most of it actually happened, including the
scene in which Elvis pulls a gun in a D.C. doughnut shop.
"The events are pretty accurate," says Rosen. "I
made up the dialogue, but that did happen in the doughnut
shop."
The seeds of the film were planted long
ago, says Rosen, when he first saw the photograph of Elvis and
Nixon shaking hands. While he says he completed a rough draft of
the script before the publication of Krogh's book, Rosen re-read
books by Jerry Hopkins, Dave Marsh, and Greil Marcus, among
others, to prepare and watched a couple of the singer's movies in
addition to conferring with Elvis bodyguard Jerry Schilling, the
man whom Elvis visited in L.A. that night and brought back with
him to D.C. Further, Rosen passed the script along to Priscilla
Presley. "She and I spoke a number of times," says
Rosen. "I made a number of changes at her request. They were
small changes. I was glad to do it. It wasn't anything about the
story. She told me some of the script was accurate as to what
happened and some of it wasn't, but she was mainly concerned
about Elvis' image. I let her know in no uncertain terms that I
was an Elvis fan and this wasn't out to get Elvis."
Rather than getting Elvis, Rosen says
his goal in the film is threefold. First, he wants to show Elvis'
sense of humor through scenes such as the one in the doughnut
shop and another which makes light of the legendary TV-screen
shootout. Secondly, he wants to demonstrate the parallels between
Elvis' and Nixon's life, saying, "These two individuals
seemingly have nothing in common, except that they both came out
of the '50s. Their careers did rise and fall together. They got
knocked out of the '60s -- Elvis by the new music and the
Beatles, Nixon by the Kennedys. They did make that comeback
together in '68 a month apart, and they were born just a day
apart, though not the same year. So there was something."
Finally, Rosen aims to make a point he says he's never seen in
print, that Elvis, though certainly square by 1970's
freewheeling, war-protesting standards, was a trailblazer who
made all establishment-shaking possible by doing it first in the
'50s.
All of the above, Rosen concedes, is
played for comic effect. "Everybody seems to have their own
relationship to Elvis and to Nixon. The notion of putting them
together brings with it a certain kind of heightened-reality
expectation," he says. "When I later did read about the
actual meeting, it was rather dull and uneventful. I wanted to
get the tone of the actual meeting in there, but take some
dramatic license and put it on a more entertaining level and
still be true to the psyches of both men." While explaining
his take on the meeting, Rosen suddenly feels the urge to
confess. Contrary to the film's Elvis/Nixon duet of "My
Way," he admits, "They didn't sing really."