LARRY KING SHOW
The following is a rush transcript
of the show. It may not be in its final form and may be updated.
KING: We're live with Sir Elton John. At the end of the show tonight Elton
is going to sing three songs. Going to flip. We taped them right before
the program so don't leave us. He's one of the top- selling solo artists
in history, 35 gold albums, 25 platinum albums. His current album is "Peachtree
Road." His smash hit "Red Piano Concert Review" returns to
Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas starting tomorrow night.
His latest musical, "Billy
Elliot," debuts in London later this year inspired by the acclaimed
film of the same name. And he's up for a Grammy for best pop collaboration
with vocals called "Sorry Seems To Be The Harshest Word" with
Ray Charles. How was it like working with him?
SIR ELTON JOHN: Absolutely amazing.
Ironically enough the first television show I ever did in America when I
first came over in 1970 was the "Andy Williams Show" with Mama
Cass and Ray Charles. And I had to do a duet of a Stevie Wonder song with
Ray. He was playing a white piano and I was playing a black piano. And I
was so nervous because I was playing with one of my idols, one of my all-time
favorite people -- artist and he was very sweet to me, calmed me down.
Unfortunately, "Sorry Seems
To Be The Hardest Word" was the last song he ever cut. We did the record
last March in Los Angeles and people warned me that he wasn't very well.
When he came to the studio, I wasn't prepared for how sick he really was.
He was very weak, very frail.
KING: Did he sing at all?
JOHN: He sat in the chair here
and I sat next to him. And we had a microphone. And we sang it through about
three times. He sang brilliantly and he sang -- he was weak, but he had
that bit of fire in his voice, you know, the usual Ray Charles fire. And
it was one of the most touching and kind of -- it didn't ruin my day, but
it was the saddest day because part of the lyrics of the song is it's sad,
it's sad, it's a sad, sad situation which you were seeing. People were in
the recording booth in tears, you know, behind the screen, and I must admit,
I had a lump in my throat, and I kept everything he said to me on a separate
CD that day, the conversations we had because you don't get to perform with
that kind of guy like that very often.
KING: Did you see his movie --
the movie?
JOHN: Amazing movie. And Jamie
Foxx, I think, will win the Oscar for that performance.
KING: If you knew Ray Charles he
had him down.
JOHN: Absolutely. That's the hardest
thing to do I would think, you know, portray so brilliantly as that. Angela
Bassett did it brilliantly in the Tina Turner movie with Laurence Fishburne
doing Ike Turner and this is an amazing performance by an incredibly talented
man.
KING: "OK Magazine" --
I guess that's Britain's version of "People," right -- estimates
that you made a staggering 62 million pounds, I guess, in 2004 besting Ozzy
and Sharon Osbourne, "American Idol" Simon Cowell, Sting, Rod
Stewart, Sir Paul McCartney. Are those figures true? And if true, what's
it like to have that much?
JOHN: Well, I did earn a lot of
money last year because I did a lot of shows in Vegas and they pay me well.
Record royalties come through. "Lion King" royalties come through.
I do work a lot. I mean, most of my income, I would say, comes from live
performances. And then you've got publishing, you've got record royalties.
But if you do a lot of shows every year you -- I earn a lot of money like
that.
KING: How does it work with Celine
Dion? When she doesn't work you're in that room?
JOHN: When Celine -- I mean, they
gave me the opportunity -- she does about 200 shows a year at least at the
Coliseum at Caesar's Palace. And they asked me if I would do maybe 30 shows
last year and I ended up doing 47. We're doing 40 this year and we'll do
probably near 50 next year. And I realize that Celine's show is an incredible
show. (UNINTELLIGIBLE)'s in Vegas now. You have to put on a show. I couldn't
go there to Vegas and not put on a show.
So I really wanted to do something
a little bit special, a little bit different, and so I got David LaChapelle,
a photographer and a dear friend of mine to produce the show and design
it. And we had to sink a lot of money in it. Because it wasn't -- if I'd
have just done it with my band and just sat on the stage -- and that's a
big stage, Larry, it's a huge stage -- we would have got killed.
So at this stage in my career,
it was a challenge. I thought, you know, I'm going to go to Vegas. And people
will say someone of Elton's age and stature usually ends up. But that was,
I think, 20 years ago that that was true but Vegas has changed. And I wanted
to really put on a really different show and a rock 'n' roll show that was
like an hour and a half rollercoaster ride. And it was tremendously successful.
It's a really exciting place to be. I never thought I'd say that. I never
thought I'd say I really enjoyed playing in Vegas and staying there, but
I actually do, and they look after me so well. And I dodged your question
about how much -- what's it like to have that much money. I love playing
Vegas. I love the people at Caesar's, and I love doing the show because
it's something different. I've never done a produced show like that before.
It's a real production.
KING: And it's still -- (UNINTELLIGIBLE)
-- it's still Vegas, right? That's still the show business place.
JOHN: Vegas is more exciting now
than it's ever been. You can go and see -- I was there one night and I was
playing. And there was Gladys Knight over the road. There was Sting, there
was B.B. King, there was John Mayer. There were about six or seven other
people in town on one night. And there's everything you want to see from
Cirque du Soleil right through the blues to R&B, soul, the great standards
from Johnny Mathis and people like that are still singing there.
KING: It's got everything.
JOHN: It's got everything. And
the best food in America probably now. So it's a great town. I can't say
enough good things about it.
KING: My wife opens for Don Rickles.
Do you like him?
JOHN: I like Don Rickles. My god,
I've met Don several times. Going back to the early seventies when I first
met him.
KING: By the way, the Super Bowl.
JOHN: Yes.
KING: You wrote "Philadelphia
Freedom," right?
JOHN: Yes.
KING: But you were rooting for
the Patriots, right?
JOHN: I'm a huge fan of the Patriots
and I'm a huge friend of Robert Kraft, the owner.
KING: Great guy.
JOHN: Real class act. But I have
to say that it was a tremendous Super Bowl as far as both teams played really,
really well, and it was a close call in the end.
KING: What did you think of Sir
Paul at halftime?
JOHN: I don't watch the halftime
shows and I never have done. I was so excited by the fact that New England
scored just before halftime but I went -- I don't know -- it's just too
much of a commercial thing.
KING: You wouldn't watch your fellow
Britisher (ph)?
JOHN: I don't watch those halftime
shows. I did one. I did the NBA halftime show once and it was really --
boy, it was like playing to a -- nobody was listening. Everybody could care
less. And people do it usually to promote a record or something.
KING: You will not do a Super Bowl?
JOHN: No, absolutely not.
KING: You also -- I don't want
to get into the whole Madonna thing. Supposing one night it's sold out in
Vegas, packed. You have laryngitis. Would you lip sync?
JOHN: Absolutely not. I couldn't.
I don't even lip sync when I'm doing a video. I can't lip sync. It's no
way.
KING: You could not do it under
any -- you would cancel a performance?
JOHN: Absolutely. And I'd make
it up some other day, yes.
KING: We'll be right back with
Elton John. He's going to sing for us later. We're going to include your
phone calls as well. Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: Elton John, our special guest
tonight, won the Kennedy Center honor last year, the highest honor I think
this country gives out, won it along with Warren Beatty, Joan Sutherland,
John Williams and Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee.
JOHN: Who died. Ossie died, I'm
so sad...
(CROSSTALK)
JOHN: It was so thrilled to meet
those two. It was a very, very thrilling occasion anyway for me, a wonderful
weekend, to be honored by this country in such a way, because this country
in many ways gave me my start in 1970. And the only other British person
to win one is Sean Connery. So I'm just absolutely thrilled to be able to
go to Washington and get this award. And to meet someone like Ossie Davis
and Ruby Dee was quite special. Joan Sutherland, of course, I've met before
in Australia. And I've met her. Warren Beatty I'd met. And John Williams
I hadn't met. But I was so saddened to read about Ossie's passing.
KING: I know you've been a critic
of the war and the president. What was it like to meet President Bush?
JOHN: I had been a critic, and
I got a lot of press in England saying that I was a hypocrite for going
to America and accepting the award from President Bush. But this wasn't
-- this had nothing to do with the government award. It was to do with --
an arts award. And it would have been extremely rude of me not to have gone
and shaken hands with your president, no matter what my political views
are. He's definitely entitled to his views. And I have to say he was incredibly
charming, he was very welcoming, as was the first lady, and Condoleezza
Rice and everyone was really, really charming to us.
It was kind of bizarre standing
backstage at halftime at the Kennedy Center and talking about AIDS with
the president for about 10 minutes, which he was very knowledgeable on.
Because I testified in Congress, and they'd given a lot of money, and I
was very grateful for that.
I have to say he was extremely,
extremely charming. You know, it's not my politics -- it's not my cup of
tea, the politics. Btu from a man-to-man basis, I found him engaging, I
found him extremely charismatic.
KING: Made it easier for you to
be around him?
JOHN: Yeah, he made me feel really
welcome. So I was very grateful for that.
KING: Last year you called papparazzi,
I think it was in Taipei...
JOHN: Taiwan, yes.
KING: "Rude, vile pigs."
You collectively accused them all.
JOHN: At that time, yes, because
we had arrived in Taiwan at 12:00 at night, after, you know, if you fly
to Taiwan from China -- China doesn't recognize that Taiwan exists, and
vice versa, so you have to go via Hong Kong. So we were traveling a long
time. We knew we'd have to go through the airport terminal. We weren't --
we knew we'd have to face photographers, but we had done that in Seoul,
in South Korea, and we, you know, we went through the terminal through the
customs, through immigration, and we took the photographs. You have to expect
that if you're going to a country you've never been to before.
But we were ambushed, and they
were really, really disgusting behavior, and you know, I fell for the trip
-- I mean, for the ruse. You know, the thing with paparazzi is that they
try to get you going, and then when they get you going, that's the picture
they want. And that's the news they want. And they got me when I was tired...
KING: They want to make you angry.
JOHN: They want to make you angry.
It's like, pleases, get out of our country. I mean, they were being really
abusive, not making us, you know, we had to walk about half a mile to immigration.
You know, they were deliberately hindering us. We were carrying all of our
hand luggage, and then they were allowed to be in immigration, they were
allowed to go through the metal detectors with their cameras unchecked.
So it was a pretty unpleasant experience. And I'm 57 and I won't put up
with it. And I just said -- they got what they deserved. KING: What right
do you think the public or, through their representatives, the media, has
to you? What -- how much privacy are you entitled to? Or do you give that
up...
JOHN: I think if I'm out going
to an event, and I'm going out to promote something and do something, I'm
fair game. I don't honestly enjoy being chased around the shops in London,
by, you know, camera people, but it becomes more and more prevalent in these
days. I don't like that.
In my own home -- and in France,
we have problems with them taking photographs of us at the house in Nice,
which we complained about, and we won. But you know, I have a pretty good
relationship with the press and the paparazzi. It's just when they step
over the line that, you know, enough's enough. I mean, I'll always pose
for someone and say, right, you got your photograph, now can you leave me
alone for the rest of the day? And if they don't, you have to grit your
teeth and not respond, because that's the photograph they want to sell throughout
the world.
KING: True or false, there's an
upscale sitcom, a "Spinal Tap" type sitcom, to be about an aging
rock star and toadies who cater to him, true?
JOHN: Yeah, that's true.
KING: You're what with this?
JOHN: I'm kind of executive producing
it. It was one of my people who worked for me, his idea, who's been working
for me for 30 years, and it was to do a sitcom about the people around the
star.
There has been a program on HBO
called "The Entourage," but it's nothing like that. It's a very,
very funny idea. Which we pitched to the producers of "Desperate Housewives"
show, and they loved it. And Cindy Chupack, who was one of the writers on
"Sex and the City" is writing it as we speak. And it's going to
be very funny.
I have 30 years of experience to
know how I can be -- it's going to be very, very funny, I hope.
KING: Did you do a pilot for ABC?
JOHN: Yes. Doing a pilot for ABC.
KING: Looks like a go?
JOHN: Yeah. We'll see how it goes.
KING: Are you ever going to be
on it?
JOHN: I might -- it's not about
me, per se. It's about a rock star. But you know, I might be a friend of
the rock star and come in and be in the program once in a while.
KING: What are you calling it?
JOHN: "Him and Us."
KING: "Him and Us."
JOHN: "Him and Us."
KING: We'll take a break and be
back and include phone calls for Sir Elton John. You like being -- I keep
calling you Elton. You're a sir.
JOHN: We're also doing...
KING: I apologize.
JOHN: ... an animated movie with
Disney as well.
KING: Called?
JOHN: "Gnomeo and Juliet."
KING: "Gnomeo and Juliet."
JOHN: Yeah.
KING: We'll be right back with
Sir Elton John -- my apologies -- following this.
(MUSIC)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
JOHN (SINGING)
(END VIDEO CLIP)
KING: The new album is "Peach
Tree Road." You're going to see a couple selections of it from the
next half hour.
Let's go to some calls for the
great Sir Elton John.
Houston, hello.
CALLER: Hello Mr. King and Mr.
John.
KING: Hi.
CALLER: What an honor to talk to
both of you.
KING: Thank you.
JOHN: Thank you.
CALLER My question is what is it
like to work with Billy Joel?
JOHN: It's an absolute pleasure.
And Billy Joel and I have been friends for a long, long time. He started
out just a little after me. He became hugely successful. He was compared
to me because he played the piano, and there aren't that many of us who
play the piano and can sing. I always thought that Billy had a style of
his own, with nothing like me. And you know we've been on tour many, many
times.
KING: When did the idea come about
that...
JOHN: I don't know, it's just like,
I really don't know who's idea, Maybe Billy's idea. But it proved really
successful. And he's a dear friend, and we'll be doing something together
in the not-too- distant future again. And I keep teasing him about, you
know, about time you wrote another -- new song. He hadn't written a song
for a about 10 or 11 years now. And now I think, now he's gotten married
again and seems really in a happy space. I think you'll see a Billy Joel
album, I bet, within another year and a half.
KING: Hartford, Connecticut, hello.
CALLER: Hi, Elton.
JOHN: Hi.
CALLER: Elton, you look better
and sound better than ever. What is your secret?
JOHN: I don't know. I'm 58 in a
couple of weeks' time. I just -- I have a lot of energy. I work hard. I
have a great partner. I'm in love. I am sober and clean. I lead a healthy
lifestyle. And I really am blessed and enjoy what I do.
KING: Has the world changed --
it's hard to signify the whole world. Do you think generally the gay life
is more accepted.
JOHN: In certain places, but it
seems to be -- it's a bit of a hot potato in America at the moment with
the gay marriage thing and, you know, the civil union thing. I think people
who are in love with each other and are committed to each other, David and
I have been together for 11 years, I think we should have the same rights
to protect each other in our relationships as people who are heterosexual
and are married. I understand some that people would then disagree with
me, and I could see -- I think, you know, if I'm going to be devoted to
someone and he's going to be devoted to me, and we love each other just
as much as any other two human beings love each other, then we should have
the rights to commit ourselves to that relationship.
KING: Did you go anywhere when
marriage was legal and get married?
JOHN: No. I'm waiting for it to
happen in Britain. There's a civil union coming in Britain, which will allow
us to go to a registry office and pledge our lives to each other and protect
each other. For example, if I die and I leave my money to David, my family
can come and contest that and David might not have a leg to stand on. I'm
not saying that's going to happen, but for anybody who's in a same-sex relationship,
I've seen it happen to so many people. One partner dies and leaves it --
his estate to his partner. The family come in and destroy and take it away.
They fight legally for it. And so the other partner is left with the death
of his loved one and with absolutely nothing. So something has to be done
to protect the same- sex relationships.
KING: Do you understand the feelings
against it?
JOHN: Yes, I can. Yes, absolutely.
I mean, but you know what, we live in the 21st century now. And I would
think that tolerance, which is one of my biggest things, tolerance and understanding
-- understanding and, you know, things about forgiveness. And tolerance
should be something that in the 21st century, we should be allowed to promote
a little bit more. As I say, it seems to be a little bit of a hot potato
in this country. But hopefully...
KING: Not elsewhere, right?
JOHN: No. Not really, elsewhere.
No.
KING: Enfield, Connecticut, hello.
CALLER: Hi, Elton, I was wondering
if you would ever consider doing a piano solo CD.
JOHN: I've been asked so many times.
A very good question. I've been asked so many times about this. I'm thinking
about it. I'm having such a great time playing with my band at the moment.
But there will be, come a day, when I will do a piano and voice CD, and
maybe just a piano CD, I don't know. But definitely piano and voice. A lot
of people have asked me to do that.
KING: Why is the piano red?
JOHN: The piano is red because
when I went to Vegas, I thought, I've got to have (UNINTELLIGIBLE), I want
a red piano. Red signifies love. And the show really is about -- has a lot
of songs about love. Love comes up on the screen a lot of times. We live
in an age, in an era where there is so much negativity, there is so much
violence in the world, there is so much unrest and people are at war, that
I wanted to promote the word love and red signifies love. So, that's why
the red piano came into it.
KING: We'll be back with more moments
with Sir Elton John, a couple more phone calls and then you're going to
see him sing. Don't go away.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
JOHN: (SINGING)
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
JOHN: (SINGING)
(END VIDEO CLIP)
KING: We're with Elton John. The
new album is "Peachtree Road," and we go to Fort Worth, Texas.
Hello.
CALLER: Hello.
KING: Hi.
CALLER: Good evening, Larry and
Elton.
KING: Hi.
CALLER: My question is, I would
like to ask Elton, has he stayed in contact with princes -- Prince William
and Prince Harry since Princess Diana's death?
JOHN: Unfortunately, I haven't
seen the boys since then. I've seen their father quite a few times, but
the boys were either at school or university. And I haven't really stayed
in contact or been in contact with them, which is a shame, but they're busy
young men and they're having their own lives.
KING: Georgetown, Massachusetts,
hello.
CALLER: Hi, Elton, I've been a
huge fan of yours since I was 9. I'm currently 17. And I was wondering what
kind of music and bands are you currently listening to right now, because
I know you keep up on a lot of it?
JOHN: Well, there's a band called
The Killers, that are doing brilliantly over here, No. 1 in England...
KING: Killers.
JOHN: ... with an album called
"Hot Fuss." They come from Las Vegas. There's a band called the
Scissor Sisters, that are also number one in England, that are American
and hasn't really taken off here yet. They sold about 200,000 copies. But
it's a sensational album. There's a guy called Ray LaMontagne, with an album
called "Trouble," which is really beautiful. He looks like Jesus
Christ and sings like Otis Redding. A guy called John Legend, who's just
made a terrific album that's doing -- I think it's No. 4 on the charts.
Great stuff.
KING: You don't need the money.
JOHN: Right.
KING: Will you always work?
JOHN: I'm a bit of a workaholic.
My partner, David, you know, I've pledged that I will slow down somewhat
as I get towards...
KING: What does David do?
JOHN: David is a film producer.
We're producing a film with Disney, an animated movie called "Gnomeo
and Juliet," which is based on the Shakespeare story of "Romeo
and Juliet," and also we're producing a film with Disney on my life.
Hopefully -- hopefully directed by David LaChapelle, and written by Lee
Hall, who did the screenplay of "Billy Elliot."
KING: And who will play you?
JOHN: Well, I'm so old now...
KING: Kevin Spacey!
JOHN: ... they'll need about --
they'll need about two or three different people. I mean, hopefully Justin
Timberlake will be one of them, because he did so well in one of my videos.
But why do I keep going? I love
to work. You like to work. It's what I do. And I do have a really wonderful
life. It's not as balanced as probably it should be, but I will probably
slow down a little bit.
The thing about Vegas is, I don't
have to fly anywhere, and that really helps. It means I stay in one place
for three weeks at a time instead of flying backwards and forwards. So instead
of doing 200 flights a year, I may do 100 now. But I'm really enjoying singing
more than ever, playing more than ever. And you know, when you see people
like B.B. King still going and Ray Charles going into his 70s and still
doing such great work, then you think, well, you know -- and Tony Bennett,
who we were just talking about.
KING: We have some news tonight.
You're going to record with B.B. King.
JOHN: I'm going to record with
B.B. King in a couple of weeks' time in Las Vegas. He lives there. We're
going to do a track with him for his new album, which will be a huge honor
for me.
KING: Do you know the song?
JOHN: Don't know yet. I think it's
a Jimmy Rogers song, but I can't wait to do that.
KING: Do you like dueting?
JOHN: I love it. I mean, as artists,
we don't perform with each other enough. And when I did a "Duets"
album with people like Bonnie Raitt and Leonard Cohen, Little Richard, Gladys
Knight, Stevie Wonder, people like that, it's always great to be with really
great people that you really love.
KING: Anyone you'd like to you
haven't?
CALLER: I've dueted with Aretha.
I've dueted with Mary J. Blige. God, there must be lots of people that I
haven't actually done anything with.
KING: Help a young performer? Do
a duet?
JOHN: People like John Mayor, Ryan
Adams, people like that I adore. That guy, Ray LaMontagne.
KING: Do you still get -- in other
words, like tomorrow night in Vegas, 8:00 or what time?
JOHN: 7:30.
KING: 7:30. Went up, same kick?
JOHN: Yes, always. Always. If you
don't have -- performing live is the real, you know, it's the icing on the
cake, because that's what I do best, and I never, ever get tired of it.
And the Vegas show, I'll be so -- I'm looking forward to it already.
KING: Do you rehearse tomorrow?
JOHN: We rehearse, go for a sound
check. And you have to, because we got a lot of screen projections and films
involved in the show, we have to make sure that we finish at the same time
that the film does, otherwise we're going to look stupid. So we'll go out
and rehearse that a little bit. But I'm not a big over-rehearser. We know
it, we'll go out there and we'll do our best.
KING: If you know it...
JOHN: If you know it, go and do
it.
KING: If you know it, you know
it.
JOHN: Yeah, exactly.
KING: Elton, I wish you nothing
but the best. Keep on keeping on.
JOHN: Thank you, Larry. It's been
a pleasure. I'm glad I finally made it to this desk.
KING: Now, before we break -- the
show is not over. We have two long segments left, and they'll be supplied
by Elton John, singing two cuts from "Peachtree road," and then
a classic hit from 1971.
So don't tune out. We'll pause
for a couple of breaks, come back, and Elton John at the red piano with
the band, same band that is going to be in Vegas tomorrow night. He'll perform
for you tonight -- as Ed Sullivan used to say, "right here on our stage!"
Don't go away.
(MUSIC)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: Our final two segments tonight
will feature the music of Elton John. We've had the conversation. We're
going to hear two songs in this segment. They're from the "Peachtree
Road" CD. Is this brand new?
JOHN: Yeah, it is. It just came
out late last year.
KING: Do you live on Peachtree
road?
JOHN: I live on Peachtree Road
in Atlanta, yes, and the studio was on Peachtree Road. And so that's --
hence, the title.
KING: And the two songs you're
going to hear is "All That I'm Allowed" and "Turn the Lights
Out When You Leave."
JOHN: Yeah, this is the new single,
the first song, and then the second song will be the third single.
KING: Go get them -- and Elton,
don't be nervous.
JOHN: I won't.
KING: You know how you get. Elton
John.
(ELTON JOHN PERFORMS "ALL
THAT I'M ALLOWED" and "TURN THE LIGHTS OUT WHEN YOU LEAVE)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: We're going to wind up this
special hour with Elton John tonight with a special song. You open in Vegas
tomorrow, right?
JOHN: Tomorrow night, yes.
KING: And Celine -- that room and
you work it?
JOHN: When she goes off, I work
it. She has a well-deserved rest. She does a lot of shows every year. We're
doing 40 shows this year.
KING: Tell me about "Tiny
Dancer." This goes back to 1971 from "Mad Man Across the Water".
JOHN: It was a hit when it first
came out in America. We played it a lot and then we didn't play it. And
then it came out in a film directed by Cameron Crowe about four years ago
called "Almost Famous" which gave the song a huge renaissance,
and I'm very grateful to him for that. And it was in the pivotal scene of
the movie so it's become one of my most requested songs.
KING: Thanks for a great night,
Elton.
JOHN: Thank you.
KING: Elton John winds it up with
"Tiny Dancer."
(MUSIC)