The Lake Tahoe engagements
- NinaFromCanadaEh
- Posts: 1,415
- Joined: September 25th, 2025, 10:58 pm
- Mood:
- Has thanked: 171 times
- Been thanked: 394 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
http://www.elvis-history-blog.com/elvis-lake-tahoe.html
Elvis at High Altitude
The 1971-76 Lake Tahoe Shows
It was the spring of 1967. High school graduation was coming up, and I was looking forward to a summer getaway before starting college in the fall. Since my wandering father had settled temporarily in the Lake Tahoe area, I decided to spend the summer there with him. The California-Nevada border runs through the lake and divides the resort area on the southern shore into two communities—the winter ski destination of South Lake Tahoe on the California side and the gambling houses of Stateline on the Nevada side.
My dad, who was a card room supervisor in the Sahara Tahoe’s casino, got me a job as a bus boy in the hotel’s coffee shop. It turned out to be a boring summer. Like any Nevada vacation area, Tahoe is a drag when you’re not old enough to gamble. I couldn’t even listen to my Elvis records, having left them at home in Spokane. Besides, at that time Elvis had reached the depths of insignificance in the pop music world. The Beatles and Bob Dylan had taken music in a completely different direction. It was, after all, the “Summer of Love.” One day I drove into San Francisco to see what was happening there, but, as an Elvis addict, I couldn’t imagine ever wearing flowers in my hair.
Neither could I imagine that just four short years later, Elvis would be back on top of his game and appearing before sold out crowds in the Sahara Tahoe showroom. Starting in August 1969, Colonel Parker committed Elvis to month-long Las Vegas engagements twice a year. In the summer of 1971, rather than send Elvis on a tour of one-nighters between the two stints in Vegas, Parker booked him into the Sahara Tahoe for two weeks leading into his August run at the International Hotel in Vegas.
Elvis opened the first of 28 shows at the Sahara in Stateline on July 20, 1971. He would come back again in 1973, 1974, and 1976, ultimately giving a total of 98 sold out performances in the High Sierra Theatre.
The high altitude setting provided both positive and negative side effects. According to Presley biographer Peter Guralnick, “Everyone appreciated the change of pace—things were a lot looser in Tahoe, there was less pressure, considerably less media scrutiny.” Elvis paid a price on stage, however. “The high altitude left him and the band out of breath at times,” noted Guralnick. Presley insider Lamar Fike added, “It’s 6,200 feet at the lake. It just beat him up to sing.”
• Elvis enjoyed the Lake Tahoe show room
Still, according to Guralnick, Elvis seemed to enjoy himself on the more intimate Sahara Tahoe showroom stage. And the Colonel had pushed up the take. He got Elvis $150,000 for the two-week engagement, $25,000 more than in Vegas. According to Marty Lacker, Parker made things pay off for the hotel by allowing them to seat eight people at showroom tables that normally sat four. That pushed the crowds in the 1,500-seat capacity High Sierra Theatre to nearly 2,000, comparable to the audiences in Las Vegas.
Photo courtesy Herb Maruska)
Although it probably wasn’t needed, Colonel Parker plastered the hotel with his boy’s name and image leading up to opening night. A July 28, 1971,Variety article described the Parker publicity push:
“It’s wall-to-wall throughout the hotel as proof the hip-swinger’s fortune still goes beyond his talent and abilities into splendid promotion. Posters of his torso line the walls. Employees wear Elvis buttons and straw hats. His name greets lookers from other mountain tops as it glitters atop the hotel roof. Tablers are handed Elvis souvenir kits upon being shown to their seats, bearing Elvis records, teddy bears, books and buttons, while souvenir stand barkers sell still more.”
The show itself was pretty much the Vegas presentation, with a couple of changes. First, comedian Nipsey Russell did the opening 30 minutes, replacing Sammy Shore. More importantly, conductor Joe Guercio’s exciting 2001: A Space Odyssey musical opening for Elvis had been finalized after some experimenting during the winter engagement in Vegas. “It was like the ultimate orgasm,” Guercio said of what would become Presley’s standard stage entrance music. Elvis loved the new opening, according to Guercio. “He didn’t want to be just a guy walking out there; he wanted to be a god.”
• Elvis: “He arrives catlike—slowly, yet majestically confident”
The initial Tahoe appearance in 1971 drew good reviews. Billboard noted Elvis worked so hard, “you’d think he almost needed the money. He left a capacity crowd … almost as exhausted (emotionally, if not physically) as he was.” Variety added, “He arrives catlike—slowly, yet majestically confident and domineering. He remains that way throughout, talking little, always maintaining a distance between himself and auditors that allows him to remain an idol to be worshipped.”
Off stage, however, troubles were brewing for Elvis at the Sahara Tahoe that summer. Flare-ups of the bizarre behavior that would haunt him throughout the seventies were coming to the surface. In an appalling affair corroborated by several Presley insiders, Elvis invited an innocent young woman he spotted in the showroom to his suite after a Tahoe show. In Palm Springs a short time later, Elvis induced her to consume Hycodan, a particularly strong narcotic cough syrup he was using at the time. When she later nearly died in a Palm Springs hospital as a result, Elvis seemed more concerned about keeping the episode out of the newspapers than about the girl’s recovery.
• Tahoe Engagement #2: May 1973
When Elvis returned to the Sahara Tahoe in May 1973 for his second booking there, the effects of his prescription drug abuse were becoming evident on stage. According to Variety, “Elvis Presley is neither looking nor sounding good. Some 30 pounds overweight, he’s puffy, whitefaced and blinking against the light. The voice sounds weak, delivery is flabby and occasional dynamic effort and no enthusiasm. Hit medley is delivered in listless fashion, ‘Hound Dog' is muttered and ‘C.C. Rider’ sounds tired and perfunctory. A few femmes down front clutched the Presley legs and competed for scarves, but beyond ringside most of the audience looked serious indeed."
Elvis garnered some goodwill during his 1973 stay in Tahoe, thanks to a charitable effort, conceived, no doubt, by Colonel Parker. On Mother’s Day, Elvis gave a special 3 a.m. concert, his fee for which was donated to the local Barton Memorial Hospital Auxiliary to help fund the hospital’s new Cardiac and Intensive Care Wing. Parker also donated Presley souvenir material for the auxiliary to sell at a booth in the hotel.
His appearance and stage work much improved, Elvis returned to Lake Tahoe for his third engagement there in May 1974. Variety reviewed opening night: “Looking good this time (though about 10 pounds overweight), and performing with an engaging air of humor and self deprecation, the Elvis appeal hasn’t waned … Much of the warmth Presley is able to generate in a huge room appears to come from rapport between the star and his own musicians and singers. The fun spills over and the crowd had received a decided boost by the end of the two hour show.”
Again, though, troubles continued for Elvis off stage in Tahoe. This time a hallway fight led to a lawsuit, one of several that would plague Presley in his final years. Guralnick summarized the episode at the Sahara in 1974:
“The most notable event that occurred in the course of their stay was that Red [West] and David Stanley and several of the other guys beat up a land developer from Grass Valley, California, who showed up drunk and disgruntled outside the suite after paying a security guard to gain admittance for himself and his date. A number of fans witnessed Elvis simply standing there and observing the fight without doing anything to stop it, as four guys held the developer down, according to his later complaint, and the rest beat him to a bloody pulp.”
Elvis may have looked good opening night, but he was unable to complete his two-week commitment. His departure a couple of days early was attributed to the flu. (To complete his obligation to the Sahara Tahoe, Elvis returned to do eight shows from October 11-14, 1974). By leaving Tahoe early, Elvis missed crossing paths with his daughter’s future husband. The Jackson Five were booked into the High Sierra Theatre following Presley.
• Final Tahoe Engagement: Spring 1976
On April 27, 1976, I saw Elvis perform in my hometown of Spokane, Washington. It was the last stop on a seven-day tour leading up to his fourth and final engagement at the Sahara Tahoe from April 30-May 9, 1976. The combined tour and Tahoe shows taxed the strength and will of Presley, who had a meager 15 months to live. Guralnick described the struggle:
“For much of the tour Elvis was alarmingly congested, and he continued to suffer memory lapses, even with songs he had been singing regularly since his return to live performing. Ronnie Tutt … observed that ‘there were nights he was so tired or so down I felt like I had to physically hit the drums much, much harder that I had before.' To Myrna Smith and the Sweet Inspirations there was a clear physical dimension to the change. ‘[A lot of the time] when he first walked onstage, he’d be half asleep.’”
Elvis Presley fans who lived in and around the Lake Tahoe area from 1971-76 had the rare opportunity to see their idol appear five times during those years. For most of them, seeing him perform on stage in 1971 must have been an inspiring and exciting experience. For those who really loved him, though, that excitement must have slowly transformed into heartbreak as they watched Elvis gradually fade away with each successive Tahoe visit. When he last came in 1976, it was more of an appearance than a performance. Like them, I saw Elvis on stage at his peak and at his lowest. I suspect that, like me, most in those Tahoe crowds today feel privileged and thankful just to have seen him at all. — Alan Hanson | © March 2014
Elvis at High Altitude
The 1971-76 Lake Tahoe Shows
It was the spring of 1967. High school graduation was coming up, and I was looking forward to a summer getaway before starting college in the fall. Since my wandering father had settled temporarily in the Lake Tahoe area, I decided to spend the summer there with him. The California-Nevada border runs through the lake and divides the resort area on the southern shore into two communities—the winter ski destination of South Lake Tahoe on the California side and the gambling houses of Stateline on the Nevada side.
My dad, who was a card room supervisor in the Sahara Tahoe’s casino, got me a job as a bus boy in the hotel’s coffee shop. It turned out to be a boring summer. Like any Nevada vacation area, Tahoe is a drag when you’re not old enough to gamble. I couldn’t even listen to my Elvis records, having left them at home in Spokane. Besides, at that time Elvis had reached the depths of insignificance in the pop music world. The Beatles and Bob Dylan had taken music in a completely different direction. It was, after all, the “Summer of Love.” One day I drove into San Francisco to see what was happening there, but, as an Elvis addict, I couldn’t imagine ever wearing flowers in my hair.
Neither could I imagine that just four short years later, Elvis would be back on top of his game and appearing before sold out crowds in the Sahara Tahoe showroom. Starting in August 1969, Colonel Parker committed Elvis to month-long Las Vegas engagements twice a year. In the summer of 1971, rather than send Elvis on a tour of one-nighters between the two stints in Vegas, Parker booked him into the Sahara Tahoe for two weeks leading into his August run at the International Hotel in Vegas.
Elvis opened the first of 28 shows at the Sahara in Stateline on July 20, 1971. He would come back again in 1973, 1974, and 1976, ultimately giving a total of 98 sold out performances in the High Sierra Theatre.
The high altitude setting provided both positive and negative side effects. According to Presley biographer Peter Guralnick, “Everyone appreciated the change of pace—things were a lot looser in Tahoe, there was less pressure, considerably less media scrutiny.” Elvis paid a price on stage, however. “The high altitude left him and the band out of breath at times,” noted Guralnick. Presley insider Lamar Fike added, “It’s 6,200 feet at the lake. It just beat him up to sing.”
• Elvis enjoyed the Lake Tahoe show room
Still, according to Guralnick, Elvis seemed to enjoy himself on the more intimate Sahara Tahoe showroom stage. And the Colonel had pushed up the take. He got Elvis $150,000 for the two-week engagement, $25,000 more than in Vegas. According to Marty Lacker, Parker made things pay off for the hotel by allowing them to seat eight people at showroom tables that normally sat four. That pushed the crowds in the 1,500-seat capacity High Sierra Theatre to nearly 2,000, comparable to the audiences in Las Vegas.
Photo courtesy Herb Maruska)
Although it probably wasn’t needed, Colonel Parker plastered the hotel with his boy’s name and image leading up to opening night. A July 28, 1971,Variety article described the Parker publicity push:
“It’s wall-to-wall throughout the hotel as proof the hip-swinger’s fortune still goes beyond his talent and abilities into splendid promotion. Posters of his torso line the walls. Employees wear Elvis buttons and straw hats. His name greets lookers from other mountain tops as it glitters atop the hotel roof. Tablers are handed Elvis souvenir kits upon being shown to their seats, bearing Elvis records, teddy bears, books and buttons, while souvenir stand barkers sell still more.”
The show itself was pretty much the Vegas presentation, with a couple of changes. First, comedian Nipsey Russell did the opening 30 minutes, replacing Sammy Shore. More importantly, conductor Joe Guercio’s exciting 2001: A Space Odyssey musical opening for Elvis had been finalized after some experimenting during the winter engagement in Vegas. “It was like the ultimate orgasm,” Guercio said of what would become Presley’s standard stage entrance music. Elvis loved the new opening, according to Guercio. “He didn’t want to be just a guy walking out there; he wanted to be a god.”
• Elvis: “He arrives catlike—slowly, yet majestically confident”
The initial Tahoe appearance in 1971 drew good reviews. Billboard noted Elvis worked so hard, “you’d think he almost needed the money. He left a capacity crowd … almost as exhausted (emotionally, if not physically) as he was.” Variety added, “He arrives catlike—slowly, yet majestically confident and domineering. He remains that way throughout, talking little, always maintaining a distance between himself and auditors that allows him to remain an idol to be worshipped.”
Off stage, however, troubles were brewing for Elvis at the Sahara Tahoe that summer. Flare-ups of the bizarre behavior that would haunt him throughout the seventies were coming to the surface. In an appalling affair corroborated by several Presley insiders, Elvis invited an innocent young woman he spotted in the showroom to his suite after a Tahoe show. In Palm Springs a short time later, Elvis induced her to consume Hycodan, a particularly strong narcotic cough syrup he was using at the time. When she later nearly died in a Palm Springs hospital as a result, Elvis seemed more concerned about keeping the episode out of the newspapers than about the girl’s recovery.
• Tahoe Engagement #2: May 1973
When Elvis returned to the Sahara Tahoe in May 1973 for his second booking there, the effects of his prescription drug abuse were becoming evident on stage. According to Variety, “Elvis Presley is neither looking nor sounding good. Some 30 pounds overweight, he’s puffy, whitefaced and blinking against the light. The voice sounds weak, delivery is flabby and occasional dynamic effort and no enthusiasm. Hit medley is delivered in listless fashion, ‘Hound Dog' is muttered and ‘C.C. Rider’ sounds tired and perfunctory. A few femmes down front clutched the Presley legs and competed for scarves, but beyond ringside most of the audience looked serious indeed."
Elvis garnered some goodwill during his 1973 stay in Tahoe, thanks to a charitable effort, conceived, no doubt, by Colonel Parker. On Mother’s Day, Elvis gave a special 3 a.m. concert, his fee for which was donated to the local Barton Memorial Hospital Auxiliary to help fund the hospital’s new Cardiac and Intensive Care Wing. Parker also donated Presley souvenir material for the auxiliary to sell at a booth in the hotel.
His appearance and stage work much improved, Elvis returned to Lake Tahoe for his third engagement there in May 1974. Variety reviewed opening night: “Looking good this time (though about 10 pounds overweight), and performing with an engaging air of humor and self deprecation, the Elvis appeal hasn’t waned … Much of the warmth Presley is able to generate in a huge room appears to come from rapport between the star and his own musicians and singers. The fun spills over and the crowd had received a decided boost by the end of the two hour show.”
Again, though, troubles continued for Elvis off stage in Tahoe. This time a hallway fight led to a lawsuit, one of several that would plague Presley in his final years. Guralnick summarized the episode at the Sahara in 1974:
“The most notable event that occurred in the course of their stay was that Red [West] and David Stanley and several of the other guys beat up a land developer from Grass Valley, California, who showed up drunk and disgruntled outside the suite after paying a security guard to gain admittance for himself and his date. A number of fans witnessed Elvis simply standing there and observing the fight without doing anything to stop it, as four guys held the developer down, according to his later complaint, and the rest beat him to a bloody pulp.”
Elvis may have looked good opening night, but he was unable to complete his two-week commitment. His departure a couple of days early was attributed to the flu. (To complete his obligation to the Sahara Tahoe, Elvis returned to do eight shows from October 11-14, 1974). By leaving Tahoe early, Elvis missed crossing paths with his daughter’s future husband. The Jackson Five were booked into the High Sierra Theatre following Presley.
• Final Tahoe Engagement: Spring 1976
On April 27, 1976, I saw Elvis perform in my hometown of Spokane, Washington. It was the last stop on a seven-day tour leading up to his fourth and final engagement at the Sahara Tahoe from April 30-May 9, 1976. The combined tour and Tahoe shows taxed the strength and will of Presley, who had a meager 15 months to live. Guralnick described the struggle:
“For much of the tour Elvis was alarmingly congested, and he continued to suffer memory lapses, even with songs he had been singing regularly since his return to live performing. Ronnie Tutt … observed that ‘there were nights he was so tired or so down I felt like I had to physically hit the drums much, much harder that I had before.' To Myrna Smith and the Sweet Inspirations there was a clear physical dimension to the change. ‘[A lot of the time] when he first walked onstage, he’d be half asleep.’”
Elvis Presley fans who lived in and around the Lake Tahoe area from 1971-76 had the rare opportunity to see their idol appear five times during those years. For most of them, seeing him perform on stage in 1971 must have been an inspiring and exciting experience. For those who really loved him, though, that excitement must have slowly transformed into heartbreak as they watched Elvis gradually fade away with each successive Tahoe visit. When he last came in 1976, it was more of an appearance than a performance. Like them, I saw Elvis on stage at his peak and at his lowest. I suspect that, like me, most in those Tahoe crowds today feel privileged and thankful just to have seen him at all. — Alan Hanson | © March 2014
- Attachments
-
- lkta2.png (149.45 KiB) Viewed 295 times
- NinaFromCanadaEh
- Posts: 1,415
- Joined: September 25th, 2025, 10:58 pm
- Mood:
- Has thanked: 171 times
- Been thanked: 394 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
Elvis Presley 1973 Lake Tahoe 3 A.M. Mother's Day Special Charity Concert Poster
https://www.elvis.com.au/presley/elvis- ... ster.shtml
By: Elvis Australia
Source: www.elvis.com.au
February 14, 2024
A highly unusual concert-advertising poster for Elvis Presley appearing at 3:00 AM in South Lake Tahoe, Nevada on Sunday morning, May 13, 1973. This middle-of-the-night event was a special show in memory of the singer's late mother, Mrs. Gladys Presley, and all proceeds were donated to the local hospital.
The show took place in the High Sierra Theatre at the Sahara Tahoe Casino, and fell in the middle of a typical two-week stand there by Elvis. This poster originated with a fan who was in Tahoe that weekend and tried to attend the show, but it quickly sold out. So instead he took this poster down from inside the casino the next day.
This is thought to be the only Elvis Presley concert poster in history to mention his mother, whom he was extremely close to. It was made on a heavy art board, as opposed to standard cardboard. Measures 22" x 28".
At this moment Elvis was basking in the glow of his last Billboard magazine #1 album, Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite, which was recorded in January, released in February and topped the charts in March.
Interesting how the venue building, the Sahara Tahoe Casino, is not mentioned on the poster. Only the venue-within-a-venue, the High Sierra Theatre. This is pretty strong evidence that these were made for posting inside the casino only, not around town. Knowing it would sell out fast, it's hard to imagine they made more than half-a-dozen of these, or a dozen at the most.
As the poster promises, Elvis donated his entire take of about $12,000 from the performance and donated it to the local hospital's Cardiac and ICU wing. That doesn't sound like much money today, but back then it was substantial. It was the amount Elvis received per concert for his 1973 Tahoe stand.
This actual performance, the 3:00 AM Mother's Day show, was officially released in stereo for the first time on a limited-edition CD as 'Elvis: At 3:AM - Lake Tahoe' by 'Memphis Recording Service'. Unusual songs performed included Kris Kristofferson's 'Help Me Make It Through the Night' – perhaps a nod to doing a third concert in the middle of the night? – and Paul Anka's 'My Way'. Reviews called this show possibly the best of Elvis' current Tahoe residency. In fact, in a highly unusual move, Elvis even came out after the show and mingled with fans, at 5:00 AM or whatever, so you know he must've been pretty pleased.
Elvis Presley 1973 Lake Tahoe 3:00 AM Mother's Day Special Charity Concert Poster

Concert | 13th May 1973 (3.00am Show)
01. Also Sprach Zarathustra
02. See See Rider
03. I Got A Woman / Amen
04. Help Me Make It Through The Night
05. Steamroller Blues
06. You Gave Me A Mountain
07. Love Me
08. Blue Suede Shoes
09. Long Tall Sally / Whole Lotta Shakin'/ Mama Don't Dance / Shake, Rattle & Roll
10. My Way
11. Hound Dog
12. What Now My Love
13. Suspicious Minds
14. Band Introductions
15. I'll Remember You
16. I Can't Stop Loving You
17. Bridge Over Troubled Water
18. Funny How Time Slips Away
19. It's Over
20. Release Me
21. Faded Love
22. Can't Help Falling In Love
https://www.elvis.com.au/presley/elvis- ... ster.shtml
By: Elvis Australia
Source: www.elvis.com.au
February 14, 2024
A highly unusual concert-advertising poster for Elvis Presley appearing at 3:00 AM in South Lake Tahoe, Nevada on Sunday morning, May 13, 1973. This middle-of-the-night event was a special show in memory of the singer's late mother, Mrs. Gladys Presley, and all proceeds were donated to the local hospital.
The show took place in the High Sierra Theatre at the Sahara Tahoe Casino, and fell in the middle of a typical two-week stand there by Elvis. This poster originated with a fan who was in Tahoe that weekend and tried to attend the show, but it quickly sold out. So instead he took this poster down from inside the casino the next day.
This is thought to be the only Elvis Presley concert poster in history to mention his mother, whom he was extremely close to. It was made on a heavy art board, as opposed to standard cardboard. Measures 22" x 28".
At this moment Elvis was basking in the glow of his last Billboard magazine #1 album, Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite, which was recorded in January, released in February and topped the charts in March.
Interesting how the venue building, the Sahara Tahoe Casino, is not mentioned on the poster. Only the venue-within-a-venue, the High Sierra Theatre. This is pretty strong evidence that these were made for posting inside the casino only, not around town. Knowing it would sell out fast, it's hard to imagine they made more than half-a-dozen of these, or a dozen at the most.
As the poster promises, Elvis donated his entire take of about $12,000 from the performance and donated it to the local hospital's Cardiac and ICU wing. That doesn't sound like much money today, but back then it was substantial. It was the amount Elvis received per concert for his 1973 Tahoe stand.
This actual performance, the 3:00 AM Mother's Day show, was officially released in stereo for the first time on a limited-edition CD as 'Elvis: At 3:AM - Lake Tahoe' by 'Memphis Recording Service'. Unusual songs performed included Kris Kristofferson's 'Help Me Make It Through the Night' – perhaps a nod to doing a third concert in the middle of the night? – and Paul Anka's 'My Way'. Reviews called this show possibly the best of Elvis' current Tahoe residency. In fact, in a highly unusual move, Elvis even came out after the show and mingled with fans, at 5:00 AM or whatever, so you know he must've been pretty pleased.
Elvis Presley 1973 Lake Tahoe 3:00 AM Mother's Day Special Charity Concert Poster

Concert | 13th May 1973 (3.00am Show)
01. Also Sprach Zarathustra
02. See See Rider
03. I Got A Woman / Amen
04. Help Me Make It Through The Night
05. Steamroller Blues
06. You Gave Me A Mountain
07. Love Me
08. Blue Suede Shoes
09. Long Tall Sally / Whole Lotta Shakin'/ Mama Don't Dance / Shake, Rattle & Roll
10. My Way
11. Hound Dog
12. What Now My Love
13. Suspicious Minds
14. Band Introductions
15. I'll Remember You
16. I Can't Stop Loving You
17. Bridge Over Troubled Water
18. Funny How Time Slips Away
19. It's Over
20. Release Me
21. Faded Love
22. Can't Help Falling In Love
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
Before I start with the focus on the complete first 1974 Lake Tahoe season, I'd like to share this nice story with you. This story was sent to me by a fellow fan from Finland (A country I hope to visit someday, especially way up in the north). It is the story of how a young man, Jyrki Hämäläinen, from Finland succeeded in meeting Elvis in Lake Tahoe during the first Tahoe season in 1974.
Jyrki was the editor of Suosikki, a teen magazine, from 1968 until his retirement from the publication in 2002. Suosikki (Finnish for "favourite") was the longest-lived youth magazine in Finland, published from 1961 to 2012. The magazine was discontinued at the end of 2012. Jyrki Hämäläinen served as the magazine's editor for many years (from 1968 to 2002) and the magazine has been called his life's work.
Hämäläinen was well known for interviewing high-profile celebrities including The Rolling Stones, Muhammad Ali and Elvis Presley. Hämäläinen, who often had his photograph taken with the celebrity whom he was interviewing, was nicknamed the "king of the backstage passes."
The article has been written by Jyrki's good friend since the 50's, Mr. Eero Prepula. Prepula is an Elvis fan who actually wrote many of the Elvis-related articles in Suosikki during the 70's.
"In the spring of 1974, Jyrki announced that he would be going on a long business trip to the United States in May to absorb ideas and write articles. On this trip, he planned to go see Elvis' show in the tourist town of Lake Tahoe in Nevada, where Elvis performed from May 16 to 27, 1974. Jyrki had planned to meet Elvis on the spot, but his attempts to arrange a meeting through normal journalistic channels had proven futile. The standard answer had been that it was impossible to arrange a meeting with Elvis – Elvis does not accept journalists from any newspaper!
After thinking about how to arrange a meeting based on my knowledge of Elvis, I suggested to Jyrki that he bring Elvis some police badges from Finland as a gift, of which Elvis was an avid collector, according to the articles written about him. Jyrki would not go to meet Elvis as a journalist, but as his admirer, bringing him Finnish police badges, the likes of which Elvis hardly had in his collection. Jyrki took immediate action by contacting the Helsinki Police Department. The police chief was favorable to the proposal, giving Jyrki written permission to collect Finnish police badges from the police depot “as a gift to the artist Elvis Presley”. The police badges were arranged in a solid wood display case on velvet as a showy collection.
Before the trip to the U.S., Jyrki sent a message through Jon "Mosse" Vikstedt (the director of Discophon Oy in Finland), to the boss of the RCA record company in New York, which publishes Elvis's records, that he was coming to give Elvis Finnish police badges and asked for help in arranging a meeting with Elvis for this purpose. This channel worked, but Jyrki had already checked into his Lake Tahoe hotel before he received confirmation from RCA in New York that the meeting would be arranged and that more detailed instructions would be sent by phone. That same day, Jyrki received a call from Colonel Parker's office and was told to arrive with his police badges the following evening, May 25, 1974, at the lobby of the Sahara Tahoe Hotel, where Elvis was performing, where he would be picked up to meet Elvis. At the same time, Jyrki was told that he was not allowed to have any magazines, books, etc. with him, and especially not a camera, because filming Elvis was prohibited.
The next evening, Jyrki was lurking in the lobby of the Sahara Tahoe by the Elvis gift counter carrying a box of police badges. Colonel Tom Parker himself and one of his assistants picked him up from there and took him to Elvis' dressing room to wait for Elvis. In the dressing room, the Colonel hardly said a word during the entire waiting time, but Joe Esposito, Elvis' closest assistant from the Memphis mafia, who was also present, was much more talkative. After half an hour had passed, Esposito received a message that Elvis was coming and everyone moved into the hallway to meet him. The sound of an elevator could be heard from the end of the hallway and at the same time Elvis, tanned and in great shape, strode down the hallway with his Memphis mafia entourage.
Elvis - followed by Jyrki - walked into the dressing room and started the conversation: "I hear you come from Finland and you have something for me?" Jyrki handed Elvis the police badges. Elvis thanked him for the gifts and examined them with interest, asking how and wherr these badges were used. Jyrki explained which of them was a cockade, which was a sleeve badge, etc. Jyrki talked with Elvis in the dressing room for about fifteen minutes.
During the conversation, Jyrki, among other things, asked Elvis when he was coming to Europe, and Elvis replied that he had already been in Europe for a couple of years – that is, during his military service in Germany. He also said that in Germany he had a Finnish army buddy in the same room (who haf given an extensive interview to Finnish newspaper Savon Sanomat at the time) and that there was a Finnish-born colonel in his unit. In the conversation that followed, Jyrki also asked Elvis to compare how his current performance differed from the show of the 50s, and Elvis stated that his audience now consists of all ages, which is why his repertoire is very diverse and does not focus as much on rock'n'roll and rock ballads as in the 50s. When Jyrki asked why Elvis no longer recorded raw rock songs in the 50s style, Elvis stated that he still likes to perform his old rock hits, but as far as the recordings go, there was no going back to the 50s because songwriters, studios, technology – everything had developed since then.
As a memento of the meeting, Elvis signed an lp ("Elvis Now") for Jyrki on the back cover of the lp, thanking him for the police badges:
"JYRKI
MANY THANKS
Elvis Presley"
When he returned from his trip and told about meeting Elvis, Jyrki said he was sure that Elvis would have let them be photographed together if Jyrki had dared to take a camera that fit in his pocket and asked Elvis for permission to take the photo. (too bad he didn’t!)
After meeting Elvis, Jyrki went straight to the Sahara Tahoe restaurant to watch the first of Elvis' two performances that night, the Dinner Show. Immediately after that, he also watched Elvis' second, the Midnight Show. And because the third time is the best, he watched Elvis' show the next night, May 26, 1974. Elvis was just as unique, a brilliant performer as Jyrki had expected – the King of Rock and Roll!"
The original article can be found here: https://www.danny.fi/jyrki/index_eero.phtml
If I'm not mistaken in 1977 Jyrki visited Elvis' grave at Graceland.
Jyrki was the editor of Suosikki, a teen magazine, from 1968 until his retirement from the publication in 2002. Suosikki (Finnish for "favourite") was the longest-lived youth magazine in Finland, published from 1961 to 2012. The magazine was discontinued at the end of 2012. Jyrki Hämäläinen served as the magazine's editor for many years (from 1968 to 2002) and the magazine has been called his life's work.
Hämäläinen was well known for interviewing high-profile celebrities including The Rolling Stones, Muhammad Ali and Elvis Presley. Hämäläinen, who often had his photograph taken with the celebrity whom he was interviewing, was nicknamed the "king of the backstage passes."
The article has been written by Jyrki's good friend since the 50's, Mr. Eero Prepula. Prepula is an Elvis fan who actually wrote many of the Elvis-related articles in Suosikki during the 70's.
"In the spring of 1974, Jyrki announced that he would be going on a long business trip to the United States in May to absorb ideas and write articles. On this trip, he planned to go see Elvis' show in the tourist town of Lake Tahoe in Nevada, where Elvis performed from May 16 to 27, 1974. Jyrki had planned to meet Elvis on the spot, but his attempts to arrange a meeting through normal journalistic channels had proven futile. The standard answer had been that it was impossible to arrange a meeting with Elvis – Elvis does not accept journalists from any newspaper!
After thinking about how to arrange a meeting based on my knowledge of Elvis, I suggested to Jyrki that he bring Elvis some police badges from Finland as a gift, of which Elvis was an avid collector, according to the articles written about him. Jyrki would not go to meet Elvis as a journalist, but as his admirer, bringing him Finnish police badges, the likes of which Elvis hardly had in his collection. Jyrki took immediate action by contacting the Helsinki Police Department. The police chief was favorable to the proposal, giving Jyrki written permission to collect Finnish police badges from the police depot “as a gift to the artist Elvis Presley”. The police badges were arranged in a solid wood display case on velvet as a showy collection.
Before the trip to the U.S., Jyrki sent a message through Jon "Mosse" Vikstedt (the director of Discophon Oy in Finland), to the boss of the RCA record company in New York, which publishes Elvis's records, that he was coming to give Elvis Finnish police badges and asked for help in arranging a meeting with Elvis for this purpose. This channel worked, but Jyrki had already checked into his Lake Tahoe hotel before he received confirmation from RCA in New York that the meeting would be arranged and that more detailed instructions would be sent by phone. That same day, Jyrki received a call from Colonel Parker's office and was told to arrive with his police badges the following evening, May 25, 1974, at the lobby of the Sahara Tahoe Hotel, where Elvis was performing, where he would be picked up to meet Elvis. At the same time, Jyrki was told that he was not allowed to have any magazines, books, etc. with him, and especially not a camera, because filming Elvis was prohibited.
The next evening, Jyrki was lurking in the lobby of the Sahara Tahoe by the Elvis gift counter carrying a box of police badges. Colonel Tom Parker himself and one of his assistants picked him up from there and took him to Elvis' dressing room to wait for Elvis. In the dressing room, the Colonel hardly said a word during the entire waiting time, but Joe Esposito, Elvis' closest assistant from the Memphis mafia, who was also present, was much more talkative. After half an hour had passed, Esposito received a message that Elvis was coming and everyone moved into the hallway to meet him. The sound of an elevator could be heard from the end of the hallway and at the same time Elvis, tanned and in great shape, strode down the hallway with his Memphis mafia entourage.
Elvis - followed by Jyrki - walked into the dressing room and started the conversation: "I hear you come from Finland and you have something for me?" Jyrki handed Elvis the police badges. Elvis thanked him for the gifts and examined them with interest, asking how and wherr these badges were used. Jyrki explained which of them was a cockade, which was a sleeve badge, etc. Jyrki talked with Elvis in the dressing room for about fifteen minutes.
During the conversation, Jyrki, among other things, asked Elvis when he was coming to Europe, and Elvis replied that he had already been in Europe for a couple of years – that is, during his military service in Germany. He also said that in Germany he had a Finnish army buddy in the same room (who haf given an extensive interview to Finnish newspaper Savon Sanomat at the time) and that there was a Finnish-born colonel in his unit. In the conversation that followed, Jyrki also asked Elvis to compare how his current performance differed from the show of the 50s, and Elvis stated that his audience now consists of all ages, which is why his repertoire is very diverse and does not focus as much on rock'n'roll and rock ballads as in the 50s. When Jyrki asked why Elvis no longer recorded raw rock songs in the 50s style, Elvis stated that he still likes to perform his old rock hits, but as far as the recordings go, there was no going back to the 50s because songwriters, studios, technology – everything had developed since then.
As a memento of the meeting, Elvis signed an lp ("Elvis Now") for Jyrki on the back cover of the lp, thanking him for the police badges:
"JYRKI
MANY THANKS
Elvis Presley"
When he returned from his trip and told about meeting Elvis, Jyrki said he was sure that Elvis would have let them be photographed together if Jyrki had dared to take a camera that fit in his pocket and asked Elvis for permission to take the photo. (too bad he didn’t!)
After meeting Elvis, Jyrki went straight to the Sahara Tahoe restaurant to watch the first of Elvis' two performances that night, the Dinner Show. Immediately after that, he also watched Elvis' second, the Midnight Show. And because the third time is the best, he watched Elvis' show the next night, May 26, 1974. Elvis was just as unique, a brilliant performer as Jyrki had expected – the King of Rock and Roll!"
The original article can be found here: https://www.danny.fi/jyrki/index_eero.phtml
If I'm not mistaken in 1977 Jyrki visited Elvis' grave at Graceland.
- Alexander72
- Posts: 148
- Joined: August 27th, 2025, 6:50 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 212 times
- Been thanked: 376 times
- Contact:
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
Excellent post and great thread. It is by far the most thorough account of Elvis' Lake Tahoe engagements that I've read anywhere online. Looking forward to reading about the 1974 and 1976 engagements.Bilbobaggins wrote: January 12th, 2026, 3:35 am Before I start with the focus on the complete first 1974 Lake Tahoe season, I'd like to share this nice story with you. This story was sent to me by a fellow fan from Finland (A country I hope to visit someday, especially way up in the north). It is the story of how a young man, Jyrki Hämäläinen, from Finland succeeded in meeting Elvis in Lake Tahoe during the first Tahoe season in 1974.
Jyrki was the editor of Suosikki, a teen magazine, from 1968 until his retirement from the publication in 2002. Suosikki (Finnish for "favourite") was the longest-lived youth magazine in Finland, published from 1961 to 2012. The magazine was discontinued at the end of 2012. Jyrki Hämäläinen served as the magazine's editor for many years (from 1968 to 2002) and the magazine has been called his life's work.
suosikki-1978.jpg
Hämäläinen was well known for interviewing high-profile celebrities including The Rolling Stones, Muhammad Ali and Elvis Presley. Hämäläinen, who often had his photograph taken with the celebrity whom he was interviewing, was nicknamed the "king of the backstage passes."
The article has been written by Jyrki's good friend since the 50's, Mr. Eero Prepula. Prepula is an Elvis fan who actually wrote many of the Elvis-related articles in Suosikki during the 70's.
suosikki-74-3.jpg
"In the spring of 1974, Jyrki announced that he would be going on a long business trip to the United States in May to absorb ideas and write articles. On this trip, he planned to go see Elvis' show in the tourist town of Lake Tahoe in Nevada, where Elvis performed from May 16 to 27, 1974. Jyrki had planned to meet Elvis on the spot, but his attempts to arrange a meeting through normal journalistic channels had proven futile. The standard answer had been that it was impossible to arrange a meeting with Elvis – Elvis does not accept journalists from any newspaper!
After thinking about how to arrange a meeting based on my knowledge of Elvis, I suggested to Jyrki that he bring Elvis some police badges from Finland as a gift, of which Elvis was an avid collector, according to the articles written about him. Jyrki would not go to meet Elvis as a journalist, but as his admirer, bringing him Finnish police badges, the likes of which Elvis hardly had in his collection. Jyrki took immediate action by contacting the Helsinki Police Department. The police chief was favorable to the proposal, giving Jyrki written permission to collect Finnish police badges from the police depot “as a gift to the artist Elvis Presley”. The police badges were arranged in a solid wood display case on velvet as a showy collection.
Before the trip to the U.S., Jyrki sent a message through Jon "Mosse" Vikstedt (the director of Discophon Oy in Finland), to the boss of the RCA record company in New York, which publishes Elvis's records, that he was coming to give Elvis Finnish police badges and asked for help in arranging a meeting with Elvis for this purpose. This channel worked, but Jyrki had already checked into his Lake Tahoe hotel before he received confirmation from RCA in New York that the meeting would be arranged and that more detailed instructions would be sent by phone. That same day, Jyrki received a call from Colonel Parker's office and was told to arrive with his police badges the following evening, May 25, 1974, at the lobby of the Sahara Tahoe Hotel, where Elvis was performing, where he would be picked up to meet Elvis. At the same time, Jyrki was told that he was not allowed to have any magazines, books, etc. with him, and especially not a camera, because filming Elvis was prohibited.
The next evening, Jyrki was lurking in the lobby of the Sahara Tahoe by the Elvis gift counter carrying a box of police badges. Colonel Tom Parker himself and one of his assistants picked him up from there and took him to Elvis' dressing room to wait for Elvis. In the dressing room, the Colonel hardly said a word during the entire waiting time, but Joe Esposito, Elvis' closest assistant from the Memphis mafia, who was also present, was much more talkative. After half an hour had passed, Esposito received a message that Elvis was coming and everyone moved into the hallway to meet him. The sound of an elevator could be heard from the end of the hallway and at the same time Elvis, tanned and in great shape, strode down the hallway with his Memphis mafia entourage.
Elvis - followed by Jyrki - walked into the dressing room and started the conversation: "I hear you come from Finland and you have something for me?" Jyrki handed Elvis the police badges. Elvis thanked him for the gifts and examined them with interest, asking how and wherr these badges were used. Jyrki explained which of them was a cockade, which was a sleeve badge, etc. Jyrki talked with Elvis in the dressing room for about fifteen minutes.
During the conversation, Jyrki, among other things, asked Elvis when he was coming to Europe, and Elvis replied that he had already been in Europe for a couple of years – that is, during his military service in Germany. He also said that in Germany he had a Finnish army buddy in the same room (who haf given an extensive interview to Finnish newspaper Savon Sanomat at the time) and that there was a Finnish-born colonel in his unit. In the conversation that followed, Jyrki also asked Elvis to compare how his current performance differed from the show of the 50s, and Elvis stated that his audience now consists of all ages, which is why his repertoire is very diverse and does not focus as much on rock'n'roll and rock ballads as in the 50s. When Jyrki asked why Elvis no longer recorded raw rock songs in the 50s style, Elvis stated that he still likes to perform his old rock hits, but as far as the recordings go, there was no going back to the 50s because songwriters, studios, technology – everything had developed since then.
As a memento of the meeting, Elvis signed an lp ("Elvis Now") for Jyrki on the back cover of the lp, thanking him for the police badges:
"JYRKI
MANY THANKS
Elvis Presley"
photo_eero_elvis04.jpg
When he returned from his trip and told about meeting Elvis, Jyrki said he was sure that Elvis would have let them be photographed together if Jyrki had dared to take a camera that fit in his pocket and asked Elvis for permission to take the photo. (too bad he didn’t!)
suosikki-74-1.jpg
After meeting Elvis, Jyrki went straight to the Sahara Tahoe restaurant to watch the first of Elvis' two performances that night, the Dinner Show. Immediately after that, he also watched Elvis' second, the Midnight Show. And because the third time is the best, he watched Elvis' show the next night, May 26, 1974. Elvis was just as unique, a brilliant performer as Jyrki had expected – the King of Rock and Roll!"
The original article can be found here: https://www.danny.fi/jyrki/index_eero.phtml
If I'm not mistaken in 1977 Jyrki visited Elvis' grave at Graceland.
photo_eero_elvis01.jpg
Checked my extensive online photo database. Do not have too many of Lake Tahoe either, because of dissapointing resolution and quality. One of the best series shot at Lake Tahoe however are the photos Sue McCasland took during the Midnight Show on October 14, 1974.Bilbobaggins wrote: January 10th, 2026, 9:00 am Still... photo's of Tahoe shows are hard to find. The ones found are often of bad quality and sometimes mislabelled. So... if you have additional photo's or spot foto's placed incorrect in my posts... do let me know!
Last edited by Alexander72 on January 12th, 2026, 6:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Alexander72
- Posts: 148
- Joined: August 27th, 2025, 6:50 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 212 times
- Been thanked: 376 times
- Contact:
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
Thank you @Alexander72. Some of them I have, some of them I don't, so thank you very much.
- NinaFromCanadaEh
- Posts: 1,415
- Joined: September 25th, 2025, 10:58 pm
- Mood:
- Has thanked: 171 times
- Been thanked: 394 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
that was very clever to get to meet Elvis
thank you for sharing that story
I vaguely recall seeing pictures of Elvis getting those badges and I wondered how that came about
thank you for sharing that story
I vaguely recall seeing pictures of Elvis getting those badges and I wondered how that came about
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
So, now we arrived in 1974.
Elvis' 1974 spring tour of the southern states was very succesful and Elvis was in good spirits. One of the highlights, of course, being the famous 'Live On Stage in Memphis' March 20th 1974 concert & album.
In early May Elvis completed a 5 concert California mini-tour represented by the FTD 'LIVE in LA' book/cd package.
On May 14th Elvis flew to Lake Tahoe for his upcoming engagement.
A few days later, on May 16th, Elvis started his 22-concert engagement at the Sahara Tahoe hotel, his third season at Lake Tahoe. At this Tahoe season Elvis was in good form and taking it easy after his California mini-tour. One of the nice things about the Lake Tahoe showroom was the closeness of the audience to the stage. This gave Elvis the possibility to interact with his fans ‘upclose and personal'.
This season, for whatever reason, more photo’s were taken than on previous seasons. Also, there were more ‘audience recordings’ made. Maybe the hotelstaff wasn’t that strickt anymore. However, there is very little information to be found about this engagement. Not even in good books as Elvis Day-By-Day and The Concert Years.
Several show are released on more than one label, and even on CDRs. I will mention only one (the first or the best) release. A complete overview of releases on CD can be found on: Elvis Presley In Concert
On opening night, Elvis wore the white peacock jumpsuit. He was in a "flirty" mood and when one woman shouted, "Elvis.I love you!", he replied, "Honey, I love you too, but what can I do about it on stage? Maybe we can arrange something after the show." "
A review from “Variety”:
Elvis Presley's annual visitation kicks off the Sahara Tahoe's summer entertainment sked to a flurry of packed rooms. Looking good this time (though about 10 pounds overweight) and performing with an engaging air of humor and self deprecation, the Elvis appeal hasn't waned.
Most material was drawn from crowd pleasing hits of the past with occasional new ones, "Help Me," (his latest single) and "Let Me Be There" thrown in.
After almost 20 years, one can't deny that the Elvis standards bear repetition but a lift might be given the show should he develop a new speciality.
Much of the warmth Presley is able to generate in a huge room appears to come from rapport between the star and his own musicians and and singers. The fun spills over and the crowd had received a decided boost, by the end of the two hour show.
May 16 1974 Opening (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Teddy Bear - Dont Be Cruel / Love Me Tender / Steamroller Blues / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? (+ reprise) / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There (+ reprise) / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
This show, an audience recording, was released on 'Trying to get to Tahoe' on the EP collector label.
Tahoe awoke on Friday, May 17th to a late snowfall. During the midnight show he sang "Tryin' To Get To You" and changed the words to "I've been streaking all the way, baby, tryin' to get to you." A woman yelled out, "Streak for us Elvis!”. He replied: “It’s too cold up here, I’d freeze to death”.
Elvis' 1974 spring tour of the southern states was very succesful and Elvis was in good spirits. One of the highlights, of course, being the famous 'Live On Stage in Memphis' March 20th 1974 concert & album.
In early May Elvis completed a 5 concert California mini-tour represented by the FTD 'LIVE in LA' book/cd package.
On May 14th Elvis flew to Lake Tahoe for his upcoming engagement.
A few days later, on May 16th, Elvis started his 22-concert engagement at the Sahara Tahoe hotel, his third season at Lake Tahoe. At this Tahoe season Elvis was in good form and taking it easy after his California mini-tour. One of the nice things about the Lake Tahoe showroom was the closeness of the audience to the stage. This gave Elvis the possibility to interact with his fans ‘upclose and personal'.
This season, for whatever reason, more photo’s were taken than on previous seasons. Also, there were more ‘audience recordings’ made. Maybe the hotelstaff wasn’t that strickt anymore. However, there is very little information to be found about this engagement. Not even in good books as Elvis Day-By-Day and The Concert Years.
Several show are released on more than one label, and even on CDRs. I will mention only one (the first or the best) release. A complete overview of releases on CD can be found on: Elvis Presley In Concert
On opening night, Elvis wore the white peacock jumpsuit. He was in a "flirty" mood and when one woman shouted, "Elvis.I love you!", he replied, "Honey, I love you too, but what can I do about it on stage? Maybe we can arrange something after the show." "
A review from “Variety”:
Elvis Presley's annual visitation kicks off the Sahara Tahoe's summer entertainment sked to a flurry of packed rooms. Looking good this time (though about 10 pounds overweight) and performing with an engaging air of humor and self deprecation, the Elvis appeal hasn't waned.
Most material was drawn from crowd pleasing hits of the past with occasional new ones, "Help Me," (his latest single) and "Let Me Be There" thrown in.
After almost 20 years, one can't deny that the Elvis standards bear repetition but a lift might be given the show should he develop a new speciality.
Much of the warmth Presley is able to generate in a huge room appears to come from rapport between the star and his own musicians and and singers. The fun spills over and the crowd had received a decided boost, by the end of the two hour show.
May 16 1974 Opening (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Teddy Bear - Dont Be Cruel / Love Me Tender / Steamroller Blues / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? (+ reprise) / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There (+ reprise) / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
This show, an audience recording, was released on 'Trying to get to Tahoe' on the EP collector label.
Tahoe awoke on Friday, May 17th to a late snowfall. During the midnight show he sang "Tryin' To Get To You" and changed the words to "I've been streaking all the way, baby, tryin' to get to you." A woman yelled out, "Streak for us Elvis!”. He replied: “It’s too cold up here, I’d freeze to death”.
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
1974 continued...
Sue McCasland: “Then in 1974, the Sahara chose to only sell tickets at their box office. You couldn't get them over the phone and we didn't have the internet then. So I drove up from the Bay Area where I lived, to the Sahara Tahoe 2 days before the tickets went on sale. There were about 10-12 people already in line in front of the box office which was located inside the hotel. I talked to the maître d' I knew, and he said he couldn't get tickets for me, but he would still get me seats. So I got in line and waited. I ate in line. I slept in line and over the next 2 days as the line was shifted by security guards, I ended up underneath a staircase. The security guards were very worried that we would be unruly and watched us very closely. No one was unruly as we were all very co-operative, When the box office finally opened, the line snaked its way around the casino several times and outside. Once I had my tickets, I knew all the waiting and sleepless nights were worth every second of being in line.”
May 19 1974 Dinner (10.00pm). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / See See Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / Steamroller Blues / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Spanish Eyes / How Great Thou Art / Let Me Be There / Big Boss Man / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released on this FTD set:
May 20, 1974 Monday
In a lawsuit (filed on October 11) Edward L. Ashley claimed that he was beaten by Evis, Sonny West. David Stanley and Dick Grob outside of Elvis pent-house suite at the Sahara Tahoe Hotel on May 20th. He claimed he had been invited to an after show party and then been refused admittance.
I believe to have read somewhere that the lawsuit was cancelled, but I'm not sure...
May 20 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Also released on the above mentioned FTD set.
May 21 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face / Big Boss Man / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released on 'High Sierra' from FTD.
Sue McCasland: “Then in 1974, the Sahara chose to only sell tickets at their box office. You couldn't get them over the phone and we didn't have the internet then. So I drove up from the Bay Area where I lived, to the Sahara Tahoe 2 days before the tickets went on sale. There were about 10-12 people already in line in front of the box office which was located inside the hotel. I talked to the maître d' I knew, and he said he couldn't get tickets for me, but he would still get me seats. So I got in line and waited. I ate in line. I slept in line and over the next 2 days as the line was shifted by security guards, I ended up underneath a staircase. The security guards were very worried that we would be unruly and watched us very closely. No one was unruly as we were all very co-operative, When the box office finally opened, the line snaked its way around the casino several times and outside. Once I had my tickets, I knew all the waiting and sleepless nights were worth every second of being in line.”
May 19 1974 Dinner (10.00pm). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / See See Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / Steamroller Blues / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Spanish Eyes / How Great Thou Art / Let Me Be There / Big Boss Man / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released on this FTD set:
May 20, 1974 Monday
In a lawsuit (filed on October 11) Edward L. Ashley claimed that he was beaten by Evis, Sonny West. David Stanley and Dick Grob outside of Elvis pent-house suite at the Sahara Tahoe Hotel on May 20th. He claimed he had been invited to an after show party and then been refused admittance.
I believe to have read somewhere that the lawsuit was cancelled, but I'm not sure...
May 20 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Also released on the above mentioned FTD set.
May 21 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face / Big Boss Man / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released on 'High Sierra' from FTD.
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
1974 continued...
May 22 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You (+ reprise) / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man (+ reprise) / My Way / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released on Spring fever on the Unicorn label. An audience recording.
May 23 1974 Dinner (10.00pm). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There / Funny How Time Slips Away / Big Boss Man / Its Now Or Never / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
First released on Fort Baxter's...
May 23 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / Spanish Eyes / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love
First released on Fort Baxter's...
May 24 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / Spanish Eyes / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released as an audience recording on Live at Del Webb's from Touchdown Productions
To be continued...
May 22 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You (+ reprise) / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man (+ reprise) / My Way / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released on Spring fever on the Unicorn label. An audience recording.
May 23 1974 Dinner (10.00pm). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There / Funny How Time Slips Away / Big Boss Man / Its Now Or Never / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
First released on Fort Baxter's...
May 23 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / Spanish Eyes / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love
First released on Fort Baxter's...
May 24 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / Spanish Eyes / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released as an audience recording on Live at Del Webb's from Touchdown Productions
To be continued...
- gilles-tcb
- Posts: 24
- Joined: August 7th, 2025, 6:53 am
- Mood:
- Has thanked: 44 times
- Been thanked: 25 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
Thanks for the 74 story. By the way the picture named img003.jpg is not from Lake Tahoe but from 74 October on tour (see the bandage on his right hand).Bilbobaggins wrote: January 13th, 2026, 7:21 am So, now we arrived in 1974.
Elvis' 1974 spring tour of the southern states was very succesful and Elvis was in good spirits. One of the highlights, of course, being the famous 'Live On Stage in Memphis' March 20th 1974 concert & album.
In early May Elvis completed a 5 concert California mini-tour represented by the FTD 'LIVE in LA' book/cd package.
On May 14th Elvis flew to Lake Tahoe for his upcoming engagement.
A few days later, on May 16th, Elvis started his 22-concert engagement at the Sahara Tahoe hotel, his third season at Lake Tahoe. At this Tahoe season Elvis was in good form and taking it easy after his California mini-tour. One of the nice things about the Lake Tahoe showroom was the closeness of the audience to the stage. This gave Elvis the possibility to interact with his fans ‘upclose and personal'.
024.jpg
This season, for whatever reason, more photo’s were taken than on previous seasons. Also, there were more ‘audience recordings’ made. Maybe the hotelstaff wasn’t that strickt anymore. However, there is very little information to be found about this engagement. Not even in good books as Elvis Day-By-Day and The Concert Years.
Several show are released on more than one label, and even on CDRs. I will mention only one (the first or the best) release. A complete overview of releases on CD can be found on: Elvis Presley In Concert
On opening night, Elvis wore the white peacock jumpsuit. He was in a "flirty" mood and when one woman shouted, "Elvis.I love you!", he replied, "Honey, I love you too, but what can I do about it on stage? Maybe we can arrange something after the show." "
img003.jpg
A review from “Variety”:
Elvis Presley's annual visitation kicks off the Sahara Tahoe's summer entertainment sked to a flurry of packed rooms. Looking good this time (though about 10 pounds overweight) and performing with an engaging air of humor and self deprecation, the Elvis appeal hasn't waned.
Most material was drawn from crowd pleasing hits of the past with occasional new ones, "Help Me," (his latest single) and "Let Me Be There" thrown in.
After almost 20 years, one can't deny that the Elvis standards bear repetition but a lift might be given the show should he develop a new speciality.
Much of the warmth Presley is able to generate in a huge room appears to come from rapport between the star and his own musicians and and singers. The fun spills over and the crowd had received a decided boost, by the end of the two hour show.
071.jpg
May 16 1974 Opening (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Teddy Bear - Dont Be Cruel / Love Me Tender / Steamroller Blues / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? (+ reprise) / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There (+ reprise) / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
This show, an audience recording, was released on 'Trying to get to Tahoe' on the EP collector label.
tryintogettotahoe01.jpg
Tahoe awoke on Friday, May 17th to a late snowfall. During the midnight show he sang "Tryin' To Get To You" and changed the words to "I've been streaking all the way, baby, tryin' to get to you." A woman yelled out, "Streak for us Elvis!”. He replied: “It’s too cold up here, I’d freeze to death”.
001.jpg
You've never walked in that man's shoes or seen things through his eyes
Or stood and watched with helpless hands while the heart inside you dies
So help your brother along the road no matter where you start
For the God that made you, made them too
Or stood and watched with helpless hands while the heart inside you dies
So help your brother along the road no matter where you start
For the God that made you, made them too
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
Yes, you are right. Indeed, it is from october 5th, Indianapolis. I am not a jumpsuit expert, as you can seegilles-tcb wrote: January 13th, 2026, 11:29 amThanks for the 74 story. By the way the picture named img003.jpg is not from Lake Tahoe but from 74 October on tour (see the bandage on his right hand).Bilbobaggins wrote: January 13th, 2026, 7:21 am So, now we arrived in 1974.
Elvis' 1974 spring tour of the southern states was very succesful and Elvis was in good spirits. One of the highlights, of course, being the famous 'Live On Stage in Memphis' March 20th 1974 concert & album.
In early May Elvis completed a 5 concert California mini-tour represented by the FTD 'LIVE in LA' book/cd package.
On May 14th Elvis flew to Lake Tahoe for his upcoming engagement.
A few days later, on May 16th, Elvis started his 22-concert engagement at the Sahara Tahoe hotel, his third season at Lake Tahoe. At this Tahoe season Elvis was in good form and taking it easy after his California mini-tour. One of the nice things about the Lake Tahoe showroom was the closeness of the audience to the stage. This gave Elvis the possibility to interact with his fans ‘upclose and personal'.
024.jpg
This season, for whatever reason, more photo’s were taken than on previous seasons. Also, there were more ‘audience recordings’ made. Maybe the hotelstaff wasn’t that strickt anymore. However, there is very little information to be found about this engagement. Not even in good books as Elvis Day-By-Day and The Concert Years.
Several show are released on more than one label, and even on CDRs. I will mention only one (the first or the best) release. A complete overview of releases on CD can be found on: Elvis Presley In Concert
On opening night, Elvis wore the white peacock jumpsuit. He was in a "flirty" mood and when one woman shouted, "Elvis.I love you!", he replied, "Honey, I love you too, but what can I do about it on stage? Maybe we can arrange something after the show." "
img003.jpg
A review from “Variety”:
Elvis Presley's annual visitation kicks off the Sahara Tahoe's summer entertainment sked to a flurry of packed rooms. Looking good this time (though about 10 pounds overweight) and performing with an engaging air of humor and self deprecation, the Elvis appeal hasn't waned.
Most material was drawn from crowd pleasing hits of the past with occasional new ones, "Help Me," (his latest single) and "Let Me Be There" thrown in.
After almost 20 years, one can't deny that the Elvis standards bear repetition but a lift might be given the show should he develop a new speciality.
Much of the warmth Presley is able to generate in a huge room appears to come from rapport between the star and his own musicians and and singers. The fun spills over and the crowd had received a decided boost, by the end of the two hour show.
071.jpg
May 16 1974 Opening (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Teddy Bear - Dont Be Cruel / Love Me Tender / Steamroller Blues / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? (+ reprise) / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There (+ reprise) / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
This show, an audience recording, was released on 'Trying to get to Tahoe' on the EP collector label.
tryintogettotahoe01.jpg
Tahoe awoke on Friday, May 17th to a late snowfall. During the midnight show he sang "Tryin' To Get To You" and changed the words to "I've been streaking all the way, baby, tryin' to get to you." A woman yelled out, "Streak for us Elvis!”. He replied: “It’s too cold up here, I’d freeze to death”.
001.jpg
- NinaFromCanadaEh
- Posts: 1,415
- Joined: September 25th, 2025, 10:58 pm
- Mood:
- Has thanked: 171 times
- Been thanked: 394 times
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
Yes, I agree. Some labels put some thought in their cover designs (Bilko, Fort Baxter etc). Although not everyone liked this one at the time...
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
The final part of the May 1974 engagement...
May 25 1974 Dinner (10.00pm). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog (+ reprise) / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There / Ill Remember You
Released on FTD's Lake Tahoe '74
Barbara Lamanna from Novato, California remebers... "In May 1974, in the middle of one of Elvis' shows, I started to climb up onto the stage. Elvis was walking toward me and my girlfriend is screaming at me, "GO, GO!". Half way up, I said, "I better not." She continued to yell. "GO!"
I then stepped on my chair, onto the table and onto the stage I went. Because it was the last song of the show, I could see someone from behind the curtain pointing at me and yelling 'GO BACK! So I stopped still, standing in at the middle of the stage feeling like a jerk!
My girlfriend is still screaming at me, "GO GET HIM". I'm looking back and forth from Elvis to her and finally I said to myself, heck with it, and ran over to Elvis.
Out from behind the curtain comes a hand that hits me so hard in the middle of my chest, it took my breath away. Elvis was very close to me and I cried, "ELVIS". He told the hand to let me go and he walked over to me. I grabbed him and told him, "I love you. Elvis" He kissed me and I kissed him back. Well, at least I think kissed him. I felt like I was in a dream and everything was in slow motion. Then I turned and skipped back to my seat." (from the book Elvis live at the Sahara Tahoe)
May 25 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord / You Gave Me A Mountain / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Im Leavin / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Also released on FTD's Stateline Sahara 1974
May 26 1974 Dinner (10.00pm). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There / Funny How Time Slips Away / Big Boss Man / Its Now Or Never / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Also released on FTD's Lake Tahoe '74
On May 26, Elvis welcomes The Jackson Five, who will take over the entertainment tomorrow. As we know today, the star of the group, Michael, would later marry Lisa Marie who was in the audience too..
May 26 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
This midnight show was supposed to be the closing show of this engagement. However, there was such a huge demand for tickets that an extra 3am show on may 27th was added.
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / You Gave Me A Mountain / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Im Leavin / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released as an audience recording on:
Then the final show of this season:
May 27 1974 Closing (3.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog / ( followed by 2 reprises of above song ) / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? (+ reprise) / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / Elvis introduces Billy Eckstein / I apologize (excerpt) / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water (+ reprise) / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released on this beauty...
May 25 1974 Dinner (10.00pm). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog (+ reprise) / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There / Ill Remember You
Released on FTD's Lake Tahoe '74
Barbara Lamanna from Novato, California remebers... "In May 1974, in the middle of one of Elvis' shows, I started to climb up onto the stage. Elvis was walking toward me and my girlfriend is screaming at me, "GO, GO!". Half way up, I said, "I better not." She continued to yell. "GO!"
I then stepped on my chair, onto the table and onto the stage I went. Because it was the last song of the show, I could see someone from behind the curtain pointing at me and yelling 'GO BACK! So I stopped still, standing in at the middle of the stage feeling like a jerk!
My girlfriend is still screaming at me, "GO GET HIM". I'm looking back and forth from Elvis to her and finally I said to myself, heck with it, and ran over to Elvis.
Out from behind the curtain comes a hand that hits me so hard in the middle of my chest, it took my breath away. Elvis was very close to me and I cried, "ELVIS". He told the hand to let me go and he walked over to me. I grabbed him and told him, "I love you. Elvis" He kissed me and I kissed him back. Well, at least I think kissed him. I felt like I was in a dream and everything was in slow motion. Then I turned and skipped back to my seat." (from the book Elvis live at the Sahara Tahoe)
May 25 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord / You Gave Me A Mountain / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Im Leavin / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Funny How Time Slips Away / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Also released on FTD's Stateline Sahara 1974
May 26 1974 Dinner (10.00pm). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / An American Trilogy / Let Me Be There / Funny How Time Slips Away / Big Boss Man / Its Now Or Never / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Also released on FTD's Lake Tahoe '74
On May 26, Elvis welcomes The Jackson Five, who will take over the entertainment tomorrow. As we know today, the star of the group, Michael, would later marry Lisa Marie who was in the audience too..
May 26 1974 Midnight (12.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
This midnight show was supposed to be the closing show of this engagement. However, there was such a huge demand for tickets that an extra 3am show on may 27th was added.
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Hound Dog / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? / You Gave Me A Mountain / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / I Cant Stop Loving You / Im Leavin / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released as an audience recording on:
Then the final show of this season:
May 27 1974 Closing (3.00am). Lake Tahoe NV. Sahara Hotel
TRACKLIST
2001 Theme / C C Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me / Tryin To Get To You / All Shook Up / Love Me Tender / You Dont Have To Say You Love Me / Johnny B Goode / Hound Dog / ( followed by 2 reprises of above song ) / Fever / Polk Salad Annie / Why Me Lord ? (+ reprise) / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / Elvis introduces Billy Eckstein / I apologize (excerpt) / I Cant Stop Loving You / Help Me / Bridge Over Troubled Water (+ reprise) / Let Me Be There / The Wonder Of You / Big Boss Man / The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face / Cant Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Released on this beauty...
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
And one more thing from May 1974 I'd like to share...
Moving on to october...
Moving on to october...
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Re: The Lake Tahoe engagements
And arriving in october...
Lake Tahoe, october 1974
Elvis opened a short engagement at the Sahara Tahoe Hotel on Friday, October 11th.
Elvis wanted to make up for the shows he missed in May 1973 because he had been ill. He performed two shows a night, one at 8:15 PM (Dinner Show) and the other at 12:00 PM (Midnight Show) through the weekend. This was the first of what would soon become known as the "Elvis In Concert" shows because for the first time in the history of the High Sierra Theater, tickets were sold for each per-formance. The tickets included three beverages and no dinner and they cost $17, each. Linda Thompson accompanied Elvis and attended most of his shows.
John Wilkinson: “I played rhythm guitar for Elvis Presley on stage for the last 9 1/2 years of his life. We shared a common bond through music and we loved to tease each other and see who would break up first.
We usually played Lake Tahoe once a year, however; in 1974 we were there twice, because Elvis wanted to make up for some of the shows he missed in May of the year, when he was ill. We were there for 4 days and 8 shows October 11-14, 1974. I remember Elvis wearing the Sundial jumpsuit on October 12. 1974 and that was the first time any of us had seen it.
It was the best time of my life to be part of Elvis' group and share in the the good times we had together.”
Lake Tahoe, october 1974
Elvis opened a short engagement at the Sahara Tahoe Hotel on Friday, October 11th.
Elvis wanted to make up for the shows he missed in May 1973 because he had been ill. He performed two shows a night, one at 8:15 PM (Dinner Show) and the other at 12:00 PM (Midnight Show) through the weekend. This was the first of what would soon become known as the "Elvis In Concert" shows because for the first time in the history of the High Sierra Theater, tickets were sold for each per-formance. The tickets included three beverages and no dinner and they cost $17, each. Linda Thompson accompanied Elvis and attended most of his shows.
John Wilkinson: “I played rhythm guitar for Elvis Presley on stage for the last 9 1/2 years of his life. We shared a common bond through music and we loved to tease each other and see who would break up first.
We usually played Lake Tahoe once a year, however; in 1974 we were there twice, because Elvis wanted to make up for some of the shows he missed in May of the year, when he was ill. We were there for 4 days and 8 shows October 11-14, 1974. I remember Elvis wearing the Sundial jumpsuit on October 12. 1974 and that was the first time any of us had seen it.
It was the best time of my life to be part of Elvis' group and share in the the good times we had together.”
- Bilbobaggins
- Posts: 490
- Joined: August 5th, 2025, 9:40 am
- Location: The Netherlands
- Has thanked: 664 times
- Been thanked: 933 times
Create an account or sign in to join the discussion
You need to be a member in order to post a reply
Create an account
Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute

