Q. What word best describes your favourite audience?
A. Just pure Elvis fans—an audience that appreciates Elvis.
Q. How do you define a successful concert?
A. Appreciation. It doesn’t have to be a sold out crowd, but they need to be enthusiastic. Two concerts can be entirely different. I will change the song choice to reflect what the audience is responding to. If I sing ballads, and I sense the crowd wants faster songs, I change the song list during the concert.
Q. What would you do career-wise if you weren’t a successful ETA, besides being a barber?
A. I am a people person, so as long as it is a career that deals with people.
Q. Do you have any special rituals that you perform before going on stage?
A. I get into the zone by having 5 minutes of quiet time before performing.
Q. What would fans find surprising about you?
A. They would be surprised at what I look like out of costume, makeup, and wig.
Q. Do you have movements on stage that make your performance unique?
A. I ask fans what they want. At one concert, a lady in the 4th row kept shaking her head no. “No, no, no! I didn’t come here to hear someone mime Elvis.” She didn’t believe it was my voice; so my stage manager asked the band not to play during the next song so she could hear me sing.
Q. How will you know when it is time for you to retire from performing as an ETA?
A. My goal was reached when I became the Ultimate Grand Champion. I will return next year as a guest. If I stop enjoying it, and the travel is too much, I will retire.
Q. What does a perfect future look like from your point of view?
A. I will develop my own style of music, while not forgetting how Elvis got me where I am. My son, Jamie, who plays several instruments will collaborate with me on my CDs.
Q. When you are performing, does the voice you hear in your head sound like Elvis; do you sound like Elvis when you sing in the car or in the shower; and if you sing a song by any other artist, does the song end up sounding like an Elvis song?
A. Yes, yes, and yes.
Q. When you perform in a city outside the UK, are you able to sightsee as yourself, minus the black hair and Elvis costumes?
A. Yes, although I am starting to be recognized. When I performed in Wales, I went to the bar after my concert dressed as myself. I overheard some people seated at the bar saying how much they enjoyed the concert. I said, “So, you enjoyed the concert?” “Oh, yes! But we hoped Gordon was going to come and talk to us after the concert.” I was unrecognizable to them.
Q. Does putting on your Elvis clothes change your personality?
A. Yes. I develop an Elvis persona. I feel special…10 feet tall. But inside I am still shy.