3rd Armored Division Co-Stars with Elvis
By Stars and Stripes ( 3ad March 25, 2005)
By Stars and Stripes ( 3ad March 25, 2005)
Elvis relaxing during an interview with Stars & Stripes (photo by Stripes photographer Gunter Schuettler).
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The 3d Armored Division is co-staring with SP4 Elvis Presley in a Hollywood movie, but Presley himself won't work in the film until he's just plain old Elvis again.
Shooting of the Hal B. Wallis production called "G.I. Blues" began August 17 (1959) at the division's training area near Freiburg, Germany, kicking off a scheduled three weeks of filming around the 3d Armored Division area.
About 100 of the division's soldiers are working as extras in the film being made by Paramount and a company of tanks from Presley's outfit is in the show, but Presley won't start work in the movie until he gets out of the Army in March (1960).
Then Paramount and Wallis will resume where they leave off on this side of the Atlantic, and what's been filmed over there will be worked into the finished, Wallis explained.
Elvis Presley
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None of the filming over here has a sound track, and all the extras-all on leave status for the duration of their part in the shooting- are used to make background footage for what will be completed in Hollywood, starting probably in April. The finished product should be released in the fall of 1960, Wallis added.
The first day of shooting found two tank platoons from the 32d Armor's Company B charging up and down hillsides near Freiburg as Paramount camera crews captured the rumbling monsters in Vista Vision.
Receiving the royal escort on his first day in Friedberg. Further below and sometime later, a more seasoned Elvis strikes a pose in front of 1st Bn, 32nd Armor headquarters.
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Presley, meanwhile, continues his regular duties as a jeep driver with a scout platoon of the 32d Armor and won't even be around to watch any of the shooting over here.
Weather held up part of the first day's shooting as 1st LT Andrew Bendaar, CO of the tank company, put his men through their paces for the cameras.
Two platoons of the clanking, roaring, monsters charged up a hill and almost into a camera into the cameras for one scene and later rumbled down a steep road, whammed into a rain-filled ditch at the bottom and roared by the cameras for another.
Elvis conducted more than a dozen press conferences in Germany during 1958-60, all under the watchful eye of the 3AD Public Information Office.
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PFC T.W. Creel of Laurel, Mississippi is Presley's double. A member of Company D of the 13th Cav, he was selected because Wallis says he'll look like Elvis from a distance.
He has the same characteristic walk and mannerisms as Presley, Wallis pointed out. In other respects he's a dead ringer for Elvis.
Captain John J. Mawn, 3d Armored Division information officer who's been assigned as technical advisor for the film, said locating Creel was a stroke of luck.
"Somebody remembered going through basic training with Creel at Fort Hood, Texas", Mawn recalled, "And he remembered how much Creel looked like Presley."
"I met Elvis only once," Creel says, "and I figure him for a pretty nice guy."
Creel, who worked on an oil-drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico before being drafted in the Army, is a tank driver and can't play the guitar, but as for rock and roll, he says: "Cat I really dig that stuff."
Other stand-ins who, like Creel, have no speaking parts and won't be seen close-up in the finished product, include only one soldier with acting experience.
He's PFC Roland D'Auguste of the 3d Armored Division's honor guard, and a veteran of TV production back in his hometown of Los Angeles.
"I've had lead parts in a number of TV programs" he replied, "including 'Navy Log,' 'Annapolis', 'West Point' and 'Walter Winchel File'."
Elvis as Tulsa McLean in G.I. Blues.
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SP4 Sheridan Jouett of White Hall, Ill., and a member of the 143d Signal Battalion is a stand-in for a loader in a tank crew. Aside from high school dramatics, he's never done any acting.
His chief claim to fame, he noted, is that the other five stand-ins get promoted in the picture, while he appears as his own rank.
PFC Frank P. Steele, of 3d Armored Division Headquarters plays a stand-in for a platoon sergeant, and PFC Norman Fair, of Company A, 143d Signal battalion stands in for a tank driver.
Steele is from Tuscaloosa, Alabama and Fair comes from Bastrop, La.
Elvis Presley in G.I. Blues.
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The finished film will about three GI's or possibly four, Wallis explained. The show will include eight or nine songs, mostly ballads, and some rock 'n' roll.
The whole thing is being done at no cost to the Army, Mawn pointed out, explaining that the gas for the tanks and other assorted expenses come out of the film's budget.
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