Introduction
Finding a way to celebrate Canada’s 153rd birthday on July 1st, 2020 in an ETA fan magazine was not as difficult as it might seem since Canada was the only country outside the USA where Elvis performed. The following articles are from an Australian site, https://www.elvispresleymusic.com.au, and credit goes to them for the written portion and photos used in this post, with edits by me. Have a great holiday everyone! Be safe. Stay strong. Celebrate responsibly. Happy birthday, Canada!
Maple Leaf Gardens, Toronto, ON, April 2, 1957
Elvis made his first and last Canadian appearances in 1957. Having already released his first album and film in 1956, and having just purchased Graceland, Elvis arrived in Canada for the first of three appearances in April 1957.
Elvis's first Canadian performances were at the Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto at 6 p.m. and 8 p.m, on April 2nd, 1957. Elvis wore his stunning, sparkling gold suit for this show - the last time he wore the full suit. In future performances, Elvis would only wear pieces from this suit, such as just the jacket, belt and shoes, and in some shows, just the jacket.
At this performance, Elvis accompanied himself on piano for 'Blueberry Hill,' Fats Domino's chart-topping hit. Elvis loved Fats and owned several of his albums.
Elvis performed again in Canada the next day, April 3, at 4:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. at the Ottawa Auditorium in Ottawa. Elvis wore the gold jacket and shoes, but not the gold tie and pants. The pieces allowed Elvis to shine on stage, but still maintain a more conservative look.
Elvis's career was in full swing, but he was still a bit of controversial figure. Parents and religious officials were concerned about their kids listening to rock 'n' roll and the potentially dangerous influence Elvis had on his fans (a funny notion more than 60 years later). A local girls' school, the Notre Dame Convent, forbade its students to attend the concert and suspended eight of its students who ignored the rule. Elvis was booked to perform in Montreal, too, but that show was cancelled due to civic concern and pressure from local Catholic officials.
Editor’s Update: April 24, 2024
Yesterday, my friend and Elvis and ETA fan (of Matt Cage in particular), Audrey Manasterski sent the following comment after reading the article I wrote about another fan, Gloria Joyce, and the ticket she had for Elvis’s concert in August, 1977, which she was not able to use due to Elvis’s passing days before. In Gloria’s article, I included information about Elvis’s only performances outside the USA, in Canada. With Audrey’s permission, I am pleased to share her story…
This is so exciting to hear about this.
My dad was at those concerts at Maple Leaf Gardens, he was an usher during Elvis’s performance.
During intermission, Dad had a chance to speak with Elvis. They both drove trucks, played guitar, played piano & sang.
I was too young to attend. When I asked Dad what was he like, Dad said he was a very nice boy, very polite.
That’s all I got out of him. He didn’t even get me an autograph, because he was busy working. Go figure.
Thank you for sharing your story, Audrey. I am in awe knowing someone who knew someone who actually spoke to the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll, and so casually…just two fellows with similar interests having a conversation—priceless! C.M.
Empire Stadium, Vancouver, B.C., August 31, 1957
On August 31, 1957, Elvis, Scotty Moore, Bill Black, D.J. Fontana, and the Jordanaires went to Vancouver by train to perform at Empire Stadium. It was the second stop of a tour of the Northwest that had started the day before in Spokane. By this time Elvis had recorded eight No. 1 singles in two years, had made three movies and was about to release “Jailhouse Rock” as his latest single. Having performed in Toronto and Ottawa in April, this was only the third time they ever performed outside of the U.S., and for Elvis it would be the last.
Vancouver's first rock-and-roll show had taken place barely a year before, when Bill Haley and the Comets drew 6,000 people to the Kerrisdale Arena. Now, at the Vancouver show, Elvis had drawn a crowd over four times larger.
The 26,500 fans in attendance went wild for the King of Rock 'n' Roll. The stage was set up on the empty football field, but fans wanted to be closer. Thousands bypassed security to find a place in front of the stage on the field. The show had to be stopped twice for safety concerns. Elvis’s manager, Col. Tom Parker, suggested to Elvis that he tone down his show; but being a rock 'n' roll rebel, Elvis didn't listen to him. He did shorten the set, though; and for safety reasons, he fooled the audience: He gave his gold jacket to a crew member to wear while getting into a car, so fans would think it was Elvis leaving. The fans followed the man in the gold jacket, and Elvis was allowed to calmly leave the stadium unharmed.
Twenty year old Red Robinson, a DeeJay for CKWX who had emceed the Bill Haley show and now emceed Elvis's show said, “That was the first time there was ever a performer in front of 26,000 people in a rented stadium. Sinatra, Crosby, no one ever rented stadiums before him.” According to records given to Red by the promoter, Hugh Pickett, shortly before he died, there were 25,898 paid admissions and at ticket prices of $1.50, $2.50 and $3.50, the gross receipts came to $61,099.86 of which Elvis probably earned $21,936.32.
Red Robinson said, “With the press conference over, the reporters were ushered out. As emcee of the show, I remained with Elvis. Let me tell you about an incident that happened while we killed the hour or so remaining until show time. It taught me that, while Elvis was always polite, he also had a wild streak of fun in him. After we’d been chatting for some time, Elvis opened the dressing room door at the stadium and invited one of the policemen outside to come in. He asked to borrow the cop’s handcuffs… then casually handcuffed me to a shower rod. Then he hid the key and laughed wildly at the joke.”
The crowd was seated in the stadium's stands on either side of the football field, and the stage was set up in the north end zone. It was constructed on the back of two flatbed trucks with a fence put up around it and between the stage and the audience was nearly 100 yards of empty football field with air cadets and police lined up as security. The opening band played for about 45 minutes before Elvis and the band went on. When the music began, more or less drowned out by the screams of the crowd, the crowd surged past the security onto the field and sat down in front of the stage. Scotty said, “We must have looked like ants to them back where they were sitting. All they wanted to do was to get closer. They didn't care if they had seats or not”.
Stadium officials stopped the show and told the crowd it would not continue until they got back off the field. D.J. Fontana remembers how defiant the crowd was. Stadium officials couldn't budge them. D.J. said, “They tried and they tried, and they wouldn't move; so we finally started the show.”
The concert had lasted all of 22 minutes. Frightened by the surging fans, Parker told Elvis to cut the show short. When Elvis abruptly left the stage Scotty and the others were left onstage to face the fans alone. Unknown to the audience, Elvis had gone into an alcove aside the stairs behind the curtain, gave his gold jacket to one of his entourage (possibly Gene Smith) who then ran to the car to be whisked away pursued by the fans. Vancouver Sun photographer, Ralph Bower, said, “They knocked the fence over and chased him, and that's when he got away. They came like a herd of cattle. I was standing there and they run right over the top of me!” Elvis walked across the field to the dressing rooms unnoticed in his black shirt.
D.J. said, “The kids all ran up there and the platform kind of tilted to one side.” By the time they got their instruments loaded into their car, they were surrounded by fans. All they could do was sit and wait it out. “They shook the car a little bit thinking Elvis was in there with us,” added D.J., “but finally they let us go. It took about two hours for us to get out. It usually took us about two hours to get out of all the buildings”.
Bower snapped a shot of the crowd just before they trampled him, and the paper ran it on the front page, accompanied by a scathing review by John Kirkwood. “It was like watching a demented army swarm down the hillside to do battle in the plain when those frenzied teenagers stormed the field," Kirkwood wrote. "Elvis and his music played a small part in the dizzy circus. The big show was provided by Vancouver teenagers, transformed into writhing, frenzied idiots of delight by the savage jungle beat music. A hard, bitter core of teenage troublemakers turned Elvis Presley's one-night stand at Empire Stadium into the most disgusting exhibition of mass hysteria and lunacy this city has ever witnessed.”
The kids who were at the show, of course, felt differently and they loved Kirkwood's hysterical condemnation of the show. Colonel Parker also enjoyed reading the accounts of the riot the next day. Scotty said, “It really wasn't a riot; the fans were just trying to get closer to the stage to see, that's all.”
Red Robinson recalls that at the show they played “Money Honey”, “That's Where Your Heartaches Begin”, “Hound Dog” and “Jailhouse Rock”. Red said the 'biggest single goof' of his long career was when he went on the radio the day following the show and divulged Elvis's room number. “I went on the air the next day and said, Wasn't that wonderful, Elvis stayed at the Hotel Georgia, room 1226.” The kids went up and ripped up the carpet, tore pieces out of the bed. It cost CKWX about $5,000 to repair the room.”
Canada was the only country outside the United States to experience an Elvis Presley Concert.