Elvis the Pelvis: Jarrett Schindler
Transcription
Elvis the Pelvis: Jarrett Schindler
Elvis the Pelvis: An Analysis of Elvis Presley’s Relation to the Sexual Revolution, 1945-1960 Jarrett Schindler HIST 395 Spring 2011 Dr. Steven A. Reich In the midst of a postwar American society built with “a strong emphasis on relationships and family life,” Elvis Presley, the rising son of Memphis, Tennessee, swept through the nation with a suggestive style that made teenage girls proclaim, “everytime [sic] I hear his records I get weak in the knees. Oooooh. . .” This young musician had an enormous cultural impact, forever changing sexual attitudes in America. Gender roles during this era were “divided accordingly” and “good girls did not have sex before marriage.” When Alfred Kinsey1 published Sexual Behavior in the Human Male in 1948, Life magazine called it an “assault on the family” and a “celebration of licentiousness.” Presley gained mass fame through his sexually innovative performance style, earning the nickname “Elvis the Pelvis” for the way he danced onstage. Presley was the “master of the sexual smile, treating his guitar as both phallus and girl” while making sounds that resembled “the male approaching an orgasm.” Elvis aroused his female adorers and reached a god-like status among male admirers. He channeled his sex appeal in order to reach unparalleled celebrity as the king of rock ‘n’ roll. Elvis Presley introduced sex into the mainstream culture of mid-20th century America, sparking a moral panic among critics that helped transcend attitudes on sexual behavior and gender leading to the sexual revolution.2, 3 1 Alfred Kinsey was an American biologist who researched human sexuality and published “The Kinsey Reports,” in 1948 and 1953. In these reports Kinsey analyzed the sexual attitudes and habits of males and females, including issues of homosexuality, causing a controversial stir in a society that kept conversation about sex quiet. 2 Marilyn Coleman, Lawrence H. Ganong, and Kelly Warzinik, Family Life in 20thCentury America (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2007), 212; Phyllis Battelle, “Rock ‘n’ Roll Music Is Tops With Teen-Agers,” Washington Post and Times Herald, June 24, 1956, p. F-10; William L. O’Neill, American High: The Years of Confidence, 1945-1960 (New York: Free Press, 1986), 3, 45; George Melly, Revolt into Style: The Pop Arts in Britain (London: Allen Lane The Penguin Press, 1970), 37. 1 The 1950s marked a period of transition for America, with “rural change, urbanization, science, technology, racism, and popular culture” all factoring into an evolving landscape. The rise of rock ‘n’ roll coincided with these movements, as this innovative musical blend of “negro rhythm ‘n’ blues” and country gained wide attention. Rock ‘n’ roll primarily affected the teenage audience, as it symbolized something new and exciting. Kenny Puncerelli, a sixteen 3 For a comprehensive look at American culture in the mid 20th century, see William L. O’Neill, American High: The Years of Confidence, 1945-1960 (New York: Free Press, 1986); and Pete Daniel, Lost Revolutions (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2000). For information regarding the sexual revolution and sexual views in postwar America, read Marilyn Coleman, Lawrence H. Ganong, and Kelly Warzinik, Family Life in 20th-Century America (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2007); Pitirim A. Sorokin, The American Sex Revolution (Boston: Porter Sargent Publisher, 1956); and Beth Bailey, Sex in the Heartland (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999). For an in depth look into life in Memphis, Tennessee, examine Margaret McKee and Fred Chisenhall, Beale Black & Blue: Life and Music on Black America’s Main Street (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1981). To read the best comprehensive biography on Elvis Presley consult Albert Goldman, Elvis (New York: McGrawHill Book Company, 1981). Information on the early years of Elvis can be found in the work of Peter Guralnick, Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley (Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1994). In Patricia Jobe Pierce, The Ultimate Elvis: Elvis Presley Day by Day (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1994), Pierce provides an extremely thorough chronology on the activities of Elvis and the times he lived in from 1933 to 1977. For further information on the life of Elvis Presley refer to Dave Marsh, Elvis (New York: Rolling Stone Press, 1982); and Bill DeNight, Elvis Album (New York: Beekman House, 1991). For information on the rise of rock ‘n’ roll and the social effects that went with it, see Nik Cohn, Rock From the Beginning (New York: Stein and Day Publishers, 1969); Trent Hill, “The Enemy Within: Censorship in Rock Music in the 1950s,” in Anthony DeCurtis, Present Tense: Rock & Roll and Culture (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1992); and Michael T. Bertrand, Race, Rock, and Elvis (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2000). Bertrand’s book is an excellent analysis of the racial attitudes toward Elvis and rock ‘n’ roll. The multitude of images of Elvis Presley is examined in Erika Doss, Elvis Culture: Fans, Faith & Image (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1999). For a brilliant analysis of Elvis’ role as a sex icon, read Sue Wise, “Sexing Elvis,” Women’s Studies International Forum 7, no. 1 (1984): 13. For more information regarding Elvis and sex, refer to Simon Frith and Angela McRobbie, “Rock and Sexuality,” in On Record: Rock, Pop, and the Written Word, ed. Simon Frith and Andrew Goodwin (New York: Pantheon Books, 1990). For information on homosexuality in the early 20th century, refer to George Chauncey, Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940 (New York: Basic Books, 1994); and Marjorie Garber, Vested Interests: Cross-Dressing & Cultural Anxiety (New York: Routledge, 1992). To read about racial issues and sexuality in the 1950s, see Renee C. Romano, Race Mixing: Black-White Marriage in Postwar America (Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2006); and Matt Wray and Annalee Newitz, White Trash: Race and Class in America (New York: Routledge, 1997). 2 year-old, stated, “It’s the rhythm. It’s easy to listen to,” while others endorsed that sentiment describing it as “music we can understand.” However, not everyone favored rock ‘n’ roll music, as the legendary Frank Sinatra described it as “sung, played and written” by “cretinous goons” and “the music of every side-burned delinquent.” This new style of music captivated youths with its sexual undertones, much to the dismay of older audiences. They described rock ‘n’ roll as “an incentive to teen-age unrest,” and compared it to “Dionysian revels in Greece, where the god of sex (Priapus) and the god of drink (Bacchus) were feted in the same two beat rhythms.” This lively music had teenagers hooked from the start, and all rock ‘n’ roll needed was a star.4 On January 8, 1935 Elvis Aron Presley entered the world, born to Vernon and Gladys Presley in their Tupelo, Mississippi home. He remained in Tupelo until age thirteen, when the family moved to Memphis, Tennessee in 1948. While attending Humes High School Presley began to distinguish himself, developing the unique dress and lavish hairstyle that garnered him much fame throughout his life. Upon graduation Presley worked several blue-collar jobs, but his passion rested with music. After several failed attempts at joining a band, he recorded a rendition of Arthur Crudup’s “That’s All Right Mama” with a few local musicians at Sam Phillips’ Sun Records office in 1954. The song aired on the radio, and Elvis became an overnight success with over five thousand orders placed the first week it played. However, Elvis did not make his real mark until his first genuine, live performance as a professional musician on July 30, 1954 in Overton Park . There Elvis performed “That’s All Right Mama” along with “Blue Moon,” and the ruckus crowd demanded an encore. Elvis asked his band members what had the crowd in such a frenzy and they replied, “It was the way you were shakin’ your left leg. 4 Daniel, 7; Cohn 9, 22; Gertrude Samuels, “Why They Rock ‘n’ Roll—And Should They?,” New York Times, January 12, 1958, p. 17, 19; Rock ‘n’ Roll Condemned,” Washington Post, July 24, 1956, p. 14; Battelle, “Rock ‘n’ Roll Music Is Tops,” p. F-10; Guralnick, 121. 3 That’s what got ‘em screamin’.” In a 1956 interview Elvis stated, “I went back out for an encore and I kind of did a little more and the more I did the wilder they went.” Elvis the Pelvis was officially born.5 The sexually suggestive style that Elvis perfected in his rise to glory drew harsh criticism from many members of the elder generation, who labeled him a “whirling dervish of sex” and “boasting of sexual prowess.” Many critics saw Elvis as a threat to teenaged girls and he “was deemed different, defective, [and] dangerous.” Postwar Americans placed an emphasis on sexual control with censorship issues arising around literature such as Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, Kinsey’s Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, and Grace Metalious’s Peyton Place. However, this moral panic primarily focused around teens and sex, as “husbands and wives were no longer expected to have sexual relations just to bear children.” Adults embraced sexual relations outside the realm of procreation, hoping to “maximize their sexual fulfillment within marriage.” This differed from how critics viewed America’s youth, as “American adults became increasingly concerned about juvenile misconduct.” Pitirim A. Sorokin, writer of The American Sex Revolution, warned, “we are completely surrounded by the rising tide of sex which is flooding every compartment of our culture,” and predicted teenagers growing up in this setting “will become rudderless boats controlled only by the winds of their environment.” Parents made efforts to limit teen’s exposure to anything deemed sexual, as “many high schools established dress codes that prohibited tight blue jeans and excessive makeup.” A growing sense of terror 5 Goldman, 63, 73, 76, 82, 110-111, 120, 113-120; Elvis Presley, interview by Paul Wilder, Lakeland, Florida, August 6, 1956; Guralnick 12, 28, 32-33, 51, 58, 85, 89-121. 4 developed among adults, as the thought of their young children having premarital sex frightened many.6 Elvis’s antics placed siege on these conservative mindsets, as his widespread popularity alarmed many elder critics. Jacob S. Potofsky, president of Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, stated, “Elvis Presley has more influence on young people than our educators.” Teenagers went wild for Elvis, carving his name into their arms and mobbing theaters he played in. He performed in an “animalistic and violent” manner, and America’s youth responded by making him their idol. Critics of Elvis’s openly sexual style cringed, as “with Elvis Presley’s rockabilly music and hip-shaking moves, mainstream adolescents found their route into a teenage culture that had a strong flavor of rebellion.” The Reverend Lucius F. Cervantes complained of teenager’s “hyperemotional eroticism” after twenty year-old girls rated Elvis the fifth most desirable husband in a 1958 poll. Teenagers throughout the country placed Elvis on the pedestal of idolism, much to the dismay of his older critics. According to critics like writer Eugene Gilbert, “through an alliance of the spirit with Presley, the teenager is able to act out of his infantile desire of striving for power through the destruction of adult standards and symbols.” The fear of Presley’s impact on America’s youth propelled his fame even further, as criticism only elevated his status among teenagers who “resented being told what to do.” This sense of 6 “Presley Termed a Passing Fancy: Minister in Village Asserts Singer Gives Teen-Agers ‘a Vicarious Fling’,” New York Times, December 17, 1956, p. 28; Melly, 37; Doss, 135; Coleman, Ganong, and Warzinik, 19, 217; Sorokin, 54, 55. 5 apprehension among critics manifested itself in the form of public condemnation of Elvis through the press.7 Elvis greatly impacted the sexual revolution through his musical performances, which made sex a topic of the national media. Never before had the general public scrutinized a public figure so closely for his sexual promiscuity. The media labeled Elvis as “unspeakably untalented and vulgar” and the Reverend Billy Graham even proclaimed, “I wouldn’t let my daughter walk across the street to see Elvis Presley perform.” These sentiments echoed throughout the country, as “for some he was the devil risen up to claim the nation’s children.” Adults, such as New York Times writer Jack Gould, deplored Elvis and remarked on how he “disturbed adult viewers” due to his “striptease behavior;” yet they feared the way in which he “instantly became a martyr in the eyes of his teen-age following.” This fear of Presley’s monumental impact on America’s youth culminated in a war of the press, in which writers denounced Elvis for his sexual openness. The media seemed to focus on Elvis for everything they disliked about the younger generation, as his “brain trust [was] having a harder time keeping his name out of the papers than getting it in.” Elvis’s teenage fans fiercely came to his defense, claiming, “he has romantic appeal,” and sternly defining his gyrations as “not vulgar.”8 7 “Elvis Presley’s Effect on Clothes Deplored,” New York Times, November 17, 1957, p. 122; Goldman, 191,192; Doss, 135; “Music: Teener’s Hero,” Time, May 14, 1956; Coleman, Ganong, and Warzinik, 216, 217; “Religion: Thoughts for the Family,” Time, July 28, 1958; Eugene Gilbert, “Elvis Fans Shape Up as ‘Rebels’ Who Can’t Face Adult World,” quoted in DeNight, 78. 8 John Crosby, New York Herald Tribune quoted in Pierce, 20; The Tampa Tribune in Pierce, 24; Jack Gould, “Elvis Presley: Lack of Responsibility is Shown by TV in Exploiting Teen-Agers,” New York Times, September 16, 1956, p. 13; Dorothy Kilgallen, “Elvis Keeps Brain Trust Rocking,” Washington Post and Times Herald, June 4, 1956, p. 32; Paul Sampson, “Youths in Dither Over Elvis’—What?,” The Washington Post and Times Herald, November 26, 1956, p. B1. 6 The nation’s obsession with Elvis’s “sex-tinged gyrations” only increased mainstream conversation on sex, taking it out of the bedroom and placing it in the public forum. Elvis’s performance and the negative response it garnered from critics “were part of a larger moral panic about sexual control and identity in postwar America.” Parents quickly sympathized with Gould’s attack on Elvis’s antics, commending Gould for his excellent comments, sensibility, and common sense that “all well-intentioned and thinking people” understood. However, Mrs. Rhonda Frank of New York brought up a valid argument when she stated that, “teen-agers were not aware of this interpretation until it was presented to them by the unhealthy few,” in reference to Elvis’s sexually suggestive performances. Frank argued the media brought attention to Elvis’s sexuality, and that teenagers simply felt “puppy love” for Elvis and his music. This is easily disputed by the testimonies of teens such as Amy Taubin, who recalls feeling aroused by Elvis’s “rhythms, his breathing, and facial expressions” upon watching him in 1956. However, the media significantly exaggerated and focused on Elvis’s sexuality, making it an acceptable public topic of interest. Writers across the country explored sex as a main area of concern, revoking the dated idea of sexuality as a taboo in the public forum. Elvis had successfully brought sex into the columns of newspapers and magazines throughout the country, mimicking the effectiveness in which he displayed sexual ideas to teenagers.9 Taubin did not stand alone in her feeling of passion for Elvis, as “hundreds of thousands of women and girls were physically aroused by his sexual gyrations.” Elvis represented sexual liberation for these girls, which teenager Royce Harris described as, “just a raw sexual urge that he projected that just turned on all the young girls'.” Elvis “wasn’t afraid to express himself,” 9 Lawrence Laurent, “Looks Like This Elvis Is a Latter-Day Liberace,” Washington Post and Times Herald, June 23, 1956, p. 31; Doss, 130, 135; “Television Mailbag: Mr. Presley,” New York Times, September 23, 1956, p. 133. 7 and his sexual openness supported these female’s own passionate pursuits. A fifty-two year-old female in Erika Doss’s book, Elvis Culture: Fans, Faith and Image, she remarks on how “Presley rose to power on the heels of the Kinsey Report[s],” in which “Kinsey told women it was unusual for them to be easily or rapidly sexually aroused.” She contends, “Presley showed them it wasn’t,” as the combination of Elvis and “the pill brought about Women’s Liberation.” Elvis made women feel secure in their sexual fantasies, emancipating their subconscious desires. He constantly flirted with his female fan’s emotions, tantalizing them until, “just as every girl in the audience leaned forward in anticipation of ecstasy, Elvis would stop.” Elvis transported mannerisms traditionally reserved for the bedroom into his performances, exciting his feminine aficionadas to an unprecedented degree and causing “the daughters of Suburban America to have public orgasms.” In doing so he illuminated his fan’s repressed sexual emotions, and mastered the art of using sex to propel his fame. However, Elvis did not only affect teenage females, as his contribution to teenage males and their sexuality also deeply influenced the sexual revolution.10 Young men saw Elvis as a role model, a magnetic figure of legendary proportions; “a butch god.” Elvis represented everything “stereotypically macho, always the red-blooded American boy, and always pursued by countless pretty girls,” a “super butch sexual hero” who could “lay girls with ease.” He “said something which had never been admitted so openly in public, that most young men are promiscuously inclined.” Elvis exposed these suppressed male feelings, as he “was the first male white singer to propose that fucking was a desirable activity,” 10 Doss, 131, 147; Royce Harris, quoted in Michael Rose, “Elvis: The King of Rock ‘n’ Roll Turns 75,” Elvis Australia, http://www.elvis.com.au/presley/elvis_the_king_of_rock_ n_roll_turns_75.shtml (accessed March 26, 2011); “Elvis—a Different Kind of Idol: Presley’s Impact Piles Up Fans, Fads—And Fears,” Life, August 27, 1956, 102; Fan from Omaha quoted in Doss, 131; Goldman, 191; Wray and Newitz, 253. 8 and that “it was possible for a man to lay girls without any of the traditional gestures or promises.” Elvis personified a new form of the male ego in a sexual respect, thrashing prewar notions of courtship and chivalry with his “pure fuck-me splendor.” Presley represented the epitome of the sexual rebel, as demonstrated when he answered, “Why buy a cow when you can get milk through the fence?” when asked whether he planned to get married. He substantially impacted the way males approached sexuality, as Elvis proposed sex as a hobby, encouraging womanizing and promiscuity in males. He influenced males by demonstrating his flirtatious mannerisms with females, as evidenced in his frequent kissing of attractive fans (Figure 1). Elvis’s male admirers saw him in a heroic fashion, and hoped to model after his perceived success with women. Whether intentionally or not, Elvis encouraged teenage males to engage in premarital sex, revolutionizing the way in which men approached relationships.11 Elvis Presley mastered the art of selling sex to propel his fame, as his management realized the allure of his appeal and successfully marketed it. During the 1950s he amassed great wealth as fans flocked to his concerts and bought his records and memorabilia on top of the lucrative contracts he received for television appearances and acting. Phyllis Battelle, a writer for the Washington Post and Times Herald, described Presley as “a 21-year-young man who makes more than $40,000 a week for rockin’ from his heels.” Presley’s fame did not primarily lie with his musical talents, but with his image and performance style. Jack Gould claimed Elvis “is a rock-and-roll variation of one of the most standard acts in show business: the virtuoso of the hootchy-kootchy.” Elvis captured the heart of teenage girls with his seductive act and image, reaping the monetary benefits from his obsessed following. Washington Post and Times Herald writer Lawrence Laurent remarked on how Elvis and his associates “convert outrage into cash 11 Wise, 13; Doss, 139; Melly, 36-37; Marsh, 55; “Music: Teener’s Hero,” Time, May 14, 1956. 9 when the freak followers line up at the box office,” in reference to Presley profiting off a teenage following inspired by the criticism he received from angered critics. Presley’s perceived rebel persona helped catapult him to the top of the charts, as his use of sexually suggestive gestures repelled a traditionally conservative performance etiquette. Presley naturally denied this, claiming in a 1956 interview, “Ma’am, I’m not tryin’ to be sexy. I didn’t have any idear of tryin’ to sell sex. It’s just my way of expressin’ how I feel when I move around.” It is of little doubt; however, that Presley’s sex appeal played a major role in his rise to stardom, as it distracted young audiences from him musical shortcomings.12 Presley’s innovative usage of sexual appeal as a vehicle to achieve celebrity changed the way popular figures constructed their images. Elvis saw great success in selling sex, providing a model for future entertainers to achieve stardom. Presley’s “aggressive, dominating, and boastful” style influenced “rock stars like Mick Jagger, Roger Daltrey, and Robert Plant.” Presley integrated an act “built around techniques of arousal and climax” that teenage girls could not resist. His movements coincided with the rise of sexual consumerism, as magazines like Playboy, True Confessions, and Confidential grew in popularity. In her book, Sex in the Heartland, Beth Bailey remarks on this stating, “this sexualization of mass culture was largely a matter of renegotiating the boundaries of respectability, for much more sexually explicit material had been available before this postwar turn, but it had been under-the-counter stuff.” Presley helped bring sex into the national marketplace, as “the mechanism of our industry, trade, and 12 Phyllis Battelle, “Elvis is King: Presley Rocks and Money Rolls In,” Washington Post and Times Herald, June 25, 1956, p. 25; Jack Gould, “TV: New Phenomenon: Elvis Presley Rises to Fame as Vocalist Who Is Virtuoso of Hootchy-Kootchy,” New York Times, June 6, 1956, p. 67; Lawrence Laurent, “Looks Like this Elvis Is a Latter-Day Liberace,” Washington Post and Times Herald, June 23, 1956, p. 31; Elvis Presley, quoted in Phyllis Battelle, “Elvis is King: Presley Rocks and Money Rolls In,” Washington Post and Times Herald, June 25, 1956, p. 25. 10 commerce seems to have become increasingly powered by sexual secretions.” This phenomenon occurred in stark contrast to prewar marketing, where suggestive advertising “would have been violently protested by the public, and outlawed by religious, moral, “watch and ward” and other organizations.” Sexual advertising had grown into a means of reaching out to the masses; “a must in commercial advertising.” Elvis profited from magnifying his sexual image, as he “employed the sexual sell directly, whereas popular music as a whole was still discreet.” By incorporating his sexual appeal into advertising, Elvis elucidated a new way to reach out to the American consumer.13 Elvis blurred gender lines through his image, which hinted at the unspeakable ideas of homosexuality and transgender in postwar American society. Elvis Herselvis, a famous female Elvis impersonator, urges people to view Elvis as “that dangerous boy who was crossing the sex barrier.” However, the “many diverse and conflicted images” Elvis presented makes it difficult to label him as strictly feminine or masculine. Simon Frith argues Elvis is a “cock rocker,” which he defines as, “an explicit, crude, and often aggressive expression of male sexuality.” The “cock rocker” viewpoint is supported by “male writers, who have created ‘Elvis in their own (fantasy) image,” while the view of Elvis as a transvestite is evident in his emulation of Liberace. Elvis flaunted himself with mascara and glitzy outfits, which prompted record producer Chet Atkins to state, “I couldn’t get over that eye shadow” and proclaim watching Elvis, “was like seein’ a couple of guys kissin’ in Key West.” Both the male and female viewpoints of Elvis are easily visible in his image, and both are factors in Elvis’s role in the sexual revolution.14 13 Frith and McRobbie, 374; Bailey, 42; Sorokin, 36-38; O’Neill, 268. Sharon Cowan, “The Elvis We Deserve: The Social Regulation of Sex/Gender and Sexuality Through Cultural Representations of ‘The King’,” Law, Culture and the Humanities 6, no. 2 (June 2010): 229; Doss, 4, Frith and McRobbie, 374; Wise, 13; Goldman, 122; Garber, 363. 14 11 The image of Elvis as a cross-dressing, feministic performer revolutionized gender, as his near androgynous style transcended gender lines. In the 1950s Elvis “helped destabilize conventional understandings of masculinity” with the way he dressed and constructed his appearance. Elvis often wore outfits with pink, “the female color of the 1950s,” in them, and put on black mascara and eye shadow. Elvis’s appearance separated him from the typical male norms of the time, as “his face was almost pretty” and his hairstyle resembled the female “pompadour” when most males wore their hair short. Marjorie Garber, author of Vested Interests: Cross-Dressing and Cultural Anxiety, writes, “one of the hallmarks of transvestic display, as we have seen recently, is the detachable part.” She goes on to describe how wigs, false breasts, and codpieces are used to make a male look female or vice versa. Here Elvis also suggested at ideas of cross gendering, as “rumour [sic] had it that into his skin-tight jeans was sewn a bar in order to suggest a weapon of heroic proportions.” David Houston, a county singer and friend of Elvis, supported this notion claiming before Elvis got on stage he would tie a cardboard roller to a “string around his waist” and let it “hang down outside his drawers” with the intention of appearing “like he had one helluva thing there inside his pants.” However, Elvis’s manhood or sexuality is not of uncertainty; rather, the question comes in asking why did he dress, perform, and display himself in a way that violated gender norms?15 Elvis appealed to both sexes through his gender-destabilizing image, which helped bring about less defined gender roles in America. His rabid teenage following took after his lead, emulating Elvis’s androgynous style. In Grand Rapids, Michigan, over one thousand girls cut their hair to look like Elvis’s in less than six weeks, as teenage girls sought to resemble Elvis’s masculinity. On the other side of the gender spectrum, males grew their hair long and parents 15 Doss, 126, 127; O’Neill, 266; Garber, 367; Melly, 37; Goldman, 157. 12 feared their sons would take after Elvis’s perceived feministic and homosexual qualities. After Romeo Community High School suspended Robert Phernetton, a sixteen year-old junior, for violating a school policy that prohibited students from wearing “the fancy hairdos and long sideburns favored by rock ‘n’ roller Presley,” Phernetton defiantly proclaimed, “I’m still not going to get my hair cut.” A sense of panic enveloped the nation’s parents, as “the socialization of middle-class children in the 1950s was focused on assuring that boys and girls grew up with gendered interests.” Part of this fear stemmed from Elvis’s imitation of Liberace, as “Elvis became a cause of feminine virile display.” Garber describes “a famous moment” in 1956 when “Elvis and Liberace themselves changed clothes,” as Elvis put on Liberace’s gold-sequinned [sic] tuxedo jacket.” Elvis continued to wear costumes of feminine grandeur after this instance (Figure 2), rejecting the accepted gender norms of the time. Society viewed him as “a boy, a eunuch, or a woman—as anything but a man,” and parents feared their children’s love for an androgynous figure could lead to homosexuality.16 Elvis hinted at homosexuality at a time “where heterosexuality was the accepted norm, homosexuality a closeted and mostly illicit deviance, and sex in general a taboo topic.” He brought these unmentionable ideas to the forefront of American culture, much to the elder generation’s dismay. Parents experienced great anxiety over these notions, and “sons who were not exposed to the influence of their fathers were considered at risk for inappropriate gender development, including homosexuality.” Postwar America shunned homosexuality, as “the specter of the invisible homosexual, like that of the invisible communist, haunted Cold War America,” and “a new wave of assaults on gay men in the postwar decade” began. Presley’s 16 “Ain’t Nothin But A Hairdo: In Grand Rapids 1,000 girls trick up locks for love of Presley,” Life, March 25, 1957, 55; “Student Loses Court Fight For Presley-Type Haircut,” Washington Post and Times Herald, November 17, 1956, p. A3; Coleman, Ganong, and Warzinik, 215; Garber, 363, 368. 13 perceived feministic qualities and challenging of “traditional male behavior” led teenagers away from conventional ideas of masculinity. He helped revolutionize ideas on gender, foreshadowing the escape from gender roles that occurred in the 1960s and 1970s. Elvis’s “sexually liquid image” influenced teenagers around the country, as they felt acceptable crossing the once strict gender line. Elvis taught males to embrace the feminine side of themselves, while at the same time encouraging females to pursue desired male traits. His overall message seemed to preach equality no matter one’s sexual orientation, or, even more surprisingly, one’s race.17 Postwar America remained a nation rife with racism, as white adults feared the alleged consequences of intermixing with blacks. Georgia Baptist preacher Jack Johnston claimed black men “want to have our women and wipe out the white race.” White Americans strongly opposed interracial relationships in the 1950s, with a 1958 national poll reporting “that 96 percent of whites disapproved of marriages between blacks and whites.” In 1954 the legislative act Brown v. Board of Education passed, banning the segregation of separate white and black schools. This prompted an intense reaction from many white adults, who feared their children would have interracial relationships from going to school with black children. These sentiments remained particularly strong in the south, where “southern political leaders, and many ordinary white southerners, claimed that the Brown decision would lead to an explosion of interracial sex.” Interracial sexual relations deeply scared prominent whites like Alabama state senator Walter Givhan, who in 1955 claimed the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) had a goal of “opening the bedroom doors of our white women to the Negro man.” 17 Doss, 128, 130, 161; Coleman, Ganong, and Warzinik, 20; Chauncey, 360. 14 White American adults feared of “the ‘cultural miscegenation’ of emerging youth culture;” a culture led by Elvis Presley.18 Elvis adopted the style of African-American musicians like Rufus Thomas and Arthur Crudup, as he “mixed and blended black and white music and black and white modes of performance into the emergent hybrid of rock and roll.” Writer Trent Hill describes rock ‘n’ roll records as “off color in both the moral and racial sense” and writes that “while sexually frank lyrics had long been accepted in r&b songs, it was only when these records became objects of consumption for white kids that anybody had any kind of problem with them.” Much to their parent’s ire, white teenagers reveled in a sexually explicit rock ‘n’ roll culture rooted with black musical styles and tradition. Black and white teenagers alike flocked to Elvis’s concerts, with girls from both races sharing an obsession for Presley. Doss remarks on how “postwar black teens were drawn to Elvis for the same reasons as other teens—he embodied a kind of dynamism and sexuality that they found appealing,” and “Elvis’s respectful emulation and acknowledgement of black style was perhaps seen by many African-Americans as vindication for centuries of cultural marginalization.” After a 1956 show, disc jockey Nathaniel Dowde Williams described how “a thousand black, brown, and beige teen-age girls in the audience blended their alto and soprano voices in one wild crescendo of sound that rent the rafters.” Williams expresses that in the aftermath of the concert “many of the brethren in black, brown, and beige” felt “plumb flustered” and “wondering if these teen-age girls’ demonstration over Presley doesn’t reflect a basic integration in attitude and aspiration which has been festering in the minds of most your folk’s womenfolk all along.” Presley’s concerts provided a public forum 18 Jack Johnston, quoted in Daniel, 154; Romano, 2, 146; Walter Givhan, quoted in James W. Vander Zanden, “The Ideology of White Supremacy,” Journal of the History of Ideas 20, no. 3 (June-September 1959): 401. 15 for teenagers of both races to freely mix, provoking the fears of white parents opposed to miscegenation.19 The youth culture of 1950s America embodied a growing spirit of racial equality that their parents feared and rejected. Teenagers saw Elvis Presley as a leading figure in this movement, as his “edginess, his rebellious enthusiasm for testing the boundaries of both race and sex, made him the central icon for a body of mixed-race, mixed-gender fans equally committed to rejecting postwar America’s repressive racial and sexual codes.” The thought that their children might develop an intimate relationship with a member of the black race alarmed many white parents. These critics saw him as “the poor white messenger of poor black sexuality,” as “the double whammy of Elvis’s transgressive sexuality and subversive racial mixing made him a potent mainstream threat.” Presley’s adoption of black culture made him, whether intentionally or not, a figurehead for racial equality during an era of widespread racism. As teenagers from both races attended his concerts, Elvis delivered parent’s “true fear: the message of pure sex, received like an arrow, straight into the White, middle-class heart of America.” Parents perceived Elvis as promoting interracial relationships, and labeled him “a kind of virus that had to be reckoned with by any means necessary.” To southern whites in particular, “the prospect of racial intermarriage or amalgamation” represented the “taboo of taboos,” and the racial openness Elvis seemed to symbolize frightened many. The fact that his sexually charged performances impacted both whites and blacks contributed to the moral panic of white parents regarding 19 Doss, 168, 175; Hill, 48; Nathaniel Dowde Williams, in Philadelphia Courier, 22 December 1956, quoted in Doss, 175; Nathaniel Dowde Williams, in Philadelphia Courier, 22 December 1956, quoted in Mckee and Chisenhall, 95-96. 16 interracial relationships. Elvis represented a new form of sexuality, in which whites and blacks rejected past racial restrictions on sex.20 Postwar America defined the concept of an evolving nation, as in the short decades after World War II the country underwent a rigorous social, political, and industrial transformation. Elvis Presley embodied this change; a celebrity of celebrities that rejected societal norms and hinted at ideas of cultural rebellion through his innovative musical style. As Garber puts it, “whether through his mascara, his dyed hair, or his imitation of black music and style, Elvis was always crossing over.” Royce Harris, a teenager who attended Presley concerts in the 1950s, recalls, “I think if you talked about it in the ‘50s we wouldn’t have said the word sex aloud, but I think that’s what Elvis was,” referring to the way in which Elvis made sex a public issue in society. Elvis’s sexually explicit style of performance shocked elder critics, as his actions brought up issues previously reserved for the private sector of people’s lives. Critics described him as “utterly nauseating,” and after viewing a Presley concert an Oakland, California policeman went as far as to state, “If he did that in the street, we’d arrest him.” Presley’s sexual connotations alarmed a generation of elder Americans, who feared the potential effect of Elvis on teenage youth. A moral panic overcame these terrified critics, as they perceived Elvis as holding values they did not want transmitted to teenagers.21 The moral panic that arose in the wake of Presley’s sexual openness helped lead to a sexual revolution in America. Presley had a unique style that hinted at ideas often shunned in postwar America, and foreshadowed a changing sense of morality in the 1960s and 1970s. Due 20 Doss, 176, Hill, 55; Walter Givhan, quoted in Zanden, 401. Garber, 368; Royce Harris, quoted in Michael Rose, “Elvis: The King of Rock ‘n’ Roll Turns 75,” Elvis Australia, http://www.elvis.com.au/presley/elvis_the_king_of_rock_ n_roll_turns_75.shtml (accessed March 26, 2011); Francis McGuire, quoted in “Letters,” Time, June 4, 1956; “Music: Yeh-Heh-Heh-Hes, Baby,” Time, June 18, 1956. 21 17 to Elvis’s enormous popularity the press feared his blatantly sexual performances, and constantly criticized him for his suggestive mannerisms. This helped make sex a topic of conversation for the national media, as it became acceptable to talk about sex in the public forum. One of the main issues that critics feared in Presley revolved around his impact on teenage youth, as these members of the younger generation worshipped Elvis. Elvis liberated the sexual feelings of teenage girls through his suggestive performances, as Elvis taught young females that they could freely embrace their sexual passions before marriage. Teenage males looked up to Elvis as a “butch god” and hero, and his womanizing ways crushed traditional ideas of courtship and significantly altered the way young men pursued sexual relationships. Elvis also impacted how future artists approached marketing, as he sold his sexuality and reaped the benefits. In the generations that followed Elvis, sex would be a key way to reach out to the American consumer. Elvis’s near androgynous image transcended traditional gender roles, as he constructed his figure with conventionally feminine traits like mascara, glitzy outfits, and long hair. By crossing the gender line, Elvis taught a generation of teenagers that they did not have to remain complacent with the accepted gender roles of their parents. He also helped eliminate prominent fears of homosexuality and transgender that existed in postwar American society. Both white and black teenagers enjoyed Elvis’s sexually suggestive style, and freely mixed during his concerts. White parents feared their children might develop interracial relationships, and Elvis’s adoption of black culture seemed to support their fears. Although Elvis may not have intended to promote miscegenation and racial harmony, the way he conducted himself in a racist society helped revolutionize sexual relations between blacks and whites. Ultimately, Elvis confronted many closeted issues through his sexual openness, helping to destabilize traditional attitudes on sex and leading a youth culture responsible for the sexual revolution. 18 Figure 1 Elvis kissing fans, March 1956, St. Louis.22 22 “Elvis with Fans: March 1956 – St Louis,” ca. March 1956, Elvis Australia, photograph, http://photos.elvispresley.com.au/kisses/elvis.html (accessed April 20, 2011). 19 Figure 2 Elvis in gold lameʹ′ suit23 23 “Elvis wore his full gold lameʹ′ suit for the last time,” ca. April 2, 1957, Maple Leaf Gardens, Toronto, Canada, Elvis Australia, photograph, http://www.elvispresleymusic.com .au/pictures/1957_april_2.html (accessed April 7, 2011). 20 Bibliography I. Primary Sources 1 “Ain’t Nothin But A Hairdo: In Grand Rapids 1,000 girls trick up locks for love of Presley.” Life, March 25, 1957. This article contains valuable information regarding teenage girls who got their hair cut to resemble Elvis Presley. Used as evidence of Elvis’s gender defying image. “Elvis—a Different Kind of Idol: Presley’s Impact Piles Up Fans, Fads, and Fears.” Life, August 27, 1956. This article remarks on Elvis’s impact on fans, as his sexually suggestive style scared members of the elder generation. “Letters.” Time, June 4, 1956. This article contains letters written to the editor after the publication of an article on Elvis Presley. Great primary source information regarding how critics viewed Presley. Melly, George. Revolt into Style: The Pop Arts. Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 1971. This book contains Melly’s first hand observations on Elvis while he was still performing. In one quote Melly remarks on Elvis’ sexual effect on the youth of the time. Melly was a musical critic, writer, and lecturer during his lifetime. “Music: Teeners’ Hero.” Time, May 14, 1956. This article discusses the suggestive style of Elvis Presley, and provides great primary information on how teens viewed him. New York Times. 16 September 1956—12 January 1958. This collection of articles provides a substantial amount of information regarding Elvis and his sexuality. From these articles I have drawn many examples of critics condemning Elvis for his open sexuality. “Religion: Thoughts for the Family.” Time, July 28, 1958. This article contains the condemnation of Elvis and the youth culture by the Reverend Lucius F. Cervantes. I used this to demonstrate how elder adults despised Elvis’s sexuality. Rose, Michael. “Elvis: The King of Rock ‘n’ Roll Turns 75.” Elvis Australia. http://www.elvis.com.au/presley/elvis_the_king_of_rock_n_roll_turns_75.shtml (accessed March 26, 2011). This article reflects on the life of Elvis Presley on his 75th anniversary. From this article I drew primary source information from Royce Harris, who was a teenager during Presley’s concerts in the 1950s. Sorokin, Pitirim A. The American Sex Revolution. Boston: Porter Sargent Publisher, 1956. 21 This book examines the growing sexual culture in postwar American culture. Pitrim Sorokin was a sociologist from Russia that founded the Department of Sociology at Harvard University. Washington Post and Times Herald. 4 June 1956—26 November 1956. From this wide breadth of articles, I gained extremely valuable primary source information to back up my assertions of Elvis’s relation to the sexual revolution. “Music: Yeh-Heh-Heh-Hes, Baby.” Time, June 18, 1956 From this article, I gained a valuable primary source in the form of a quote from an Oakland, California policeman condemning Elvis. Zanden, James W. Vander. “The Ideology of White Supremacy.” Journal of the History of Ideas 20, no. 3 (June-September 1959): 385-402. In this article, Zanden examines the idea of white supremacy in the postwar American south. I used this article to demonstrate resentment toward interracial relationships and miscegenation in the American south during Elvis’s career. II. Secondary Sources Bailey, Beth. Sex in the Heartland. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999. In this book, Bailey examines the sexual revolution of the 1960s in America, specifically focusing on the town of Lawrence, Kansas. Bailey is a social and cultural historian that works at Temple University. Bertrand, Michael T. Race, Rock, And Elvis. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2000. In this book, Bertrand provides an excellent background on the social environment in which Elvis Presley thrived. Bertrand specifically takes a look at the racial attitudes toward Elvis and rock ‘n’ roll. Bertrand is an assistant professor of history at Tennessee State University and a native of the American south. Chauncey, George. Gay New York: Gender, Urban Culture, and the Making of the Gay Male World, 1890-1940. New York: Basic Books, 1994. In his remarkable book, Chauncey chronicles gay culture in New York from 1890 to 1940. Of specific interest to me was the epilogue that led into postwar American gay life. Chauncey is a Professor of History at Yale University. Cohn, Nik. Rock From the Beginning. New York: Stein and Day Publishers, 1969. In this book, Cohn chronicles the evolution of rock ‘n’ roll from its beginnings in the mid-fifties to the late sixties. Cohn speaks extensively about Elvis Presley’s use of sex appeal, and this book has led to primary sources. Cohn is a British rock critic who lived during the peak of rock ‘n’ roll. Coleman, Marilyn, Lawrence H. Ganong, and Kelly Warzinik. Family Life in 20th-Century America. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2007. 22 This book gives an extensive analysis of all aspects of family life in 20th century America. Marilyn Coleman and Lawrence H. Ganong are professors at the University of Missouri, while Kelly Warzinik obtained a MS at Missouri. Cowan, Sharon. “The Elvis We Deserve: The Social Regulation of Sex/Gender and Sexuality Through Cultural Representations of ‘The King’.” Law, Culture and the Humanities 6, no. 2 (June 2010): 221-244. This article gives a background on the changing image of Elvis as a sex icon throughout his lifetime, as well as how society viewed this. Dr. Sharon Cowan is the senior director of studies and medical jurisprudence at the University of Edinburgh School of Law. Daniel, Pete. Lost Revolutions: The South in the 1950s. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2000. This book examines life in the American south during the 1950s, focusing on issues like race, values, and popular culture. Pete Daniel is a retired ex-curator of the Smithsonian National Museum of American History and an expert on the American south. DeNight, Bill. Elvis Album. New York: Beekman House, 1991. This book examines the life of Elvis Presley from his birth in 1935 to his death in 1977. It includes extensive primary source information stemming from news articles and pictures from Presley’s career. Doss, Erika. Elvis Culture: Fans, Faith and Image. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1999. In this book Doss includes images, letters, and information about fans reactions toward Elvis Presley. This book has led to numerous primary sources, as it is extremely valuable in evaluating different aspects of Presley’s image. Frith, Simon, and Angela McRobbie. “Rock and Sexuality.” In On Record: Rock, Pop, and the Written Word, edited by Simon Firth and Andrew Goodwin. New York: Pantheon Books, 1990. This article examines the role of sexuality in rock ‘n’ roll music, with Frith and McRobbie arguing Elvis’s place as a masculine “cock rocker.” Frith is a rock critic and sociologist, while McRobbie is a Professor at London that specializes in youth culture. Garber, Marjorie. Vested Interestes: Cross-Dressing & Cultural Anxiety. New York: Routledge, 1992. This book examines transvestism and issues of gender, providing an interesting examination of Elvis’s gender bending characteristics. Garber is a Professor of English as Harvard University. Goldman, Albert. Elvis. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1981. Goldman’s book provides an excellent look at the evolution of Elvis Presley throughout his career. The chapters “The Early Days of Sexually Inspired Mass Hysteria” and “The Last Days of Elvis the Pelvis” are of particular interest and have references to good 23 primary sources. Dr. Goldman taught at numerous schools in New York, including Columbia University. Guralnick, Peter. Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1994. This book chronicles the early years of Elvis’s life in a biographical way, providing a good background on the rise of Elvis Presley. Guralnick is a popular American music critic with a master’s degree from Boston University. Hill, Trent. “The Enemy Within: Censorship in Rock Music in the 1950s.” In DeCurtis, Anthony. Present Tense: Rock & Roll and Culture, 39-72. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1992. This article focuses around censorship issues in rock ‘n’ roll during the 1950s. It contains valuable information regarding public reaction to Elvis’s sexually suggestive performances. Marsh, Dave. Elvis. New York: Rolling Stone Press, 1982. This book details the life and career of Elvis Presley, including pictures and news clippings from events throughout his career. Dave Marsh was a music critic at Newsday and an associate editor of Rolling Stone. McKee, Margaret, and Fred Chisenhall. Beale Black & Blue: Life and Music on Black America’s Main Street. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1981. This book provides an in depth look at Beale Street in Memphis, Tennessee, as well as the blues musicians who hailed from this region. The book examines the evolution of these musicians and the area in the 20th century. O’Neill, William L. American High: The Years of Confidence, 1945-1960. New York: Free Press, 1986. This book provides information regarding the changing landscape of American culture between 1945-1960 and the sexual revolution that went with it. Dr. O’Neill is Professor Emeritus of History at Rutgers University. Pierce, Patricia Jobe. The Ultimate Elvis: Elvis Presley Day by Day. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1994. This book provides a day-to-day insight into the life of Elvis Presley, including his role as a sexual icon. Pierce is an expert in American art and President of Pierce Galleries, Inc. Romano, Renee C. Race Mixing: Black-White Marriage in Postwar America. Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press, 2006. This book examines attitudes reflecting interracial marriage and miscegenation in postwar America. Romano is a specialist in 20th century America history, and an Associate Professor at Oberlin College. Wise, Sue. “Sexing Elvis.” Women’s Studies International Forum 7, no. 1 (1984): 13. 24 Wise’s article examines Elvis’ role as a sex icon, and how males have formulated this. This article brilliantly connects Elvis and sex, and has led me to valuable primary sources, such as George Melly’s book. Wise is the Professor of Social Justice at Lancaster University. Wray, Matt, and Annalee Newitz. White Trash: Race and Class in America. New York: Routledge, 1997. This book details the history of people considered “white trash” in America, focusing on cultural issues of race and class for poor Americans. In this work Newitz and Wray examine Elvis’s emergence from poverty and his adoption of black style. 25