| Love, 
              Elvis and the famous Kiss photo | 
           
           
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            May 
                2023. As reported on the "Elvis Information Network" 
                Barbara Gray of "The Kiss" passed away on March 1st 
                2023. Here is the Vanity Fair article regarding her and the famous 
                Elvis Kiss.  | 
           
           
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            Several 
                years ago, Malcolm Gray was watching an Elvis Presley tribute 
                show on Pay Per View when a still photograph appeared: the iconic 
                1956 shot of the 21-year-old rock ‘n’ roll star playfully 
                romancing a blonde fan backstage. Gray’s eyes widened. “My 
                God, come here!” the electrical engineer shouted to his 
                girlfriend, Barbara, now his wife. “They’ve got you 
                on that big screen. Does Priscilla know who you are?”  | 
           
           
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            “No,” 
                Barbara said, nonchalantly, from the other room. She had seen 
                that photo hundreds of times over the past half-century. “I 
                was before Priscilla, Malcolm.”  | 
           
           
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            “The 
                Kiss”—as the photograph is sometimes called—is 
                in fact the most enduring of the 3,800 exposures that photographer 
                Al Wertheimer made of Elvis Presley, many of the best taken during 
                a two-day period in June 1956. While chronicling the rock prince 
                on the threshold of becoming the King, Wertheimer, then 26, famously 
                caught Elvis on the road and at his home in Memphis with his family 
                and entourage. But that prize frame has become one of the classics 
                in the rock-photography canon: Elvis, in a stairwell at the Mosque 
                Theatre in Richmond, Virginia, minutes before a concert, darting 
                a mischievous tongue toward the deliciously reciprocating mouth 
                of a mysterious girl in black.   | 
           
           
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            Many 
                have compared the picture to another moment snapped 11 years before: 
                Alfred Eisenstaedt’s 1945 “V-J Day in Times Square,” 
                shot for Life, of a sailor and a nurse spontaneously embracing 
                the day World War II ended. But while both images have remained 
                photographic whodunits for decades, nearly 20 people have come 
                forward now and again, purporting to be the subjects in the Times 
                Square shot. In contrast, no one has ever emerged with a legitimate 
                claim as Elvis’s blonde. And with good reason. In the photo, 
                her features are largely obscured. And to make matters more difficult, 
                Elvis, throughout his career, was known to have had scores of 
                dates and trysts with fans and companions.  | 
           
           
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            “I 
                never bothered to ask her name,” says Wertheimer, an energetic 
                81-year-old German émigré, sitting in his New York 
                brownstone brimming with Elvis books, photos, and memorabilia. 
                “And she never bothered to tell me.” As a result, 
                for 55 years Wertheimer has called her simply Elvis’s “date 
                for the day.” What’s more, ever since the picture 
                was published, no one on the Richmond music scene, or in Elvis’s 
                inner circle, seemed to know who she was.  | 
           
           
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            But 
                how could they not? This was a Kim Novak look-alike, dressed for 
                Saturday night—sexy, flirty, wearing four-inch, plastic 
                Springolator pumps, rhinestone fan earrings, a black chiffon spaghetti-strap 
                dress, and a see-through purse festooned with faux pearls. Whoever 
                she was, this was not a girl to forget. As evidenced in the 48 
                shots that Wertheimer took of her that day—many of which 
                show her facing directly into the lens—she had fetching 
                dimples, brows sharply penciled in black, and a teasing smile 
                that tugged at the corners of her mouth.  | 
           
           
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            By 
                her own admission, real-estate manager Barbara Gray, though a 
                natural blonde, doesn’t much resemble that babe from ’56. 
                “But, hey, what do you want? I was 20 years old,” 
                she says good-naturedly, sitting in the kitchen of her Charleston, 
                South Carolina, home, and speaking in an accent that smacks of 
                street-smart Philly. “Now I’m 75. I was very thin 
                and very stacked. Every time I would go to get fitted for a bra, 
                the sales ladies would say, ‘Gosh, you have such lovely 
                breasts.’ And I would think, ‘Well, I don’t 
                know. Are you hitting on me?’”  | 
           
           
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            When 
                the photo first appeared—in a September 1956 magazine entitled 
                The Amazing Elvis Presley (a 100,000-copy, 35-cent-an-issue newsstand 
                “one-shot”)—Barbara, known as Bobbi, got a kick 
                out of it. In those days she was a sometime dancer, a shoe-store 
                clerk, and an unabashed party girl. And she certainly got around. 
                The singer Pat Boone, she says, with whom she’d become rather 
                friendly when he played Charleston the year before, called her 
                to give her some grief. “Boy,” he supposedly needled 
                her, “you’re in pictures all over the place with my 
                biggest rival!”  | 
           
           
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            “What 
                are you talking about?”   
              “These 
                pictures of you with Elvis Presley!”  | 
           
           
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            Later, 
                the shots showed up in Life and elsewhere. And then, it seemed, 
                the music stopped. Bobbi, albeit anonymously, had enjoyed her 
                brief brush with fame, and “didn’t really seem to 
                be that interested,” remembers her sister, Margaret Crosby.  | 
           
           
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            She 
                wasn’t the only one. According to Wertheimer—who, 
                that March, had initially been hired by RCA Victor to shadow the 
                label’s dynamic young star—the images were of “no 
                value to speak of” until 1977, when a drug-addled Presley 
                collapsed and died in his bathroom at Graceland at the age of 
                42. “Then the phone started ringing,” says Wertheimer, 
                “and it really hasn’t stopped in the 34 years since”—largely 
                because no other photographer had ever been granted such access.  | 
           
           
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            Wertheimer 
                was a Brooklyn-raised photojournalist who shared a studio at the 
                time with photographers Jerry Uelsmann and *Life’*s Paul 
                Schutzer. In between assignments, Wertheimer would take forays 
                to the South, creating a variety of images of Presley riding his 
                motorcycle, hanging out with cronies, recording songs in the studio. 
                But by 1958 the singer’s paranoid manager, Colonel Tom Parker, 
                lowered a curtain around his protégé and, for the 
                rest of Presley’s life, restricted the media to meticulously 
                orchestrated events.  | 
           
           
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            In 
                1996, Wertheimer decided to abandon a movie-equipment-leasing 
                business to concentrate full-time on Elvis, selling prints through 
                *The New York Times’*s online store and Washington’s 
                Govinda Gallery (for as much as $9,000 each). He also entered 
                into a licensing agreement with Elvis Presley Enterprises, which 
                began emblazoning photos of the singer and the mystery kisser 
                on calendars, note cards, screen-savers, purses, refrigerator 
                magnets, and the like.  | 
           
           
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            The 
                sheer ubiquity of “The Kiss,” in part, is what finally 
                got Barbara Gray, you might say, all shook up. “My granddaughter 
                went to Graceland and brought back a coffee cup, a little lunch 
                bucket, and a clock, all with that photo on it,” she explains. 
                “She said, ‘Grandma, can you get your name on the 
                picture? Because some day it’s going to be worth something.’”  | 
           
           
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            It’s 
                true that the woman in the photos didn’t sign a model release; 
                she could have made a good sum, over the years, from the commercial 
                use of her likeness. But Gray says she’s not after material 
                gain at this late stage. What she claims to want, instead, is 
                to get her story out. And she says that by turning to Vanity Fair—knowing 
                the magazine has featured Wertheimer’s work in the past—she 
                is also seeking validation from the one man who could give it 
                to her.  | 
           
           
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            A 
                year ago January, Malcolm Gray, Barbara’s fourth husband 
                (and 16 years her junior), brought home a copy of USA Today. For 
                Presley’s 75th birthday, according to the paper, the Smithsonian 
                was mounting an exhibition, “Elvis at 21, Photographs by 
                Alfred Wertheimer.” In the accompanying photo, there was 
                Wertheimer, standing in front of a blow-up of “The Kiss,” 
                the centerpiece of the show.  | 
           
           
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            Gray 
                insists that that one image was the last straw. She was fed up, 
                as she puts it, with being “the unknown young woman in the 
                wings.” So she switched on her computer, found Wertheimer 
                on Facebook, and fired off a message: “I’m the girl, 
                ‘The Kiss,’ Have a good story for you…Please 
                answer this email.” She signed off: Bobbi Owens, using her 
                maiden name.  | 
           
           
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            But 
                while Wertheimer says he’s been searching for the bona fide 
                blonde since the 60s, he bided his time before answering. “Over 
                the years,” he explains, “I’ve had at least 
                a half a dozen women—from Houston, Atlanta, almost always 
                from the South—tell me that they were the one who got kissed 
                by Elvis. I’d say, ‘I don’t doubt it, but you 
                weren’t the one in my photograph.’ And they would 
                say, ‘How do you know that?’ Well, most of those women 
                said they were somewhere around five foot eight or nine. I didn’t 
                tell them, but the girl was like four foot eleven. Elvis was six 
                feet tall, and she was standing on the landing while he was one 
                step down, so they were both at roughly the same height.”  | 
           
           
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            Wertheimer 
                was doubly skeptical. Recently, he’d received an update 
                from an employee of the Heartbreak Hotel in Memphis—a fan-favorite 
                motel across the street from Graceland—who informed him 
                that a woman claiming to be the kissee’s mother said her 
                daughter had died in a car accident many years before. “I 
                was under the impression that the Kiss Lady was dead. I said, 
                ‘My goodness, that’s a sad way to end it.’”  | 
           
           
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            Gray, 
                however, did not like being stalled. By now, she’d waited 
                more than 30 years for an answer, having contacted Wertheimer 
                by phone in the late 1970s when she was Barbara Satinoff, living 
                in Royersford, Pennsylvania, with her third husband and running 
                halfway houses for recovering addicts. By her account, Wertheimer 
                blew her off. Though Wertheimer says he has no recollection of 
                the conversation, Bobbi says she remembers plenty.  | 
           
           
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            “I 
                want to write a book about my life and all the people I’ve 
                been connected to in show business,” she told him, alluding 
                to the days she’d dated two of Liberace’s boyfriends 
                in Puerto Rico, got in a fight with Zsa Zsa Gabor while doing 
                makeup for The Mike Douglas Show, and worked for Frederick’s 
                of Hollywood. While the Elvis episode was only “one tiny 
                little dot” of her colorful past, she said, she wanted copies 
                of Wertheimer’s pictures to illustrate it.  | 
           
           
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            Gray’s 
                background, by any measure, reads like something out of an Erskine 
                Caldwell novel. A self-described “free spirit,” she 
                was the illegitimate daughter of a factory worker and a cop whom, 
                she says, would occasionally beat her. When she was 12, her boyfriend 
                raped her. By 14, she had run away to marry a kid named Harry 
                Wright, with whom, at 16, she had a daughter, Debbie. A year later, 
                she was divorced and doing a little hustling. “I was a pretty 
                loose gal,” she admits. “Then I started waking up 
                to the fact I was a whore.”  | 
           
           
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            Gray 
                did some nude modeling to pay the bills, caught the eye of performers 
                who would swing through Charleston on the big-band circuit, and 
                accepted a ride to Atlanta from Woody Herman’s road manager. 
                Settling there, she worked for a record-distribution company and 
                started dating the singer Tommy Leonetti, soon to star on TV’s 
                Your Hit Parade. Come 1956, she left her young daughter in the 
                care of friends and returned to Charleston, taking up so-called 
                “show-off” dancing at a club called the Carriage House—right 
                around the time that Elvis came to town.  | 
           
           
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            None 
                of this ever came up during that long-ago phone call. Not that 
                Wertheimer, in Gray’s estimation, gave her much of an opening. 
                  
              “A 
                lot of women have called and said they are that girl and they 
                are not,” she remembers him saying. 
              “Well, 
                I am.” 
              “Do 
                you still have those earrings?” 
              “No.” 
              “What 
                about the pocketbook with the fake pearls?” 
              “Are 
                you kidding me?” 
              “Well, 
                why not…?” 
              “I’ve 
                moved back and forth across the country!” 
              Then 
                came another test. “Elvis was on his way to do a TV show. 
                What was it?” 
              “I 
                guess Ed Sullivan.” 
              “No, 
                see, you’re not the girl. If you are, how many people were 
                in the cab to the theater?” 
              “There 
                were six.” 
              “No 
                . . . There were five. Can you tell me this? What do I look like?”  | 
           
           
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            Bobbi 
                had reached her breaking point. “You’re a fat little 
                Jew with a bald head, and you wear glasses,” she snapped, 
                not really remembering what he looked like behind his camera. 
                Her Jewish husband laughed as she hung up the phone. The bespectacled 
                Wertheimer stands five feet seven but, to this day, has a full 
                head of hair.  | 
           
           
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            A 
                month after receiving Gray’s Facebook message, Wertheimer 
                still had not responded. Frustrated, she called in to Richard 
                Todd, a D.J. promoting an Elvis tribute show on WTMA, a local 
                radio station. Identifying herself only as Barbara on James Island, 
                she insisted she’d kept a secret since 1956, declaring herself 
                the girl in the classic kiss picture.  | 
           
           
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            “Do 
                you know this is you for a fact?” the D.J. asked.  
               
              “Oh, 
                absolutely.”  | 
           
           
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            One 
                listener, however, had his doubts. Broadcast veteran Ron Brandon 
                had recorded Presley’s homecoming concert in Tupelo, Mississippi, 
                when Brandon was a 17-year-old engineer at WTUP radio. He got 
                suspicious when the caller mispronounced the name of the Mosque 
                Theatre. But after they finally connected in person, she won him 
                over, and Brandon, in turn, got in touch with me. He thought I 
                might be able to authenticate her story since I’d just published 
                a book the month before on Presley’s love life, Baby, Let’s 
                Play House.  | 
           
           
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            When 
                Elvis Presley came to Charleston in the summer of ’56, Gray 
                had never heard of him. But one night at a bar her rowdy companions 
                were all fired up about Presley, saying he played “nigger” 
                music, and guessing he was “sweet” because he wore 
                mascara. “He’s staying up in the Francis Marion Hotel,” 
                one friend said. “Bobbi, you ought to call him. You could 
                get a date with him. If anybody could, you could.”  | 
           
           
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            As 
                Barbara tells it, she was drunk that evening and accepted the 
                dare, wobbling a little as she picked up the phone behind the 
                bar, and asking the hotel operator to put her through to Presley’s 
                room. His oddball cousin Gene Smith supposedly answered.  
               
              “Is 
                this Elvis?” she asked. 
              “No, 
                do you want to talk to him?” 
              “Yeah, 
                I want to talk to Elvis.”  | 
           
           
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            Soon, 
                the rock star and the stranger were into it, flirting for a good 
                half-hour, before making plans to meet two days later in Richmond, 
                Virginia—425 miles away—once Presley returned from 
                a New York rehearsal for a TV segment on The Steve Allen Show. 
                From Richmond, Gray made it perfectly clear, she would then head 
                north to see her boyfriend in Philadelphia. Before hanging up, 
                Gray recalls, Presley promised to send a car to collect her the 
                next day.  | 
           
           
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            Soon, 
                the rock star and the stranger were into it, flirting for a good 
                half-hour, before making plans to meet two days later in Richmond, 
                Virginia—425 miles away—once Presley returned from 
                a New York rehearsal for a TV segment on The Steve Allen Show. 
                From Richmond, Gray made it perfectly clear, she would then head 
                north to see her boyfriend in Philadelphia. Before hanging up, 
                Gray recalls, Presley promised to send a car to collect her the 
                next day.  | 
           
           
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            “I 
                said, ‘O.K.,’ thinking it was just a line.” 
                But the next morning Gene and a buddy, who introduced himself 
                as Elvis’s road manager—today no one in Presley’s 
                camp can seem to place him—showed up in a ’56 ivory-colored 
                Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz that Elvis had purchased earlier that 
                month. The trio drove to Richmond, where Gray stayed at her Aunt 
                Gladys’s house. Gray’s cousin Ruth Wagner, who was 
                living there at the time, remembers the car, the overnight visit, 
                the excited talk about Elvis.  | 
           
           
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            The 
                following afternoon Bobbi met Gene outside the swank Jefferson 
                Hotel. Carrying a bright-green jacket in a plastic dry-cleaning 
                bag—Elvis’s change of clothes for that night’s 
                second set—Gene walked her through the lobby and into the 
                coffee shop, where his cousin was finishing a bowl of chili. Bobbi 
                still had no idea what the singer looked like.  | 
           
           
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            “Elvis, 
                she’s here,” Gene said to the pompadoured man sitting 
                at the counter, wearing a white shirt and matching knit tie that 
                set off his slate-gray suit. “He turned around,” Bobbi 
                remembers, “and that was the first time I ever laid eyes 
                on him. I thought, God, he’s beautiful.”  | 
           
           
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            Elvis 
                never stood up, but motioned for Bobbi to sit on the vinyl chair 
                next to him, and then gave her a hug before angling closer.  | 
           
           
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            Despite 
                appreciating his androgynous good looks (and his white buckskin 
                shoes), Bobbi was a big-band follower and a Frank Sinatra fan; 
                her tastes in men followed a similar sophistication. She says 
                she considered Elvis little more than a budding musician—“and 
                really kind of insecure.” It put her off that he asked her 
                who she was and where she was from, like they’d never had 
                that first phone conversation. And his Mississippi accent made 
                him seem like “a goofy guy from the sticks.” She found 
                his long sideburns, which were radical for the day, sort of weird, 
                and thought they anchored him in the blue-collar world (which 
                he’d recently inhabited as an apprentice electrician). For 
                her part, she never mentioned she was a divorcée with a 
                child—which would have been the ultimate turn-off for the 
                virgin-obsessed Presley.  | 
           
           
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            Al 
                Wertheimer, who had followed Elvis to Richmond, documented the 
                next moments as Elvis attempted to loosen up his date. Bobbi was 
                oblivious to the photographer and the two black Nikons dangling 
                around his neck.   
              “Would 
                you like something to drink, a beer maybe?” Elvis ventured. 
              The 
                question threw her. A coffee shop serving beer? Maybe this was 
                just a test. “No,” Bobbi declined. 
              “That’s 
                good,” Elvis said, “‘cause I don’t let 
                my women drink.” 
              “I’m 
                not your woman,” Bobbi snipped. 
              “Do 
                you smoke?” Elvis pushed. 
              “No,” 
                she fibbed. 
              “Good. 
                I don’t like my women to smoke, either.” 
              “I 
                told you I’m not your woman.… If I want to smoke and 
                have a beer, I’ll do it.”  | 
           
           
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            Bobbi 
                had his attention; Elvis liked a girl with attitude. He showed 
                her his script for The Steve Allen Show, but she still seemed 
                unimpressed, so he got right up on her ear, alternately whispering 
                and shouting. She mustered a smile or two, which brought out his 
                playful side. It was now a half-hour before his five-o’clock 
                performance. Gene interrupted to say they had a cab waiting for 
                the half-mile ride up Main Street to the yellow-brick Mosque.  | 
           
           
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            “Come 
                on,” Elvis said. “You’re going to be with me 
                for the show.” As they got up to leave, Elvis suggestively 
                grabbed his new friend, which sent her running out the side door 
                of the hotel and into the street, Elvis in pursuit and calling 
                her “Fat Butt.” She liked him better now.  | 
           
           
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            It 
                was in the taxi that Bobbi first noticed Wertheimer, who climbed 
                in the front seat with Gene and the cab driver. In the back, Elvis 
                anchored one side of the seat, while Junior Smith (Gene’s 
                spooky-looking brother, a Korean War vet) held down the other. 
                Bobbi squeezed in between, and Elvis, clowning around, followed 
                the photographer’s directive to look animated. He messed 
                up Bobbi’s hair. He pretended to choke her. But what Wertheimer 
                really wanted was something intimate. A nuzzle, an embrace, a 
                kiss.  | 
           
           
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            When 
                the cab reached the Mosque, Elvis, with Al on his heels, got out 
                at the stage entrance to talk with the fans, while Gene and Junior 
                took Bobbi around to the front of the hall. There was hubbub backstage 
                as the supporting acts—the Flaim Brothers Orchestra, comic 
                Phil Maraquin, and magicians George and Betty Johnstone—performed. 
                Elvis paused to pull out a cardboard can of Royal Crown pomade 
                and sculpted his dirty-blond hair into a high, goopy wedge. Then 
                he called for a quick rehearsal with the Jordanaires, his backing 
                vocal group.  | 
           
           
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            After 
                a while, Wertheimer noticed his main subject was missing. Concerned, 
                he made his way down the fire stair to the stage level, and at 
                the end of a long, narrow hallway he saw two figures in silhouette—Elvis 
                and the girl, as he would call her. They were wrapped around each 
                other now, with Elvis intent on a kiss. Wertheimer remembers, 
                “I asked myself, Do I interrupt these love birds, or do 
                I leave them alone? I finally thought, What the heck? The worst 
                that can happen is that he’ll ask me to leave.”  | 
           
           
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            Wertheimer 
                climbed up on a railing and scissored his legs for balance. He 
                was now four feet from the girl, shooting over her shoulder, more 
                or less into Elvis’s face. Through his viewfinder, the scene 
                was illuminated by harsh backlight from a nearby window and a 
                50-watt bulb overhead.  | 
           
           
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            The 
                pair paid no attention as he steadied his breathing for a shutter 
                speed around a 10th of a second. Elvis pulled his date closer 
                now—his hands clasped around her back, her hands resting 
                on his shoulders. Then he gave her the smoldering stare he’d 
                copped from Rudolph Valentino, his early idol.  | 
           
           
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            Wertheimer, 
                desperate to light them from the other side, put on a maintenance 
                man’s voice—“Excuse me, coming through”—as 
                he squeezed past, descended three steps below them, and set his 
                frame. It was then, he claims, that the girl taunted, “I’ll 
                bet you can’t kiss me, Elvis.”  | 
           
           
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            “Of 
                course, Elvis has been trying all day to kiss her, and he comes 
                back and says, ‘I’ll bet you I can.’ She sticks 
                out her tongue a little, and he comes in and meets her tongue 
                with his, but he overshoots the mark and bends her nose. Then 
                he backs off a trifle and comes in a second time—perfect 
                landing.”  | 
           
           
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            That’s 
                a bunch of crap,” says Gray. “I never said, ‘I’ll 
                bet you can’t kiss me.’ I might have said, ‘You 
                can’t kiss me, because I have a boyfriend and I will not 
                kiss you.’ But right after that, I pulled away from him, 
                and he chased me across the stage trying to kiss me, just before 
                the show started.”  | 
           
           
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            Not 
                only did she not notice Wertheimer in the hallway, but she doesn’t 
                remember seeing him the rest of the evening. After the second 
                show, Bobbi and Elvis got in a car—maybe a sheriff’s 
                paddy wagon—to go to the train station. Elvis was headed 
                back to New York and wanted Bobbi to go with him.  | 
           
           
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            “I 
                said, ‘No, I’ve already made plans. I’m going 
                to Philly.’” But Elvis insisted. They climbed aboard 
                Car 20 of the Richmond, Fredericksburg, and Potomac Railroad train 
                and made their way to Elvis’s private compartment, Roomette 
                No. 7. There, Elvis intended to get what he’d wanted all 
                along.  | 
           
           
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            “He 
                started grabbing me and hugging me, and I finally let him kiss 
                me. Somehow we ended up lying on the bed, and he tried to feel 
                me up. He put his hand on my behind and he said, ‘Oh, you’ve 
                got on a girdle.’ I said, ‘They’re elastic panties, 
                but what’s it to you?’ He said, ‘I don’t 
                mess with girls who wear girdles.’ And he stopped.” 
                Suddenly, somebody knocked on the door and warned, “Elvis, 
                the train is leaving.” And Bobbi said, “So am I.”  | 
           
           
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            In 
                Richmond, Wertheimer accompanied Elvis’s party on the train 
                up to New York, but he doesn’t remember Bobbi being anywhere 
                near it. Nor does she show up in his pictures of Elvis in between 
                shows, when the singer gave an interview to a local reporter, 
                Gene Miller from The Richmond Times-Dispatch.  | 
           
           
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            “I 
                was standing there talking with the Jordanaires and goofing off 
                with the Flaim Brothers,” she explains. “I spent more 
                time with the other guys than I did with [Elvis].” (Miller, 
                in fact, would corroborate part of her tale, at least, writing 
                that Elvis “playfully chased an attractive young blonde 
                across the stage into the wings.”)  | 
           
           
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            One 
                man can attest to other aspects of Bobbi’s story. Edward 
                Swier, her Philadelphia boyfriend, now 79 and a retired Boeing 
                engineer, remembers her visit that summer. (So as not to upset 
                him at the time, she didn’t disclose her dalliance with 
                Elvis.) “We were pretty hot and heavy for a couple of years,” 
                says Swier, who met her over a game of miniature golf when he 
                was stationed at Charleston Air Force Base. “She was quite 
                a live wire and a very striking girl. She showed me some nude 
                photographs of herself in a magazine. I remember she got a call 
                from Pat Boone, because I answered the phone. He wanted to take 
                her to dinner and she turned him down.”  | 
           
           
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            Boone 
                would play a much bigger role in her life, leading her, as Bobbi 
                puts it, “from a loose girl to a child of Christ.” 
                In the late 60s, Boone and his wife, Shirley, baptized Bobbi, 
                she says, in their swimming pool in Beverly Hills. Now 75, Caroljean 
                Root, with whom Bobbi lived at the time, and who heard her Elvis 
                story long before “The Kiss” began appearing on souvenir 
                tchotchkes, remembers the Boone connection vividly. “She 
                would go over to Pat and Shirley’s house, and also attend 
                religious services with them. Even after she was baptized, they 
                were still in communication. They were all friends.”  | 
           
           
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            Boone, 
                now 77, hosted Bible-study sessions in the early 70s for celebrities, 
                Elvis’s wife, Priscilla, among them. Boone did not return 
                *Vanity Fair’*s repeated calls. In 1970, he wrote a book, 
                A New Song, in which he admitted to flirtations on the road that 
                nearly upended his marriage: “An occasional drink, the loud 
                music, and the titillating awareness that some young lovely was 
                obviously ‘available’—all seemed more and more 
                fun.” If she ever writes her own book, Bobbi, an observant 
                Baptist, hopes it “will show young girls how Jesus can save 
                you from anything and everything.”  | 
           
           
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            So, 
                after all the shake, rattle, and roll, where’s the proof? 
                Some of Bobbi Gray’s recollections are too minute for casual 
                invention. Many die-hard Elvis fans don’t know about the 
                Flaim Brothers, for instance; they don’t show up in Peter 
                Guralnick’s authoritative biography, Last Train to Memphis. 
                They are, however, billed in advertisements for Presley’s 
                1956 shows, and toured with him for a year, according to Emil 
                Flaim, now 78.  | 
           
           
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            Most 
                significantly, though, is the fact that when Vanity Fair asked 
                Bobbi for snapshots of herself from the same era, photo after 
                photo seemed the spitting image of the woman Wertheimer shot as 
                Elvis cozied up to her in the cab that day. In addition, the picture 
                on Bobbi’s 1974 driver’s license is also a perfect 
                match—as are her signatures, then and now.  | 
           
           
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            By 
                the time Wertheimer got around to answering Bobbi’s e-mails 
                (“Before we talk about it too much, I need to know exactly 
                how tall you are in your bare feet”), Vanity Fair was acting 
                as an intermediary, showing Wertheimer Bobbi’s old photos 
                (“They’re good—they’re very close”). 
                Then came the detail that really piqued his interest. Told that 
                Bobbi was four feet eleven, Wertheimer caught his breath: “Is. 
                She. Really.”  | 
           
           
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            It 
                was then that Wertheimer got nervous. “After 55 years, she 
                hasn’t said boo, and now she’s finally coming out 
                of the closet?!”  | 
           
           
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            Last 
                spring, Gray and Wertheimer finally spoke on the phone, and Wertheimer 
                quizzed her relentlessly. For more than an hour, they bantered 
                and sparred, but not without cordiality and humor.  | 
           
           
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            Al: 
                Have you felt badly that you haven’t really gotten the recognition 
                that you should have had as one of Elvis’s lovers?  
               
              Bobbi: 
                Listen, Al, I never was his lover. 
              Al: 
                I’m not here to upset you. I’m here to try to do some 
                fact-finding. 
              Bobbi: 
                This is what you did back in the 70s. You annoyed me to no end, 
                and that’s why I never called you again. 
              Al: 
                In the second show, [Elvis] had a very bright-colored jacket on. 
                Do you recall the color? 
              Bobbi: 
                No, because when I saw the jacket, it was [in a dry-cleaning bag]. 
              Al: 
                But you’re now in the theater. The show is finished, and 
                he’s changing his clothes to the second show. What was he 
                wearing? 
              Bobbi: 
                He could have been in his drawers for all I know. 
              Al: 
                [Laughing.] He wasn’t in his drawers. He was nude. 
              Bobbi: 
                Oh, God . . . I think I remember an awful lot for a 74-year-old 
                lady. 
              Al: 
                See how much I remember for being an 80-year-old codger?  | 
           
           
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            Today, 
                Wertheimer concedes that Bobbi is, in fact, the Kiss Lady. What 
                convinced him, he says, apart from her height and her personal 
                photographs from the time, was what she said about the taxi ride 
                to the theater—one of the points she had tried to make in 
                their 70s phone call. “I said, ‘Three of us in the 
                front? I don’t recall three in the front.’ She said, 
                ‘Well, if you notice in one of your pictures, there is an 
                elbow sticking out. That belonged to the other cousin.”  | 
           
           
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            And 
                Bobbi had remembered something else that Wertheimer had not, a 
                detail that had been partly visible in the photographs all the 
                time: Junior was holding . . . Elvis’s guitar!  | 
           
           
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            “I 
                have been looking at my photographs for 54 years,” says 
                Wertheimer, “and I didn’t notice [the edge of the 
                guitar case]. So her memory was, in that case, better than mine.”  | 
           
           
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            Last 
                summer, he offered her a settlement: $2,000 and his public acknowledgment—he 
                has signed an affidavit—that she is, indeed, the woman in 
                his famous frame. Additionally, he pledged to provide nine autographed 
                copies of two of his Elvis books, three signed prints of “The 
                Kiss,” six signed posters, six magnets, and, on a perpetual 
                license, 24 digital files of her photographs for any personal 
                projects.  | 
           
           
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            At 
                first, Bobbi wanted him to donate funds to her church, but Wertheimer 
                balked. “If I were richer I might pay her more. But she 
                wants to be a celebrity. Of course, she might feel that she’s 
                been had, but on the other hand, had I not been there … 
                It would have been a non-event. She is such a church-going person, 
                well, let her hustle a little bit. If she wants to go on Elvis 
                cruises and talk about being the ‘Tongue Lady’ and 
                sell some of the prints that I allow her to make, she has my blessings.”  | 
           
           
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            In 
                the end, after months of negotiation, Bobbi signed the agreement, 
                giving up all commercial rights to one of the most desired photos 
                in rock ’n’ roll.  | 
           
           
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            To 
                decompress, she made a trek to Richmond to revisit the old Mosque 
                Theatre and another to Washington, D.C., to see Wertheimer’s 
                show at the National Portrait Gallery. Her hope was to be photographed 
                in front of “The Kiss” as a memento for her three 
                grandchildren. But when she arrived, she didn’t bother to 
                go in. The crowds were overflowing.  | 
           
           
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            Today, 
                Barbara Gray insists she’s after neither money nor fame—just 
                a glimmer of recognition, which is, after all, what many of us 
                seek in this life. “I didn’t get into this to be frustrated 
                and crazy. I just wanted to get my name on the damn picture.”  | 
           
           
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