Elvis Presley 'Regretted' Not Doing Barbra Streisand's “A Star Is Born, ”Says Priscilla (Exclusive)

Priscilla Presley tells PEOPLE Elvis' manager Colonel Tom Parker "talked him out of" taking the role

Nov 15, 2024 - 23:35
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Elvis Presley 'Regretted' Not Doing Barbra Streisand's “A Star Is Born, ”Says Priscilla (Exclusive)

Priscilla Presley tells PEOPLE Elvis' manager Colonel Tom Parker "talked him out of" taking the role

Bettman/Getty; Screen Archives/Getty Elvis Presley; Barbra Streisand

Bettman/Getty; Screen Archives/Getty Elvis Presley; Barbra Streisand

Elvis Presley almost starred in 1976's A Star Is Born.

Barbra Streisand initially had the King of Rock 'n' Roll in mind to play her onscreen love interest in the film, but Elvis' manager Colonel Tom Parker told him not to take the role. The part ultimately went to Kris Kristofferson.

"Barbra had offered him the part," Elvis' ex-wife Priscilla recalls to PEOPLE. "Colonel talked him out of that saying, 'Oh, it's not going to be good. She's going to be in charge, not you. Her movie, not yours.' Elvis regretted that because he felt he could have played that part."

Elvis' complicated dynamic with Parker is explored in the new Netflix documentary Return of the King: The Fall and Rise of Elvis Presley (streaming now). The film looks back on how Parker got Elvis locked into an multi-year movie contract following his return from the Army in 1960.

Related: Priscilla Presley Never Saw Elvis Perform Live Until His '68 Comeback Special: 'A Trip' (Exclusive)

Over time, Elvis became increasingly frustrated with the scripts he was being presented.

"One day he was reading a script, and he threw it across the room and said, ‘I’m not doing this,’” says his longtime friend Jerry Schilling. “The Colonel loved Elvis and vice versa, but Elvis outgrew the Colonel.”

Netflix Jerry Schilling in Return of the King: The Fall and Rise of Elvis Presley

Netflix Jerry Schilling in Return of the King: The Fall and Rise of Elvis Presley

Priscilla, 79, says he "wanted to be in great movies, not the stupid movies that he did like Girls! Girls! Girls! That wasn't Elvis."

"Colonel did not get him really at all," she says. "That was hard for both Jerry and I, but you couldn't say anything to Colonel. You just had to keep quiet."

Related: Elvis Presley Admits 'Hollywood's Image of Me Was Wrong' in Rare Vulnerable Moment Featured in New Doc (Exclusive)

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Jerry Schilling and Priscilla Presley in New York City in May 2022
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Jerry Schilling and Priscilla Presley in New York City in May 2022

Schilling adds that Elvis "called James Dean a genius, and he loved Marlon Brando." Following Dean's death at age 24 in 1955, Schilling says Parker approached producer Hal Wallis about Elvis taking Dean's part in 1958's King Creole.

"Colonel went to Hal and said, 'What about Elvis for this movie?'" Schilling says. "Because Elvis really wanted those type of movies. Hal went to Michael Curtiz, the director, and he said, 'No Elvis.' Hal and the Colonel said, 'Why don't you just have lunch, just meet with him?' Michael fell in love with Elvis as an actor. At the end of that picture, it was his fourth, Elvis walked over to Michael and said, 'Thank you, Mr. Curtiz. Now I understand what a director is.'"

Related: Priscilla Presley Opens Up About What 'Freed' Her from Being Known as Just Elvis Presley's Wife

The movie roles that followed King Creole were less creatively fulfilling to Elvis, but he was able to breathe new life into his career with his '68 Comeback Special that aired on NBC on Dec. 3, 1968.

Though Parker tried to get him to do a family-friendly Christmas special, Elvis insisted on a return to his rock roots.

"The Colonel, he came from the old school where he wanted Elvis to be Bing Crosby doing a Christmas Special, rather than doing a sexy rock and roll gospel, like the '68 special," says Schilling.

Gary Null/ NBC Universal via Getty Elvis Presley during his 1968 'Comeback Special' on NBC.

Gary Null/ NBC Universal via Getty Elvis Presley during his 1968 'Comeback Special' on NBC.

The special went on to become the highest-rated show of the year for NBC. Elvis dedicated himself to live performances from then on, and he played hundreds more concerts before his death at age 42 in 1977.

"I feel strongly I lost my friend at an early age out of creative disappointment. I know I did," says Schilling. "That creative disappointment caused other problems. But when he had a challenge like the '68 Special, he would go into training like Muhammad Ali. He'd lose 20 lbs."