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Elvis' baby-faced bodyguard: What life was like with The King
Posted by Doug Elfman
Monday, May. 09, 2011 at 11:20 PM
One night in the mid-1970s, Jerry Lee Lewis drove up to the Graceland estate to visit Elvis. The security guard called up to the mansion and asked if he should let Jerry Lee in.
“No, man, I don’t want to see him,” Elvis said — because the guard had informed him that Jerry Lee had been drinking.
Jerry Lee pulled out a gun. He took his foot off the brake. His Rolls-Royce rolled into the Graceland gate, bending it in.
This was Sam Thompson’s introduction to an armed but amiable Jerry Lee Lewis — as Sam was Elvis’ “baby-faced” bodyguard.
Sam trotted out to the gate.
“I reach in and grab Jerry Lee and pull him through the door, and we call the cops,” Sam says.
No one wanted to prosecute.
“It turns out it’s an honest mistake,” Sam says. “A sheriff in Desoto County (in Mississippi, next to Memphis) had given Jerry Lee Lewis a pistol. And Jerry Lee Lewis had brought it to Elvis to give it to him as a gift.
“But he had been drinking and was on pills, and it was just one of those regrettable situations.”
Elvis didn’t really mind, Sam says.
“Elvis loved Jerry Lee. They had a funny relationship.”
Elvis used to sit up nights and wonder why he had become The King, and someone else had not — someone like Jerry Lee.
“He really did ponder on this issue cosmically: Why me?” Sam says. “He knew he was talented and he was good looking, and at the right place at the right time. But there were a lot of others out there, too.
“He truly felt humbled by that. He never truly came to grips with it.”
MEETING ELVIS
Sam had been introduced to Elvis by his sister Linda Thompson, a 1972 winner of the Miss Tennessee Universe Pageant. She started dating Elvis that year.
The first night Elvis and Sam met near the end of 1972, they sat up singing gospel. “How Great Thou Art.” “In the Garden.” “The Great-Speckled Bird.”
Sam, a Catholic, had been raised Protestant in Memphis and knew the gospel Elvis adored.
Elvis quickly stole Sam away from law enforcement to make him a bodyguard and then a security chief.
Sam was well-trained. He had been a local sheriff’s sergeant on the SWAT team, running the dignitary protection unit, a post he earned after driving and guarding Danny Thomas.
Sam was 6-feet-6 and 270 pounds and came with a cop’s haircut that didn’t intimidate Elvis adequately.
“Man, I gotta baby-faced bodyguard,” Elvis said. “You gotta grow a beard.”
“So I scruffed up,” Sam says. “That’s what he called it: ‘Scruffed up.’”
ELVIS BUYS A HOUSE
In August 1973, Sam and his wife Louise were living in an apartment across town. Elvis would call him up, looking for fun.
“Let’s go motorcycle riding,” Elvis would say in the dead of night.
“Elvis, I gotta be at work at 4 o’clock in the morning. I can’t,” Sam would answer.
So Elvis devised a plan. One day, Elvis drove over to Sam and Louise’s apartment and piled them into his black Stutz Blackhawk, with Linda in the front seat.
Sam had a cast on one broken leg. He had been in a fight in the jail. He stuck his cast leg in the front of the car.
“He would mess with me and take his cigar and put it out on my cast,” Sam recalls fondly and chuckles at Elvis the jokester.
Elvis said, “I’m thinking about buyin’ some real estate around Graceland. You mind stoppin’?”
Elvis pulled up to a house next door to Graceland. He looked around, then glanced at Sam’s wife.
“Louise, do you like this house?” Elvis asked.
“It’s really nice, Elvis,” she said.
Elvis reached in his pocket and flipped her the keys.
“Good. It’s yours,” Elvis said.
“You can’t do this,” Louise said.
“I can do anything I want to, honey, I’m rich,” Elvis said.
Elvis looked at Sam and winked.
“No more excuses” to miss out on motorcycle riding at odd hours, Elvis said. “I want to show you somethin’.”
Sam followed Elvis to the garage.
There sat a brand new Harley Softail.
BLOOD IS THICKER THAN WATER
Elvis and Linda split in the winter of ’76 when Elvis was on tour in San Francisco.
Linda would never see him again.
The question was: Would Sam stay with Elvis after the breakup?
Linda flew out of town. Elvis called Sam and told him to meet him in his hotel room. Sam thought he was about to get fired.
Sam walked in. People were milling about. Elvis led Sam to the bathroom.
“He shuts the door. Puts the toilet seat down. Sits down. I sit on the side of the tub. He’s the king of rock and roll, and we’re sittin’ at the bathtub.”
Elvis told him: Now that his bodyguards Red West, Sonny Hebler and Dave West had written a tell-all book (which would be published just before Elvis’ death), he could only rely on a small number of trusted insiders.
“It’s down to you” and bodyguard Dick Grob and karate sensei Ed Parker, Elvis said.
“I need you to stay. And I want you to stay. But you need to do what you want to do,” Elvis said.
“Elvis, I’ll always love Linda,” Sam said. “Blood is thicker than water. I’ll always be loyal to her. But I want to stay.
“We got up, embraced and everything was cool,” Sam says. “We had this catharsis … this real emotional moment.”
Linda didn’t hold it against Sam that he stayed with her ex.
“I think Linda looked at our relationship — mine and Elvis’ — as an extension, as me watching over him the way she had done. And I did the best I could.”
DRUGS
Sam worried about Elvis, absolutely.
“Elvis fired me once because I went to him and told him I felt like he had a drug problem. But you have to remember this was back in the days when the Betty Ford clinic wasn’t around.
“Back then it would ruin your career.”
Elvis certainly felt like he needed prescription drugs.
So he canned Sam for bringing it up.
After a few days, Sam got a telephone call from one of the guys at Graceland.
“Hey, we’re going motorcycle riding. Elvis wants to know where you are,” the guy said.
Sam was confused.
“Elvis fired me three days ago,” Sam said.
“Really? I don’t think so,” the guy said.
“Yeah, I’m pretty sure it happened. I was there.”
They hung up. An hour later, the guy called back.
“Elvis says he doesn’t know what the hell you’re talking about. Get your ass over here.”
“I got the message,” Sam says. “The message was: This was an area we could not have a discussion on.”
There wasn’t a man who worked for Elvis who didn’t try to talk to him about drug abuse.
Ed Parker, the karate sensei, had a saying Sam remembers precisely.
“You cannot protect a man from himself,” Parker would say.
“And that’s true,” Sam says.
ELVIS IS DEAD
“I was at Graceland. I came over to pick Lisa Marie up that day. I was gonna fly her back to L.A. to Priscilla.”
But then, Elvis’ body was found. There was crying “pandemonium” at Graceland. Sam had work to do. He had to secure the location of Elvis’ death, while Dick Grob secured the location at the morgue.
“Then I looked around and realized there’s a 9-year-old little girl here, who was really my responsibility.”
He found Lisa in Elvis’ grandmother Dodger’s room.
Lisa had remembered the phone number for Elvis’ ex-girlfriend, Sam’s sister, so Lisa called Linda Thompson to give her the news.
Sam heard Lisa’s voice when he entered the room.
“I could hear her say, ‘No, Linda, really, he’s dead.’”
Sam stepped in and picked up the phone call.
“I could hear Linda saying, ‘No, no, Lisa, I’m sure that’s not right.’”
Sam started talking to Linda on the phone.
When Linda heard her brother’s voice, she started crying.
Sam had been entrusted with Lisa partly because he had two small daughters, himself.
Lisa wasn’t supposed to be at Graceland. Sam was supposed to take Lisa back to Priscilla at least a week before.
“But Elvis loved having her there.”
Lisa would ride around the property in a golf cart “just hell-bent for leather.”
Lisa stayed close with Linda after that. Sam hasn’t seen Lisa for years.
“She’s had a lot to overcome. First of all, just being the daughter of an icon and having to deal with that — musically and socially and in so many ways — and dealing as a 9-year-old with her father’s death right there on the property …
“I think she’s matured into a fine, wonderful woman and mother,” he says. “Given the circumstances she’s had, the spotlight she’s had to live her life under, she’s done extraordinarily well.
“I admire her."
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