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Blue suede news: Sleepy Parkes all shook up by the Elvis army

Like every other year since Parkes became a magnet for Elvis fans, the town is once again awash with sequin jumpsuits, greased hair and reverence for The King. <i>Photo: AAP</i>

Like every other year since Parkes became a magnet for Elvis fans, the town is once again awash with sequin jumpsuits, greased hair and reverence for The King. Photo: AAP

Dressed in a jewelled white jumpsuit, his hair combed back in regulation Elvis-style, mechanic Charlie McCarter carefully buffs his black Cadillac.

“This is the problem with black cars. They show up dust,” Mr McCarter says, as he whips a red duster around his 1958 classic at the Parkes Elvis Festival in central western NSW.

Hundreds of classic cars lined Parkes’ main drag for a street parade on Saturday morning, including a pink Cadillac with the bumper sticker: “Where the Heck is Memphis”.

Despite the 14,000 kilometre distance from Elvis’ Graceland home, fans have been gathering at the country town festival to honour his legacy for nearly 30 years.

Mr McCarter said he keeps Elvis’ spirit alive through vintage cars, records and a vast collection of memorabilia.

“It’s my passion. It’s the vibe,” Mr McCarter said.

“Elvis was a poor man from a poor family and all of a sudden he’s famous.

“He was a very big-hearted man. I want to carry that on.”

Thousands lined Clarinda Street to watch the parade of cars, in keeping with the festival’s theme of Speedway, the 1968 film starring Elvis and Nancy Sinatra.

Love me fender

Lookalikes revved their engines, sounded their blaring horns and one feigned his best southern drawl to call out “Elvis loves you baby” to a cheering crowd.

There was an Elvis on rollerskates and another sitting next to Marilyn Monroe’s doppelganger, while swing dancers twirled down the street, alongside a bewigged brass band.

Longtime friends Christine Owerko, Cheryl Latter, Carla Carnevale and Maree Rychvalsky wore matching lemon yellow 1960s shift dresses and beehive hairstyles.

Ms Latter said the fashion and the music brings back memories of childhood and good old-fashioned fun.

“There’s no badness or sadness about it,” she said.

“The kids are reviving it now, when we go dancing they’re doing the Jailhouse Rock.

“In the places we go, everyone’s happy, you don’t see any drunks, there’s no swearing, it’s just everyone enjoying themselves.”

Parkes local, Abagail Sharples, 17, is one in a new generation of Elvis fans.

Ms Sharples dressed as Priscilla Presley and drove her bright red 1989 Mazda convertible in the parade.

“I always listen to Elvis and Frank Sinatra and 60s era music,” she said. “I’ve just grown up around it.”

Mr McCarter said young and old alike love Elvis because he changed music and the way people move.

“Everyone was so silent before Elvis. They couldn’t move their hips, they couldn’t dance properly,” he said.

“Elvis really broke the ice.”

-AAP

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