Clambake

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Clambake
Directed by Arthur H. Nadel
Produced by Arthur Gardner & Arnold Laven & Jules Levy
Written by Arthur Browne Jr.
Starring Elvis Presley
Shelley Fabares
Music by Jeff Alexander
Cinematography William Margulies
Editing by Tom Rolf
Distributed by United Artists
Running time 100 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

Clambake is a 1967 musical film starring Elvis Presley.

Contents

Scott Hayward is the son of a rich oilman. He decides to leave so he can discover life for himself. He runs into Tom Wilson, a ski instructor, who has no luck with the women. Tom offers to switch places with Scott so they can have of taste of what life is like in each other's shoes. Scott works as a ski instructor for a Miami hotel, while Tom has fun pretending he is rich. Scott is taken by Dianne, who is searching for a rich guy to snag. She decides to make a play for James J. Jamison III, owner of a pyjama company and boat racing champion. Scott agrees to help her get Jamison, but in the process falls for her.

Clambake (October 10, 1967)
Clambake (October 10, 1967) cover
Soundtrack by Elvis Presley
Released October 10, 1967
Elvis Presley chronology
Double Trouble (1967) Clambake (1967) Elvis' Gold Records Volume 4 (1968)


The soundtrack songs along with three others were released as a music album in November 1967 to coincide with the film.

Side 1:

Side 2:

  • You Don't Know Me - (Cindy Walker - Eddy Arnold)
  • The Girl I Never Loved - (Randy Starr)
  • How Can You Lose What You Never Had - (Ben Weisman & Sid Wayne)
  • Big Boss Man - (Al Smith - Luther Dixon)
  • Singing Tree - (A. Owens - A. Solberg)
  • Just Call Me Lonesome - (Rex Griffin)

  • In her 1985 book, Elvis and Me, Priscilla Presley writes that by the time filming was to begin on Clambake, Elvis's growing distress with the quality of his films led to a despondency accompanied by overeating that saw his weight balloon from his normal 170 lb (77 kg) to 200 lb (91 kg). A movie studio executive ordered him to lose the weight in a hurry, marking the introduction of diet pills to his already excessive regimen of medications.
  • In his song "Back to Tupelo", Mark Knopfler references Clambake as a turning point in Presley's career.

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