How ‘Priscilla’ Built its Graceland, A Cage As Pretty as a Wedding Cake

Sofia Coppola was determined to get the clock right.

This wasn’t just any clock. It was an imposing starburst clock, a grander version of the kind that became popular in the 1950s, with a black face and shimmery gold spokes. And it needed to dominate a mirrored wall surrounding the mantle in the living room at Graceland. Buying a replica would have been costly. When Priscilla set decorator Patricia Cuccia showed Coppola what her team had come up with instead, the director felt it was too small. Not enough pizzazz. So the art department extended the clock’s diameter using—of all things—painted cardboard. Looking at it onscreen, you’d never sense it’s not authentic.

Priscilla went to great lengths to recreate Graceland. That didn’t usually require baroque paper products, but hey: whatever’s fit for the King. Or, rather, his bride. In adapting Priscilla Presley’s 1985 memoir Elvis and Me, Coppola’s new biopic focuses solely on its eponymous subject’s perspective. While living in West Germany with her military family, a teenage Priscilla (Cailee Spaeny) meets one of Elvis’ friends, who invites her to meet Elvis (Jacob Elordi), who sweeps her into his gilded inner sanctum. Eventually, she moves to Graceland, the 13.8-acre Memphis property that Elvis bought in 1957.

Coppola told Cuccia the film’s aesthetics should align with Marie Antoinette and The Beguiled, her other two movies about women living unfulfilled lives in beautiful homes. Cuccia and production designer Tamara Deverell studied the relatively few snapshots they could find of Graceland from the time Priscilla lived there (1963 to 1972), as well as floor plans, original interior-design sketches, and additional photographs Coppola cited, particularly those of Americana legend William Eggleston. Most of the interiors, constructed on a soundstage in Toronto, grew from that research. Elvis’ decorator used furniture made by midcentury designer T.H. Robsjohn-Gibbings, which gave Cuccia a foundation to build off of. The rest of the house was embellished. Elvis outfitted the home for his beloved mother, so a feminine touch was essential. Coppola wanted the whole thing to look like a wedding cake, soft and creamy.

“I didn’t want to be bogged down with reality,” Deverell says. “We’re making a movie about a person who is still alive, and this really was more about Priscilla’s memory. We took little Easter eggs from different Graceland images.”

That starburst clock, for example, was really there. (You can spot one in Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis, too.) So were the animal statues, including the porcelain tiger in Elvis’ bedroom and the lifesize ceramic Afghan hound in his office. Elvis would buy lamps for his mom while traveling, and some of those exact models are on display. The drapes—blue velvet in the dining room, buttery-yellow sateen in the music room, red during Christmastime—were dyed to look as close to what hung in Graceland as the movie’s lighting design would allow. On Elvis’ bedside table? Books he read during his mind-opening spiritual phase, like Autobiography of a Yogi and Khalil Gibran’s The Prophet. (The pickleball court that Coppola had built on the soundstage for lunch tournaments was an anachronistic addition.)

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