# Paige the courtyard
Elvis Presley to the State: A Memoir from a Visit to Hollywood
During June 15 - July 15, 2010, Her Majesty the Queen of the Thousand Years, by His Majesty the King Gathiberoth Maha Adulyadej the Great, went on a mission to strengthen official relations with the United States, and on June 20 of the same year, visited Paramount Company in Hollywood.
In this regard, Princess Prasad Rangsit (Isa at the time) wrote in the book According to America:
This Paramount company is as big as a city, making several movies at the same time. The "Ten Commandments" has just been completed. The scene has not yet been dismantled. He has gone through the whole Roman city. He is very big, there are buildings, houses, roads, wide, looking like real things. Whoever runs to the crash will not be shaken.
After that, he took him to the theater where Hal Wallis' film G.I. Blues was being made. Mr. Wallis was sick that day, and he sent a representative named Paul Netan to replace him. Mr. Netan led the heroine, Elvis Presley and Juliet Praws.
It seems that the woman heard Mr. Elvis say to His Majesty, "Hello, Your Majesty, Sir," and then salute when he grabbed his hand. His posture was neat, shy, wrong, more handsome than he thought. Blue eyes, clean face, smooth teeth, beautiful smile. He had just left the military. Short hair, like a normal young American. Not as long, shocking as in some movies.
He made up for the movie, painted dark brown on his entire face, but something else, like his mouth or eyebrows, wasn't applied, would have left it naturally, and Juliet Puras was like in the movie.
This movie, G.I. Blues, is played by many beautiful girls, one of whom is the queen of the story, a little small, lovely, purple, standing and watching the king with the others.
When the protagonist of the story came to his presence, the King and the King sat down, and he arranged for Mr. Elvis to sit next to him, and for Juliet to sit next to him. Mother Juliet, unaware of the customs, would sit cross-legged at her pleasure.
The photographers took a lot of pictures, and Elvis and Mother Juliet got up to show the movie. Elvis went up to the floor and danced among the American soldiers, his children, and he sang, but there was no sound.
The lyrics have the words "Did you ever..." The song has a similar name, and a large crowd of people are watching it downstairs, both soldiers, military officers, and women. Mother Juliet seems to be showing up from the curtain behind the floor, not sitting in a row watching like everyone else.
He said that when he was filmed for the last part of the film G.I. Blues, he repeated it twice. Mr. Elvis had to dance and dance, sing two times, and then he had a sign that said, "Silence." If we were going to talk at that time, there would be Thai at the end of the film.
Source: Book of 84 Lent, Double Glass Lady






















































































