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Elvis Presley's New Orleans Mardi Gras by Scotty Moore via scottymoore.net (best Elvis site on the internet) 
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On May 1, 1955, Elvis, Scotty and Bill performed at the Municipal
        Auditorium for the first time with three shows while on a new tour with Hank
        Snow's All Star Jamboree.  
Having toured with them on dates since
        February to an increasing popularity in the mid south and West Texas
        area, often to greater demand and much dismay of the headliners, this tour
        would take them into new territory as they traveled to Florida and the
        Southeast.
the tour began on May 1 in New Orleans, the day
        after 
        Elvis' fourth Sun single, "Baby, Let’s Play House," was released. 
It was 
        billed as a three-week, twenty-city tour that would employ thirty-one 
        different artists, some of whom would pick up and leave the tour at 
        various points.  
Headliners were Hank Snow, Slim Whitman, the Carter 
        Sisters with Mother Maybelle, and Martha Carson. 
Faron Young would 
        join the show in Florida. In a solution the Colonel devised to prevent 
        the kind of thing that had happened on the last tour, there would be a 
        first half of "younger talent" that included Jimmie Rodgers Snow, the 
        Davis Sisters, and the Wilburn Brothers, with 
"one of the newest though 
        most exciting personalities in the Hillbilly field . . . [whose] singing 
        style is completely different from any other singer in the field," Elvis 
        Presley, appearing just before the intermission.
There were near-riots almost everywhere they played. 
“I wanna be like that guy."
There were girls in every city, and after 
        the show Elvis never lacked for company, cruising around town in the 
        pink and white Cadillac he had just acquired to replace the Lincoln 
        (once again he had his name painted in black on the door). 
Jimmie  Snow
        roomed with him 
        on this tour.
Bill Black, Jimmie Rodgers Snow, and Elvis in Meridian, MS 
        - May 26, 1955
Photo courtesy Jimmie Rodgers Snow
 
 
Postcard featuring The Municipal Auditorium in New
        Orleans ca. 1953
        The Municipal Auditorium at 1201 St Peters Ave. in New Orleans, LA, adjacent to the French Quarter,
        opened in 1930.
One of the reasons it was built, says John Magill, head 
        of research at the Historic New Orleans Collections, was to replace the 
        French Opera House, which burned to the ground in 1919. 
The auditorium 
        was part of a planned municipal complex that was intended to fill much 
        of what is now
        Louis Armstrong Park as well as extending along Basin Street. 
        
But when the Great Depression set in, plans for the rest of the project 
        were scrapped.
Mayor de Lesseps S. Morrison presents Queen Ethel
        Elizabeth Seiler at the Krewe of Hermes ball in the Municipal Auditorium - Feb 22, 1952
At the time it  was considered one of the 
largest and most modern in this
        country with a total seating capacity of 10,000 that could be 
divided into two halls, one
        seating 6500 and the other 3500.  It had fourteen other meeting 
rooms
        and 75,000 sq ft. of space for exhibit purposes. It has hosted 
many concerts and events, perhaps being best known as the site of many 
of the New Orleans Mardi Gras Krewe balls.
Cleaning up the Municipal Auditorium after a carnival
        ball - undated
Photo courtesy New Orleans Public Library Louisiana
        Photographic collection
Krewes are the masking and parading clubs (or social
        organizations) for which New Orleans is both famous and infamous. Most
        Krewes developed from private social clubs that have restrictive
        membership policies. Today, in order to obtain a Parade Permit, all
        Orleans Parish Clubs must sign Affidavits agreeing not to discriminate in
        terms of membership, but many of the more established Krewes continue to 
        allow membership by "invitation only."
It was on this tour that when Elvis was mobbed in
        Jacksonville, the Colonel was sold on Elvis' 
        earning potential.  
According to  Oscar Davis, wrote Guralnick, that 
        marked the turning point -- that was the real eye opener, the Colonel 
        said to him.   
By the time the show got to 
        Richmond three days later, it was as if Elvis had never been 
        anything but the Colonel's boy. 
reproduction of
        
        Times Picayune Aug. 12, 1956 ad
ad courtesy New Orleans Public Library
        Their next (and last) appearance at Memorial Auditorium was on August 12, 1956,
        when Elvis, the band and entourage arrived in New Orleans
        from Jacksonville, FL for two shows.  This was the last stop on a ten day tour
        that had started in Miami, which, aside from
        this one, consisted of dates entirely in Florida.  Unlike their
        first appearance at the Auditorium which started their tours of
        Florida and the southeast, this would mark the end of appearances in
        that area, and touring on a regular basis for that matter.
        Elvis arrives in New Orleans in his new Lincoln - Aug. 12, 1956 Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's "Elvis Close Up"
 As had often been the custom they traveled at night
        and slept by day.  Traveling with Red West and cousins Gene and Junior Smith, Elvis arrived
        in the new Lincoln Continental Mark II that he had purchased in Miami at
        the start of this tour.
        Phil Maraquin backed by tour orchestra entertains the crowd - Aug 12, 1956
Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's "Elvis Close Up"
        Elvis is presented with a key to the city prior to a performance - Aug 
        12, 1956 Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's "Elvis Close Up"
        As had appeared on most of the shows on the tour, this show opened with 
        performances by singers, Frankie Connors, Nancy Ford, The Jordanaires, 
        and comic magician Phil Maraquin backed by the tour
        orchestra recruited by Al Dvorin in Chicago.  When Elvis finally went onstage 
        he was presented with "the key to the city" and a scroll of thousands of 
        signatures from fans. 
        The Jordanairse, Elvis and Bill Black at the Municipal Auditorium - Aug
        12, 1956
Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's "Elvis Close Up"
On the 13th, the day after the shows, the review in the
        Times Picayune went as follows:
        Elvis performing on stage at the Municipal Auditorium - Aug 12, 1956 Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's "Elvis Close Up"
Elvis Presley jerked his tortuous way across the
        stage of the Municipal Auditorium twice Sunday, "sang" eight
        or ten songs, thumped on a guitar, fell to the floor, knocked over
        microphones and set off a din of teenage squealing unparalleled since
        the heyday of Sinatra.3
        Elvis performing on stage at the Municipal Auditorium - Aug 12, 1956
Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's "Elvis Close Up"
At matinee and evening performances before nearly
        full houses on each occasion (the auditorium holds 10,000), Elvis the
        Pelvis started each show with a small tiny belch and on each occasion
        brought the house down. It was that kind of show.3
        Elvis performing on stage at the Municipal Auditorium - Aug 12, 1956
Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's "Elvis Close Up"
He sang all the songs that are now a mark of jukebox
        America. "Blues Suede Shoes" and "When My Baby Left
        Me" and "Heartbreak Hotel" and "Tutti Fruiti"
        and "I Want You, I Need You, I Love You" and a number of
        others equally deathless.3
        Elvis performing on stage at the Municipal Auditorium - Aug 12, 1956
Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's "Elvis Close Up"
To say that Elvis Presley sings is, on the strength of his New Orleans 
        performance, giving him the benefit of doubt, for more often than not 
        what passes for his voice is drowned out as often as it was audible. On 
        the other hand he is not known for his voice. He is a personality, an 
        entertainer who has made an incredible mark on a whole nation and in New 
        Orleans he lived up to this latter role with all the vigor and aplomb of 
        a veteran which he isn't.3
        Some of the fans at the Memorial Auditorium - Aug 12, 1956
Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's "Elvis Close Up"
His auditorium audiences were, by and large, made up of girls from about 
        10 to 16 who came armed with flash cameras, autograph books, photographs 
        of their hero and who behaved in a way that scarcely reflects credit on 
        teen-age America. At the evening performance he contorted his body in 
        such a manner as to cause whole platoons to rush to the edge of the 
        stage. Girls of 10 and 12 lunged to touch him.3
        Bill, Elvis and DJ performing on stage at the Municipal Auditorium - Aug 
        12, 1956 Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's Elvis Close Up
When police started to move in, Elvis jerked his way back to the center 
        of the stage and comparative safety of the trio which backs him up.3
        Elvis performing on stage at the Municipal Auditorium - Aug 12, 1956
He flings his limbs about and quivers in such a way as to make one think 
        he might have a trick knee or hip, possibly from an old war injury. But 
        this is not the case. This is just Elvis Presley.
        At each performance his appearance was preceded by singers, dancers and 
        comedians, some of whom had talent far exceeding that of the star but 
        none of whom who could touch the lad when it comes to showmanship.3
        Elvis performing on stage at the Municipal Auditorium - Aug 12, 1956
Photos © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's Elvis Close Up
At each show he was onstage about 35 minutes, delivering the same songs 
        that have become
        
        de rigeur for the nations disc jockeys. He was also presented 
        with a key to the city and a scroll bearing more than 5000 signatures of 
        youthful New Orleanians who would wish him luck and some who carried 
        banners inscribed, "Elvis for President."3 
        Elvis and Bill on stage at the Municipal Auditorium - Aug 12, 1956 Photo © Jay B. Leviton courtesy Ger Rijff's Elvis Close Up
        Whether he'll be around as long as the Davy Crocket hat remains to be 
        seen.3
        
According to Peter Guralnick and Ernst Jorgensen in 
        "Elvis
        Day by Day", the Colonel had guaranteed Elvis $500 a performance or $2,000 a day, whichever 
        was greater, and Elvis received a total of $20,000, plus a $7,500 commission on souvenir sales for the ten-day tour. 
        The band however, received their "working" salary of $200 a week.  
        After two long years on the road the days of constant touring were over. 
        Ten days later Elvis would be in Hollywood to begin production on 
        Love Me 
        Tender, the first of four movies that he would make before 
        entering the Army.  They would only make ten more appearances in 
        1956 and perform shows on three short tours in 1957. 
Lawrence Welk Show at the Municipal Auditorium, Pete
        Fountain on clarinet c. 1958 Photo courtesy New Orleans Public Library Louisiana
        Photographic collection
        The Auditorium in New Orleans continued to offer major attractions 
        through the 1950s and into the 1970s at least.  In 1969 and 
        1970 it was home to the New Orleans Buccaneers  one
        of the charter franchises of the American Basketball Association,
        founded in 1967.  It was the city's first professional basketball team 
        but the team was sold and moved to Memphis in 1970.  During its 
        inaugural 1974-1975 season the Auditorium was home to the  New Orleans Jazz basketball team.  
        They finished in last place that season with a 23-59 record and moved to the Louisiana Superdome 
        the following season. 
Led Zeppelin in Long Beach - June 27, 1972
Photo by Richard Creamer
        The venue hosted many of the major rock acts of the 60s, 70s and
        80s.  Led Zeppelin performed at the Municipal Auditorium in August
        of 1971 and May of 1973.  They reputedly were said to have appeared
        there in 1975 (unconfirmed) on their American tour accompanying the release of 
        their "Physical Graffiti" album and so did Rod Stewart and Ron Wood with 
        Faces later that year.  Bruce Springsteen and the E St. Band 
        performed there in 1976 and 1978.
        The venue also was a casino before the new Harrah's New Orleans building on Canal Street was opened.
        
In the 90's, fueled by the desire to bring more 
        profitable events to the facility, the city decided to renovate and 
        transform the Auditorium into a multi-purpose arena and auditorium.  
        The project involved building a regulation hockey rink inside the 
        building flexible enough so that it could be converted back to an 
        auditorium for other uses.  The building was able to go from a 
        hockey rink, to a concert hall, to a basketball court, to a Mardi Gras 
        ball setting in a one-day turnaround.4
View from the stage in Municipal Auditorium
        
        Photo courtesy Louisiana
        Film and Television
The Auditorium was renamed the Morris F.X. Jeff Sr. Municipal Auditorium,
        after a former executive in the New Orleans Recreation Department who
        had committed his life to improving conditions and opportunities for New Orleans children.  
        Completed in October of 1997, the  200,000 square-foot building 
        featured a 5,000-seat arena and was the new home of The New Orleans 
        Brass, a minor league hockey team of the East Coast Hockey League 
        (seating for stage events was 7,853).
View from the stage in Municipal Auditorium
        
        Photo courtesy Louisiana
        Film and Television
The Brass, a one-time East Coast Hockey League affiliate of the NHL's
        San Jose Sharks, lasted only five seasons (1997-2002).  The Brass averaged a home attendance of 4,300
        (78-percent capacity) at the Municipal Auditorium during its first two
        seasons. The Brass moved to the New Orleans Arena for the 1999-2000
        season, but the more cavernous confines of the New Orleans Arena made
        spectators feel further from the action.5
View of the stage in Municipal Auditorium
Photo courtesy Louisiana
        Film and Television
With the ECHL under pressure to release a 2002-03
        schedule, the team suspended operations on July 18, 2002 as it struggled to
        hammer out a deal that would have designated Morris F.X. Jeff Sr.
        Municipal Auditorium once again as its home playing facility.5
Katrina floodwaters covering roadways and swallowing up buildings
        - Aug 30, 2005
In August of 2005 the auditorium suffered damage and associated flooding
        when Hurricane Katrina, one of the costliest and deadliest hurricanes to
        the hit the US, wreaked havoc along much of the north-central Gulf Coast.
        The storm flooded the basement and damaged the roof of the auditorium
        destroying all of it's mechanical and electrical systems 
        located in the building's basement.1
        Aerial view of the Municipal Auditorium - 2007
        Photos courtesy Microsoft Earth Data
Prior to and immediately after Katrina, the Municipal 
        Auditorium was managed by
        SMG
        corporation, 
        which also managed the adjacent Mahalia Jackson Theatre, the 
Superdome, the New Orleans Arena, the Pontchartrain Center and many 
other facilities nationwide.  In January of 2006 the city produced a 
two-page list of capital improvements and preliminary estimates to 
restore the auditorium (at a minimum of $7.5 million).
        By July of 2006, beyond pumping out the flooded basement and 
removing soaked carpet and water-damaged debris
        - all paid for with FEMA 
        funds and completed by early December 2005 - nothing much had 
happened. 
        The city said that SMG's services were no longer necessary 
        because the building was not being used and terminated its contract 
        after March 31.1 
        Aerial views of the Municipal Auditorium - 2007
        Photos courtesy Microsoft Earth Data
According to a Recovery Projects Report published in 
        June of 2008, there are no current plans underway to renovate the 
        Auditorium. Aside from repairing the roof and exterior to seal the 
        building from outside elements, repairs to the Auditorium are not high 
        on the priority list to return it to working order. They have it listed 
        as preliminary design stage phase, which is the fourth of nine phases. 
        At present, attention is focused on the completion of the Mahalia 
        Jackson Theatre for the Performing Arts, mostly because it is more of a 
        multi-purpose performing arts facility and thus can be used by more 
        organizations - ballet, symphony, opera, musical theatre. The Theater is 
        scheduled to reopen in January, 2009. The Mayor's Office of Recovery 
        Management is responsible for this information and recovery can be 
        tracked at 
        www.cityofno.com/recovery.6 
Tyler Dixon in his Davy Crockett (Coonskin) Hat - July
        2006
In the 1960s, Leonard Bernstein was quoted as calling Elvis “the
        greatest cultural force in the twentieth century.”  His 
        popularity and that sentiment has prevailed and continues to grow still 
        today.  The Davy Crockett (or Coonskin ) hat referred to by the
        Times Picayune writer was made popular in
        large part by Disney's 1954 television show "Davy Crockett, Indian
        Fighter" and its sequels, starring Fess Parker. The hat went out of fashion by the end of the
        '50s.
1955 Hank Snow All star Jamboree
        advertisement courtesy Ger Rijff's Long Lonely Highway.  1956 Times
        Picayune article courtesy New Orleans Public Library.
        
2 excerpt from Mardi
        Gras: The Krewes and The Parades
        3 "VOCALIST SHOWS USUAL TACTICS
        Quivers, Jerks in Rendering Favored Number" by Pen Wilson, Times
        Picayune Aug. 13, 1956
4
        
        New Orleans Transforms Landmark Auditorium 
        courtesy Graphisoft Virtual Building Solutions
5 
        "Frozen 
        In Time: Six-year anniversary of New Orleans Brass folding" by Chris 
        Scarnati, For The Times-Picayune July 17, 2008
        6 courtesy 
        Mary Beth Romig, Director of Communications and Public Relations,
        New Orleans 
        Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau
Elvis' 1956 Lincoln Continental Mark II on auction at the
        MGM Grand - Oct 9, 1999
Photos courtesy AMA
        Pro Racing
The 1956 Lincoln Continental Mark II that Elvis bought
        in Miami at the beginning of his August 1956 tour remained in his 
        possession for the rest of his life.  It was sold by EPE at auction 
        at the MGM Grand in
        Las Vegas in 1999 along with many other items from the Archives.  It is now on display at Townsend's
        Classic & Antique Auto Collection in Shawnee, Oklahoma. 
      All photos on this site (that we
        didn't borrow) unless
        otherwise indicated are the property of either Scotty Moore or James V.
        Roy and unauthorized use or reproduction is prohibited.