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Interview with Linda Thompson, 2002

How does the world see Elvis? Let's discuss in this forum how he is viewed by the world and where changes toward the postive are now happening in that regard. Links to articles that reflect these changes can be posted here as well.

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Interview with Linda Thompson, 2002

Postby Rainbow Light » Wed Jun 06, 2007 7:46 am

Linda Thompson was born May 23, 1950 in Memphis, Tennessee. Linda won several beauty pageants, including the 1972 Miss Tennessee USA title. In July of that year she began a relationship with the recently separated Elvis Presley and immediately moved in with him at Graceland for roughly three and a half years.

In 1981, Thompson married former Olympic Games Gold Medalist, Bruce Jenner with whom she had two children. Bruce divorced Linda in 1983 and she appeared in a few motion pictures and made a number of guest appearances on different television series.


In 1991 she married composer David Foster. With her new husband's help, she began writing lyrics for some of his compositions, notably the song 'No Explanation' for the 1990 film, Pretty Woman. In 1992 they were nominated for a Grammy Award and an Academy Award for Best Song for their composition of the song 'I Have Nothing' sung by Whitney Houston in the 1992 motion picture, The Bodyguard.

Foster helped Thompson write the lyrics to 'The Power of the Dream', the official song of the 1996 Summer Olympics composed by Foster and Kenneth 'Babyface' Edmonds. In 2003, Thompson and her husband won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Music and Lyrics for 'The Concert for World Children's Day'.

She was active with her husband in humanitarian causes in the 'David Foster Foundation Society'. In 2005, the Fosters aired a reality television show called The Princes of Malibu based on Linda's slacker sons and how Foster had to deal with them. The show was cancelled after a few airings, with Foster separating from Thompson.



[/quote]
Can you start by telling me a little about how your first meeting with Elvis was set up? I beliee an RCA guy called Bill Browder was responsible?

Yes, I knew him as Bill Browder but he later became TG Shepard who later became a country artist who did a song called Devil in a Bottle, and he had a lot of success with it. I was Miss Tennessee at the time and my girlfriend, who was my roommate in the Miss USA pageant, was a girl named Jeannie LeMay. She was Miss Rhode Island and had just moved to Memphis. Anyway, we were out walking one day and she suggested we go into Fridays and have some lunch. So we walk into Fridays and Bill Browder is there and he asks if we'd like to join him for lunch. He then asks us if we'd like to meet Elvis as he was in town. If it had not been for Jeannie I probably would not have met him because I was very conservative and I was about to say that we were busy because we were both supposed to model that night. Jeannie said that we would meet him and that we'd cancel our plans.


Elvis & Linda Thompson
Were you an Elvis fan at this time?

Oh yes, I had been my whole life but I knew that we had this modeling job to do and I was happy to stick with my commitment but Jeannie said that if there was an opportunity to meet Elvis, she was going to take it. So, we cancelled our modeling engagement and they got replacements for us. We went to the Memphian Theater at midnight because that's when it closed and Elvis took over and show movies.

What was he like? What was your first impression of him?

Well, I was in the lobby talking to some of the guys and a few of the people who were hanging around there and the door burst open and there was this vision. It was the middle of July in Memphis and it was very humid, just sweltering. He had on this black cape with a high collar and a red satin lining and I said "dressed a little like Dracula aren't we?" so you see, we both shared a sense of humor that was very much like the other. We just hit it off immediately because we grew up in Memphis, we had the same religious beliefs, the same love for our family, devotion to mother and father. We had the same sense of loyalty, we enjoyed the same cuisine because we were both Southerners.

It sounds like it was almost inevitable Linda?

Oh, it was. We shared a real kinship. I mean, we became kindred souls. So much so that he said, "where have you been?" and I said "Growing up!"

He had just split from Priscilla when you two first met right?

It's funny because when we met at the Memphian Theatre, he was telling me that he'd just separated. We met on July 6th and he had been separated since the beginning of January.

You obviously met Lisa Marie pretty soon after you began dating. How quick did she accept you as her father's new partner?

She was a wonderful little girl. She was very embracing and a little shy but I've always loved children and we got on really well. The first time I ever saw her was at the Monovale house and I was out by the pool. She kind of timidly came around and said hi. We started talking and we became really close. I loved being with her. You know, Elvis had a real childlike spirit and I have too. I like to do childlike things and to sometimes get down to a child's level. She and I became very close.

Are you still close with her now?

Yes, I am.I believe it was Lisa who told you of Elvis' death?

She called me. She was only 9-years old but she had the presence of mind to call me and tell me what had happened.

Was it really a shock to you or could you see that it was going to happen?

You know, even if someone that you know is on a destructive path, even when they finally pass away, it's always shocking. Yes, it was a shock.

You saved his life once or twice right?

Yes, a few times.

Did you both ever discuss marriage?

We talked about marriage often. We talked about having children too. When Elvis was in the hospital a couple of times with pneumonia and other health problems, I stayed in the hospital with him for two and a half weeks at a time. I had my own hospital bed that was pushed up against his. I even ate hospital food. I was a young, healthy, vibrant girl but I'm in a hospital bed pressing the buttons to move up and down in tandem with him. The TV would go off at night, we didn't have all-night cable like we do now, and we'd turn the monitor to the nursery and pick out the different babies that we'd like to have (laughs).

So Elvis had CCTV in his room? Was it something he requested?

We had a television in the room that you could switch over to the nursery. I don't think Elvis requested it but for privacy, we were put near the floor where the babies were.

What about the guys that were around Elvis? Did you get along with all of them?

We actually got along very well and I remain friendly with a number of them now.

Was there anyone in particular that you were able to share the difficult times with? David Brigg's (Elvis' piano player at the time) became a close friend didn't he?

Actually, we shared a romantic relationship for over two and a half years and we remain friends as well. You see, in all honesty, there was no way of really meeting anybody. It was Elvis' world and we lived this kind of reversed life where we were awake all night and asleep all day. I was around the same people all the time so it was natural that when I left, a gravitated to someone who I had been close to and shared things with. We both had a common love of Elvis too. We both loved him very much and found it sad to watch him self-destruct.

Were you in contact with Elvis between the time you left and the time he died?

Well, he died only eight months after I left. We did speak once or twice because I worried about him and I would call. I called Graceland a couple of times just to see how he was because I was worried. I ask Charlie Hodge or Ricky Stanley, or whoever was attending to him, to please go and check on him. They would insist that he was fine but I'd ask them to put me on hold, go up and check, and let me know he's okay. I did that several times without speaking to him but I did speak to him a couple of times too. We were very loving with each other and... we loved each other. I know that Elvis understood my heart and I really loved him dearly.

I know that's true. I have just one difficult question. If you were still with him in August 1977, do you think you would have been there to perhaps save his life?

Well, I know that I've had a past record of having saved his life several times when certain things happened and you're right, it's a difficult one because everybody around him, including his father, had said that if I'd have been with him he would have still been alive. His father told me that on the night of the funeral. All of his friends and relatives have said that to me too. That is something that we will now never know. I could have stayed there and kept him alive for another ten years or I might have found him dead the same way that Ginger did. That would have been even more devastating to me than the fact that I could have been there or I might have done something. I think God has a way of working things out. He removed me from the situation because maybe there was nothing I could've done.

You can't change the course of history can you?

Exactly. Can I just check a story with you? It's something that was supposed to have happened and it's such a great story that I kind of hope it did. You and Elvis were eating in McDonalds and someone thought he was an impersonator...

The story is true but the details are a little wrong. We never ate in McDonalds. We were approaching the Memphian Theater where I told you that at midnight we went to see movies. We were walking in and he was slightly ahead of me and someone came up to him and said, "Oh my God, look, it's Elvis. You're Elvis aren't you?" He said, "Well, yes, I am Elvis" and they went crazy. They wanted an autograph and a picture. As I walked up I said, "Charlie, you're not using that Elvis bit again are you? Come on, you're not telling these people that you're Elvis again are you?" I told the fans, "He gets it all the time and he's always messing with people." The fans said, "We knew you couldn't really be Elvis" and he replied, "But I am, tell 'em honey!" I replied, "Come on Charlie, we're late."

That sounds like it was fun.

He had such an amazingly wonderful sense of humour and we shared that. If you can laugh with someone then you can spend a lot of years with them. You can forgive a lot of things, overlook a lot of things.

Do you remember Elvis' poem about the robin that he told at your house on Old Hickory in Memphis in 1974?

Is that out?

It's out on CD and I can send you a copy if you’d like to hear it again.

Would you?

RCA tried to buy that from me and I said no. It's bootlegged I guess but it's okay. I'd love to hear it. My children were asking about it just the other day and I was looking for my tape. I have it on a little cassette tape somewhere. As I awoke this Morning, when all sweet things are born, A robin perched upon my windowsill to greet the coming morn... that's the poem right?

That's the one. You can finish it if you like (laughs).

He sang his song so sweetly, and paused for a moment's lull. I gently raised the window, and crushing his 'bleeping' skull (laughs).You know it off by heart but you left out the swear word! That was his favorite poem.

Have you ever met anyone with as much charisma as Elvis?

I don't ever expect to meet anyone again in my life with that absolute magic. Elvis was one of a kind. He was a mould-breaker. My grandmother used to say that he broke the mould.

Do you still have your TLC (tender loving care) necklace?

Oh yeah, I still have it and I still wear it occasionally. Not to take away from anyone else that I've loved in my life. Everyone has a personal magic. We're all like snowflakes, unique in our creation. We're so much alike and we're all just drifting through life but we all have our own character, our own shape. Elvis was just unique, incredibly sensual and tender. He was funny and he was good. He was an extreme in every aspect of his life.

What about the time when he only just missed you with a bullet in Las Vegas?

He was just like a little child. It's astounding when you think about the guns that he had because I'm so aware now of gun control and the danger of handguns. When I look back and think about when he had guns around that were loaded and a young child around. You know, we just said to Lisa to never go near the guns and she didn't. But who knows, if she had been a more disobedient child or a more curious child, it's astounding. It makes my blood run cold when I think about the responsibility.

It's a miracle that no body was killed or injured but I think the incident with you was the nearest right?

That's right. I'd just happened to have come out of the shower at the Las Vegas Hilton, the presidential suite, and he was lying on the sofa. In those days they had these huge bull's eye advertisements. Vegas came alive when Elvis was there and they had these billboards, posters and placards. So he had one of these enormous bull's eye things in the suite and he decided that he would just shoot for the target. It was a kind of cardboard cutout of his name with this bull's eye... like hit the mark, come see Elvis... whatever. So, Elvis pulled out his gun and shot at the bull's eye and the bullet went through the wall, which was adjacent to my bathroom. It went through the wall, then through the toilet paper holder, which was metal, out through a mirrored door and shattered it. I was standing at the sink and I heard ting, ting, and the sound of glass breaking. I felt the air behind my leg. When I looked down there was a bullet hole in the door behind me. I opened that door and there was another shattered glass door and a bullet lying there. I knew exactly what was happening. James Caughley came in and said, "Linda, are you okay?" and I said, "Yeah, what the hell was that?” and he said that it was just Elvis having a little target practice. I threw my robe on, put a towel around my head and went outside and said, "What do you think you are doing? You almost shot me!" and he went white. It was as though someone had told him that the bullet had gone through the wall and that I was hit. He couldn't even get up because he was so shaken.

Well, that's the child in him that you just mentioned. He was being scorned.

I know, I was scolding him and he just shriveled. He said, "Oh my God, I didn't know you were in there. I didn't know it would go through the wall. I thought it would just lodge there." I said, "You could have killed me!" and he asked if I wanted to go home. I said, "Well, at least I won't get shot at there!" He was profusely apologetic but he was really shaken up. He was ashen.

That bullet story is in the film Elvis and the Beauty Queen. What did you think of the movie?

You know, it was a little frustrating because it's impossible to encapsulate in two hours what happened in a five-year relationship of the intensity of my relationship with Elvis. It's difficult to be totally objective about it because it was so close to everything that happened. I felt that they chose something to expound upon like the drug usage and such problems more than his sensitivity, his generosity, his playfulness an his talent. You know, these are the things that I talked in length about. I spoke far more in detail about the acts of generosity and his spirituality and his kindness. Of course there was the drug abuse and the self-destructiveness, but this is what they expounded upon. I felt that it was more of a personal slant for the writer but they couldn't have been nicer and kinder to me and it couldn't have been any more flattering to me, which I appreciated. I'm sorry that more of his goodness didn't show in the movie. There was so much. It should have been a mini-series and people should have come away thinking 'my God what an incredible human being he was, floored and troubled yes, but what a phenomenal, incredible human being.'

How would you like to finish this interview?

I should probably tell you this; the years I was with Elvis, I'd always been a poet. I was Baptized when I was nine years old at the Baptist Church in Memphis and I've always felt that the gift that God gave me was to write poetry. So, I started when I was nine years old and I wrote poetry for my father, my mother and all my family. That's how I started writing lyrics and when I was with Elvis I would write love poems. You know, if he ever hurt me I would write that out and express to him everything through poetry. He would always say, "Honey, this is beautiful, won't you let me have someone put this to music and I'll record that because it's so pretty?" and I would always say no because I felt it was personal. And now, in my stupidity, I had no idea about royalties (laughs) but I know that when he died, he knew that I wasn't there for any other reason, any commercial consideration or anything. I was there only because I truly loved him.

You can't put a price on your memories or what you have in your heart.

That's right, but I think that he would get a real kick out of the fact that I've become a successful song writer and that I am able to bring all that poetry to song. Having records cut and stuff.

Absolutely, I was so surprised to learn that you'd written hits for Whitney Houston and Celion Dion. David's musicality would have been a big source of joy for Elvis too. Elvis loved musicians. He loved David Briggs, he loved his music, so I'm sure he'd really appreciate my husband's music.

I know that he appreciated you and fans throughout the world are aware of that.

That's been such a great source of comfort to me, to feel that love shared throughout the world. All fan magazines and tabloids have always dealt with me very kindly. I really take more satisfaction in that than anything. Knowing that people really understand how much I loved Elvis. The people who love him appreciate that and they let me know it.

Do you have any unseen photographs of you and Elvis together?

It's so hard to find any good clear shots.

You know why? Because we never allowed any photographs to be taken. I respected that about his privacy and he was very skittish about people taking photographs, so there aren't all that many of us together.

I've seen several good photographs of you in the 1970's. You have very long eyelashes Linda.

(laughs) I do don't I? My children have those too. In my family on my mother's side, everybody has long eyelashes. People used to think that I wore false eyelashes but I never did.

Well, I hope you like the photos we choose to go with the interview when it's printed.

Oh I'm sure I will and thank all the fans for remaining loyal and devoted to Elvis.

I will and I'm sure they'll say the same to you. Thanks for allowing us the interview.

Keep up the good work and we'll be in touch.

Thanks Linda, give our regards to David and the family.

I sure will. Bye.[/quote]
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Postby ALNA » Sun Jun 17, 2007 2:11 am

I love Linda, she is such a kind person
A star burned too brightly, burned out too quickly and we were left with the afterglow which has never dimmed."

ELVIS - Did you ever know you were my hero
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Postby MaryInTheMorning » Sun Jun 17, 2007 11:42 pm

I do too Alna. :) She does seem very sweet and you can tell how much she truly loved Elvis. :D Thanks so much Sue-Lenora for sharing this really great and informative interview with us. :D I had no idea of Linda's extensive songwriting abilities or that she had written for Whitney Houston, written the song for "Pretty Woman" or the theme song for the '96 Summer Olympics either. :o An amazingly talented, beautiful and sweet woman. :D
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Postby Rainbow Light » Mon Jun 18, 2007 5:43 am

You're welcome, ladies! I like Linda too, she's pretty, sweet and intelligent and still, as far as I'm concerned, the best lady for Elvis as far as his own personal welfare was concerned within his relationship with her.

Perhaps in a very real way he knew and realised this but in another way, because of the extent of his medical conditions he could not bear to see her hurt at seeing him so ill but I honestly believe Linda would have stayed with him and been there by his side with her love and support right to the end whatever happened and in this respect I am so sorry he didn't give her the chance to prove the extent of her love to him but realise some may see it differently than I, just putting some thoughts and feelings out there is all!
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Postby MaryInTheMorning » Mon Jun 18, 2007 12:42 pm

Sue I feel the same way you do. It seemed like Elvis cared about her so much that he didn't want her to "have to" (as it seems like he was looking at the situation at the time) stay around him while he was so ill :( I too wish he would've just let her stay and continue to show how very much she loved him but I guess Elvis thought that by her doing so it would have caused her MORE hurt than by "breaking her poor little ol' heart" as I think he said to Wanda. :(
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Postby Rainbow Light » Tue Jun 19, 2007 8:49 am

Thank you, think in a way, while he at heart didn't want to drive her off, he ended up treating her in a way that made her feel that it was her idea to go off and leave him exactly because he didn't want her to know how ill he was, she would've stayed otherwise for sure right to the end.

Certainly don't mean to undermine Elvis' other girlfriends or wife Pris but honestly intuitively have more belief and faith in Linda as being the lady for Elvis, as well she was a Southern belle so she would have known his ways and overall did more than her best to get to know him more as the man behind the myth/image. Linda understood Elvis more at heart and spirit level more than the others perhaps were able to that's all I'm trying to say!
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Postby Wanda June Hill » Wed Jun 20, 2007 11:14 am

Very true. She loved him. He loved her. He couldn't bear to see her heartbreak, look into her eyes when he knew he was going down hard and no one could prevent it. I wish he had gone to someone who could help his emotional problems be sorted out, to get him squared away with what he had done, been and become-but he didn't. I guess it was the way it was supposed to be-he said that many times, he chose the way. Linda was so good for him for so long, thank the good Lord for bringing him an angel when he needed one the most. He wouldn't have made it as long as he did otherwise. wjh
Wanda June Hill
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Postby Rainbow Light » Fri Jun 22, 2007 6:36 am

Thanks, Wanda and what you say is so very true too but I believe the Lord brought Elvis another angel in the form of a lady by the name of Wanda June Hill, ie YOU too!! :) 8)
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Postby MaryInTheMorning » Fri Jun 22, 2007 2:20 pm

Rainbow Light wrote:Thanks, Wanda and what you say is so very true too but I believe the Lord brought Elvis another angel in the form of a lady by the name of Wanda June Hill, ie YOU too!! :) 8)


AMEN Sue-Lenora!!! :D
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Postby Rainbow Light » Sat Jun 23, 2007 5:24 am

:)
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