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Elvis Presley tended to treat other performers poorly toward the end of his life. Here's why his bodyguards believed he acted this way.
Red and Sonny West, friends of Elvis who spoke out about the singer's drug problems, both died this year. As It Happen spoke to Sonny about Elvis' death back in 1977.
Red and Sonny West both admitted they were terrified, but they were still willing to protect Elvis. Elvis and his bodyguards | Tom Wargacki/WireImage “Man, I know I was shaking,” Red said.
Pete Vallee is holding his weight loss at 460 pounds, and his buddy Sonny West, too, has dropped some pounds. But not for the same reasons.
Red West, the longtime confidante and bodyguard of Elvis Presley who became a successful film and television actor after the singer's death, died.
West and his co-authors, fellow “Memphis Mafia” members and Elvis bodyguards Sonny West (a cousin, who died March 24) and David Hebler, assisted by Steve Dunleavy, a journalist, said the book ...
“It was Sonny West, myself and Charlie Hodge [with Elvis]. “And it was so intense…you couldn’t hear a pin drop.” READ MORE: Elvis Presley biopic release date, cast, trailer and plot ...
John Scheinfeld will direct 'Fame & Fortune,' an adaptation of 'Elvis: Still Taking Care of Business,' the 2007 biography by former Presley bodyguard Sonny West and biographer Marshall Terrill.
On the 30th anniversary of Elvis Presley's death, his friend and bodyguard Sonny West recalls life with The King.
Elvis Presley treated other performers poorly in the 1970s. His bodyguards said his ego was so large he had to be the center of attention.
One commonality shared by Pete “Big Elvis” Vallee and Sonny West, aside from their devotion to the legacy of Elvis Presley, is weight loss. Big Elvis has lost — brace thyself – 500 pounds ...
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