After 12 years, karate tournament revives memorial tradition

The 25th anniversary of Elvis Presley’s death will revive a martial arts tradition here with the first Elvis Presley Memorial Karate Tournament since 1990.

Five martial artists, including kickboxing champions Bill Wallace and Anthony Elmore and movie veteran Cynthia Rothrock, will be inducted into the Elvis Presley Memorial Martial Arts Hall of Fame. Six others, including Mayor Willie Herenton and Tennessee Supreme Court Justice Janice Holder, will be inducted as honorary hall of fame members.

Patrick Wrenn, who once co-owned the Tennessee Karate Institute with Bill Wallace and former Presley security guard Red West, said the tournament began as a memorial to Elvis in 1981 and was held for nine years before it was discontinued. “This year, since it’s the 25th anniversary year, we decided to do it again,” says Wrenn.

The tournament, a benefit for Le Bonheur Children’s Medical Center, begins at 11 a.m. today in the Showcase, a ballroom-size space on the first floor of the Gibson Guitar complex at 145 Lt. George W. Lee downtown.

The hall of fame inductees also will include martial arts experts Ed Parker and Pat Burleson.

Admission is $5 for adults, $3 for children.

Wrenn, 58, said that he, like Elvis, is a seventh-degree black belt karate expert. Wrenn, who holds several world records, now teaches more than 100 karate students at the Six 50 Health & Fitness centers in Cordova.

For more information, call 753-8883, or go to Elvis.com, and look for the karate tournament under Elvis Week events.

- Michael Lollar: 529-2793

Get a Trackback link

No Comments Yet

You can be the first to comment!

Leave a comment

advertising
  • New Elvis Record

    The latest Elvis record is not the kind you download. If you were in Memphis, you knew you weren’t on Lonely Street at all those sold-out events. But Graceland spokesman Kevin Kern says the official attendance figure for the week was 75,000. Even in the sweltering heat, 55,000 took part in the candlelight vigil. “The […]

  • Someone put an Elvis mojo on me

    Well, another anniversary of the death of Elvis Presley is approaching. Fearing the worst, I am writing this column before Aug. 16. I do not know if I will survive this event.
    Like other Americans who remember what they were doing when, say, President John F. Kennedy was shot in Dallas, I recall exactly what I […]

  • Sun Records

    Sun Records/Memphis Recording Service. In the mid- to late summer of 1953, Elvis was a walk-in who paid $3.98 to record “My Happiness.” A year later, on July 5, 1954, he would record “That’s All Right (Mama),” often called the Big Bang of Rock and Roll.

Events

    • No events.