Lisa Marie Presley obituary: singer-songwriter with a turbulent private life
Elvis Presley’s only child followed in her father’s footsteps by forging a career in the music industry
Lisa Marie Presley, who died aged 54, was the only child of Elvis. Although she knew she’d always be compared to him, she followed in his footsteps by forging her own career as a singer-songwriter, but what success she had was overshadowed by publicity about her private life, which was turbulent and touched by tragedy.
She was born in Memphis in 1968 to Elvis Presley and his wife Priscilla, and took part in her first photocall when she was four days old. Her father doted on her, said The Guardian. Once, he flew her to Idaho so that she could play in the snow for an hour (she had never seen it before); and he named his plane The Lisa Marie.
After her parents divorced, she moved with her mother to Los Angeles, but she continued to visit her father regularly at his Memphis mansion, Graceland. She was there when Presley was found dead in his bathroom, in 1977, and she is reported to have witnessed the efforts to save his life.
The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.
Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
Even as a young girl, she found being Elvis’s daughter a trial. “In every school, the kids would automatically hate me and think I was stuck-up,” she once recalled. “But I wasn’t.” She left school at 17, and went through a wild period before waking up one day after a drug-fuelled party and going to her local Scientology church. She wound up living in its Celebrity Centre, where she met the musician Danny Keough. They married in 1988, and had two children.
Five years later, on her 25th birthday, she inherited the Presley estate, which was worth $100m. Priscilla had managed it well: despite his success, Presley had left only $5m, and tax debts. Lisa Marie, however, seemed to have inherited her father’s lack of business sense and his profligacy, said The Daily Telegraph: by 2015, all the money was gone.
In 1994 she divorced Keough, and less than a month later she caused a sensation by revealing that she had married Michael Jackson, whom she had first met when she was seven years old. He was being sued for child sex abuse, and she’d later say that she’d wanted to “save him”. The marriage, however, proved short-lived: they divorced in 1996. Her third marriage, to the actor Nicolas Cage, lasted just 107 days in 2002.
She mined her personal life for material, producing her first studio album, To Whom It May Concern, in 2003. It sold well, but her third, Storm & Grace (2012), was widely considered her best work. She recorded it while she was living in East Sussex with her fourth husband, Michael Lockwood, with whom she had twin daughters.
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
She seemed to have found a degree of peace in England. She tended her garden, and was seen drinking in the local pub and helping out in a friend’s chip van. But in 2016, she returned to the US and sued for divorce. In 2019, it was reported that Priscilla had had to sell her own house to pay Lisa Marie’s mounting debts. Then in 2020, her son Benjamin Keough died by suicide. Presley’s grief was overwhelming. “My and my three daughters’ lives as we knew it were completely detonated and destroyed by his death,” she wrote. “We live in this every. Single. Day.”
-
‘These moves would usher in a future of chemical leaks’Instant Opinion Opinion, comment and editorials of the day
-
Trump unveils $12B bailout for tariff-hit farmersSpeed Read The president continues to insist that his tariff policy is working
-
Paramount fights Netflix for Warner as Trump hoversSpeed Read Paramount Skydance is seeking to undo Netflix’s purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery
-
Homes with great fireplacesFeature Featuring a suspended fireplace in Washington and two-sided Parisian fireplace in Florida
-
Film reviews: ‘The Secret Agent’ and ‘Zootopia 2’Feature A Brazilian man living in a brutal era seeks answers and survival and Judy and Nick fight again for animal justice
-
Wake Up Dead Man: ‘arch and witty’ Knives Out sequelThe Week Recommends Daniel Craig returns for the ‘excellent’ third instalment of the murder mystery film series
-
Zootropolis 2: a ‘perky and amusing’ movieThe Week Recommends The talking animals return in a family-friendly sequel
-
Storyteller: a ‘fitting tribute’ to Robert Louis StevensonThe Week Recommends Leo Damrosch’s ‘valuable’ biography of the man behind Treasure Island
-
The rapid-fire brilliance of Tom StoppardIn the Spotlight The 88-year-old was a playwright of dazzling wit and complex ideas
-
‘Mexico: A 500-Year History’ by Paul Gillingham and ‘When Caesar Was King: How Sid Caesar Reinvented American Comedy’ by David Margolickfeature A chronicle of Mexico’s shifts in power and how Sid Caesar shaped the early days of television
-
Homes by renowned architectsFeature Featuring a Leonard Willeke Tudor Revival in Detroit and modern John Storyk design in Woodstock