Elvis Presley was obsessed with virgins and demanded aides provide a ‘steady stream’ of young s-x partners, book claims
In his twenties, Elvis spent the night with three 14-year-old girls and had pillow fights whilst tickling and kissing
The 'King of Foreplay', it has been revealed that Elvis Presley would meet with young women for s-x and had a particular interest in virgins.
Elvis' s-x secrets have been exposed in a book, including how he would demand that his aids presented him with a 'steady stream' of girls.
'Elvis Presley: A Southern Life' claims that he had a "perverted s-xual appetite" and regularly met with young women, despite being married to Priscilla, whom he met when she was just 14.
But the King of Rock and Roll may have known how to work his magic on the guitar, but it seems that Presley wasn't quite as confident in the bedroom.
He spent one night with a trio of 14-year-old girls for 'pillow fights, tickling, kissing, wrestling, and cuddling.
He was 22 at this point.
In the book, author and historian Joel Williamson wrote that the love triangle affair between him and two self-proclaimed virgins was an "impossible dream for Elvis who was obsessed with virginity."
He was a great kisser and very sweet, but not the stud that she had expected.
Accounts from former lovers fill the book’s pages with personal accounts of “highly overrated” s-x with a man who was “obsessed with virginity”.
Later in his life, he transformed his Palm Springs house into a Playboy mansion wannabe, seeing a flurry of women pass one another at the door.
His wife Pricilla was not invited to his naked pool parties which would lead to romps in the house.
Elvis met his wife when he was 24 and she was just 14 when he was in the U.S army.
The book reveals that he treated her virginity as if it was something he needed to maintain and the pair would "make love in various ways short of full intercourse".
'Obsessed with virginity'
Lamar Fike, who lived in several of Elvis's houses, said: "His s-xual appetite was very, very strong.
"The touching and the feeling and the patting and everything else meant more to Elvis than the actual act.
"‘I guess Elvis was the King of Foreplay."
He and Priscilla would play nurse and patient games as well as bringing in other girls into the bedroom.
The singer seemed to follow a pattern, he would romance and woo women who still had their virginity and preserve that for as long as possible.
However, as soon as the women lost their virginity the relationship would quickly fizzle out.
Talking about his affair with Cybill Shephard, an actress, the book reads: "He was a great kisser and very sweet, but not the stud that she had expected. She ascribed the difficulty to the drugs he was taking it was hard for him to be a natural man."
When his daughter Lisa Marie was born, Elvis simply refused to sleep with Priscilla at all, the author writes.
From the moment Elvis first stepped out on stage in 1954 to death in 1977 at the age of just 42, women went wild for the rock and roll crooner.
Williamson surmises: “Elvis was skilful in the wooing process. When he wanted, he could make a girl - an audience of one - feel that she was the only one in the whole world for him”.