With the end of the Memphis in May celebrations and the beginning of June, summer is well and truly underway in Memphis.
Okay, the first day of summer isnโt technically for another couple of weeks, but letโs be honest โ it feels like summer. Itโs hot, humid, and summer thunderstorms have already begun rolling through town. So if itโs time to break out the sunscreen for the season, then we may as well party like itโs officially summer. But how to get your seasonal groove on? Worry not, dear reader, your faithful Flyer staff is here to help.
In this issue, weโve got a list of happenings we hope will keep you cool โ festivals, movie nights, Elvis Week, anniversaries, book launches, and more. Our advice? Circle everything that sounds fun, slap on some sunblock, swig a seltzer, and go out and enjoy the Memphis heat.
Summer Fest: Memphis Pride Fest
Memphis Pride Fest is back, louder and prouder because itโs IRL this year after two years of online events.
The weekend of events is billed as the single largest gathering for the LGBTQ+ community and allies in Memphis and the Mid-South. Organizers expect more than 35,000 attendees โto celebrate the most colorful weekend of the year.โ
Pride kicks off Thursday at the Malco Summer Drive-In. Gates open at 7 p.m. for a viewing of To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar at 8 p.m. A drag show featuring Brenda Newport, Kaiyla JonVier Dickerson, Zoey Adams, and more starts at 10 p.m. Tickets are $35 per vehicle.
On Friday, the Big Gay Dance Party returns, this time at Crosstown Theater at 8 p.m. The event features DJ A.D. โand a safe, inclusive environment to be their true selves.โ Tickets range from $15-$150. After-parties start after midnight at Druโs Bar and The Pumping Station.
Saturday will find Robert R. Church Park awash in rainbows as the festival gets under way at 10 a.m. It features two stages, more than 150 vendors, food trucks, a car show, a kids area, an adult area, a VIP lounge, free and discreet HIV testing, and more. The festival ends at 5 p.m. Tickets are $1.
โWhat would Pride be without a big, bold colorful parade?โ ask the organizers. We wonโt have to find out this year. The Memphis Pride Parade steps off at 1 p.m. from 4th and Beale and makes its way through the Beale Street Entertainment District. It will feature 100 different floats, performers, and more with more than 3,000 people participating.
Head back to Beale Sunday at 11 a.m. for the Grand Marshalโs Drag Brunch at the Jerry Lee Lewis Cafe. โ Toby Sells
Memphis Pride Fest, various locations, June 2nd-5th. Event tickets range from $1-$150. Check midsouthpride.org for more information.

Summer Sounds: Music in the Open Air
Hearing live music outside as the day cools to dusk is one of the great joys of summer in Memphis. With Covid concerns having lapsed over the past year and outdoor gatherings being among the safest anyway, there is sure to be an outdoor music event happening nearly any weekend you care to find one.
Weโve recently covered some of the ongoing series offering such delights, venerable local traditions such as the Memphis Botanic Gardenโs Live at the Garden series (kicking off on June 11th with Steely Dan) and the Overton Park Shellโs Orion Free Concert Series (which launched Sunday with the Sunset Symphony concert, followed by Jackie Venson on Thursday, June 2nd). Farther east, yet with a more local flair, thereโs always the Germantown Performing Arts Centerโs Bluebird Concerts at The Grove. All of them offer green spaces for lounging under the trees as the summer breeze rises โ not to mention food and drink vendors.
Some summer series actually began in the spring. The River Series at Harbor Town offers the prime acoustics of an amphitheater on the eastern banks of Mud Island, in full view of the Memphis skyline, and their final spring concert, featuring MouseRocket and Ibex Clone, goes down this Saturday, June 4th. Trolley Night has been livening up the last Friday of every month since March, and will carry on through October, bringing plenty of casual live music to the South Main area. And the Sunset Jazz series has already begun gracing the second Sunday of each month down in Court Square. If Thursday is more your thing, consider the Rooftop Parties atop the Peabody Hotel, which have been featuring a mix of live bands and DJs since April.
Finally, donโt forget the many private venues that specialize in outdoor shows, like Railgarten, Loflin Yard, Carolina Watershed, and Slider Inn Downtown. Thanks to them, you can find live music in the open air nearly every night of the week. โ Alex Greene
Summer in the Garden: Twilight Thursdays
Every week between now and October 27th, the Memphis Botanic Garden is featuring a โTwilight Thursdayโ from 5 till 8 p.m. What is a Twilight Thursday? Glad you asked, because thereโs a lot happening at these events, not to mention the fabulous Alice in Wonderland topiary exhibit going on right now.
Hungry? Twilight Thursdays offer a rotating array of food trucks each week with a variety of culinary options so you can create your own picnic dinner. There are picnic tables in a nearby grove of trees. If you like getting your drink on, thereโs also a โCurious Cocktailsโ cash bar, which could potentially help you better appreciate the Cheshire Catโs looming grin. More of a beer person? MBG has got you covered with a special selection of โAliceโs Alesโ from Memphis Made Brewing Company.
Memphis Botanic Garden promises there will be additional surprises each week, including vendors, performers, and other special guests, plus presentations from various community partners and groups.
And hereโs another bonus: You can bring your favorite pupper to Twilight Thursdays. You know theyโd like nothing more than a hike around the grounds on a summerโs eve. Just donโt forget to keep them on leash at all times.
For advance information on food and drink options and performers and other special activities, check with the gardenโs Instagram and Facebook accounts. Nonmembers are required to purchase time-entry advance tickets for Twilight Thursdays. โ Bruce VanWyngarden

Summer Spaghetti Gravy: Italian Fest
On cross-country European railways, thereโs always that one train car that sticks out. Rather than a collective of quiet, mild-mannered passengers elsewhere, this car opens its door to release a noisy deluge of yelling, partying, dancing, card-playing, drinking, general hoopla, and hand gestures, dio mio, the hand gestures. Yes, thatโs right: Itโs the one and only Italian car.
But fear not: The exhilarating merriment of such an encounter doesnโt have to require a transcontinental trip โ Memphisโ very own Italian Fest is back in full force this summer, shedding the private, Covid-enforced subdued environments of recent years to embrace its former glory. Weโre talking large cooking pots from which the red sauce endlessly floweth, throngs of jubilant festival-goers dancing the tarantella in large fields at Marquette Park, and thrilling clashes of perhaps one of the worldโs most intense sports: bocce.
Itโs a list of festivities that would make Chef Hector Boyardee himself proud, bringing together many fine staples of Italian-American culture into one place. The festival, running from Thursday, June 2nd, to Saturday, June 4th, is a wild three-day party; itโs a Mediterranean-style version of barbecue fest, where instead of pork there are enough noodles to make a bridge across the Mississippi. Itโs fine enough to hang out, listen to some music, and peruse the festivities. But the real fun is in the cook-off, where various teams pack into their tents as they attempt to create the best spaghetti gravy on site or other Italian entrees and desserts. (Pro tip: try to link up with someone who has an invite to one of the cooking tents. The experience is far superior that way.)
If you need an extra glass of wine, toss the kids over to the carnival rides at Luigi Land before popping open another bottle. Thereโs fun aplenty, and while we may not be in Rome, well, โฆ do as the Romans do anyway. โ Samuel X. Cicci
Learn more about Italian Fest dates and tickets at memphisitalianfestival.org.

Summer Reading
This issue is jam-packed with ways to get out and experience hot fun in the Memphis summertime. But this oneโs for the fans of air-conditioning.
There are no end of book events in the Bluff City this summer. First on our list is the 36th anniversary celebration at Comics & Collectibles Saturday, June 4th, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. General manager Donny Juengling says the store opened in 1986 and, โWeโre really just thankful that weโve been in business that long.โ There is a 20 percent off sale, and illustrator Scott Kolins will be on site for the event.
Next up, 901 Comics is celebrating the storeโs sixth anniversary on Saturday, June 4th. Writer and illustrator Al Milgrom will be there signing books. โYou can walk back in the back room and pick up a book from the โ70s, โ80s, โ90s, and he probably worked on it,โ says Shannon Merritt, who co-founded the store with Jaime Wright. โWhen we opened this thing, we werenโt sure if it was going to last a year,โ Merritt says.
Why not make Saturday a book-stravaganza? Hit two comic shop anniversary parties, then stop by Novel at 6 p.m. for the launch of Finding Jupiter, the new novel by former Memphian Kelis Rowe. โKelis grew up in Memphis, where she had her first big love as a teenager,โ the event announcement says. โShe did not see herself or her big love reflected in the pages of a YA novel at the time and now writes contemporary YA to give Black young people more reflections of themselves and their love to enjoy.โ
For less time-sensitive book needs, consider going to Burkeโs Book Store or DeMoir Books & Things, perhaps to scope out a new novel, short story collection, or poetry book from a local author. Jeremee DeMoir just restocked copies of Memphis by Tara M. Stringfellow โ for the fourth time โ and Burkeโs has signed copies, as does Novel. Memphis made the list of The Bitter Southernerโs โ2022 Summer Reading Roundup,โ so itโs not just me begging you to read the beautiful debut.
However you get your fiction fix, thereโs no better time than summer to kick back with a good book. โ Jesse Davis

Summer Kisses, Winter Tears: Elvis Week
Some of you out there have never been to Graceland โ you know who you are. But this is as good a year as any to immerse yourself in our very own pop culture phenomenon, and get it on with Elvis. Itโs now or never, baby.
The 2022 Elvis Week 45th anniversary celebration happens from August 9th through the 17th, rain or shine, with or without hound dogs. Just bring your burning love. And youโd better snap to it since some of the Elvis 45 packages and events are already sold out.
But thereโs still plenty in store. There will be special guests, notably Priscilla Presley and Jerry Schilling (among the few living Memphis Mafia members). Theyโll be at several events and will even lead tours of the mansion.
There will be plenty of music, much of it provided by Elvis Tribute Artists past and present. The Ultimate Elvis Tribute Artist Contest runs through the week with hopeful Elvii turning on the tunes and the charm. And winners of past contests will be livening things up as well. For one, the 2011 winner Cody Ray Slaughter (who portrayed Elvis in the traveling production of the Tony Award-winning musical Million Dollar Quartet) will headline a concert at the Graceland Soundstage. And for another, Dean Z (he won in 2013) will be hosting several events during the week.
Meanwhile, musicians Terry Mike Jeffrey and Andy Childs will host a tuneful reminiscence that includes TCB band members. And thereโs a concert experience at Graceland Soundstage with Elvisโ image backed by live musicians. Pretty much everywhere you turn, youโll see and hear the King of Rock-and-Roll.
For fans who need more than music and celebrity, there will be live tour guides throughout Graceland Mansion celebrating the 40th year of it being opened to the public. (And even a โHidden Graceland Tourโ to see what most mortals cannot.) Go farther afield if you want and take an excursion to Tupelo to see Elvisโ birthplace and other landmarks.
There are themed dance parties throughout, plenty of Elvis art, an Elvis karaoke for the brave, and even a bingo contest. Thatโs alright mama, any way you do. Not enough of a mix for ya? Keep in mind that there will be plenty of gospel music as well as Elvira: Mistress of the Dark. Not kidding.
The big draw, of course, is the Candlelight Vigil on August 15th. Get your candle and walk on the grounds of Graceland to the gravesite along with thousands of fans.
Elvis really is everywhere, so follow that dream. โ Jon W. Sparks
Best to get tickets sooner rather than later at graceland.com/elvis-week-tickets. For ticket questions, call Graceland Reservations at 800-238-2000 or
332-3322, or email reservations@graceland.com.

Summer at the Movies
Memorial Day weekend began the summer blockbuster season with the strong pairing of Top Gun: Maverick and The Bobโs Burgers Movie.
This week, David Cronenbergโs Crimes of the Future marks the legendary Canadian auteurโs return to the body horror genre he pioneered. On June 10th, the dinosaurs are back, theyโre mad, and theyโre going to the mall in Jurassic World Dominion. Chris Evans provides the voice for the Toy Story astronaut in Pixarโs Lightyear, due June 17th. The next week, Memphisโ favorite son gets a blown-up biopic from Baz Luhrmann. Elvis stars Austin Butler as the man who would be king, and Tom Hanks as his Machiavellian manager Col. Tom Parker.
On July 8th, Marvel comes roaring back with Thor: Love and Thunder, with Chris Hemsworth coming out of semi-retirement to thwart the God Butcher (Christian Bale, in his Marvel debut), only to find that his ex-girlfriend Jane Foster (Natalie Portman) is now wielding the magic hammer. July 15th offers something completely different in Where the Crawdads Sing, a Southern Gothic whodunit produced by Reese Witherspoon. One of the most hotly anticipated releases of the summer is Nope, director Jordan Peeleโs third sci-fi/horror outing. The trailer for this one, coming July 22nd, looks spectacular. Then on July 29th, the DC Legion of Super-Pets boasts an all-star voice cast including Dwayne Johnson as Krypto the Superdog.
August 5th weekend is crowded with new titles, including the slasher comedy Bodies Bodies Bodies, a new entry in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, and the Brad Pitt action comedy Bullet Train. Finally, the summer season closes magically with Mad Max director George Millerโs Three Thousand Years of Longing starring Tilda Swinton as a shy professor who is offered three wishes by a djinn, played by Idris Elba. โ Chris McCoy

Summer Classics: Cemetery Cinema
Thatโs not exactly what Rick, aka Humphrey Bogart, says to Ilsa, aka Ingrid Bergman, in the 1942 classic, Casablanca, but if the plot involved Elmwood Cemeteryโs โCemetery Cinema,โ everyoneโs favorite nightclub owner (Rickโs Cafe, remember?) might say something like that.
โWe show classics or very popular films in the cemetery on specific nights,โ says Elmwood executive director Kim Bearden.
โOf all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into my cemetery to watch a movie.โ
Casablanca will be the featured movie at 8:15ish (depends on when the sun goes down) Friday, June 3rd. Gates open at 6:30 p.m.
The movie showings are fundraisers for the cemetery, Bearden says. โEvent goers bring lawn chairs and they set up on the driveway in front of the cottage.โ
Elmwood provides a food truck, but moviegoers are invited to bring their own food. As for adult beverages, Bearden says, โWe say coolers are allowed.โ
Movies are shown on the roof of the 1866 cottage used for offices at Elmwood, she says. The circa 1886 cottage, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, is the only example of โVictorian Gothic carpenter cottage architectureโ in Shelby County. โSo, the roof on the cottage is in the Gothic style and has a very high pitch. Because of the high pitch we were able to project films on the roof and people can see them from the drive.โ
Cemetery Cinema isnโt a scary movie series; Elmwood, which began the movie showings in 2016, recently aired the 1961 Walt Disney film, The Parent Trap, starring Hayley Mills as twin sisters. They will show the 1964 film, My Fair Lady, on June 17th.
Elmwood has shown โsome of the old classic black-and-whiteโ horror movies, including the 1931 movie, Frankenstein, starring Boris Karloff.
But there are some types of horror movies they would not show. โProbably slasher flicks,โ Bearden says.
Tickets to Casablanca, which are $15, must be purchased in advance at elmwoodcemetery.org. โ Michael Donahue
Summer History: A Pugilistic Milestone
On Saturday, June 8, 2002, a full generation ago, the Pyramid on the Memphis riverfront was the site for the kind of spectacle it might have been created for: the heavyweight championship fight between Mike Tyson and Lennox Lewis.
The Pyramid was already on the way out as a showcase arena after the NBAโs recently arrived Grizzlies had turned it down as outmoded for their purposes and forced the city and county to go on the hook for a new facility, the soon-to-be FedExForum.
The Big Fight was a sort of Last Hurrah for the place, arranged by then Memphis Mayor Willie Herenton in an inspired act of personal diplomacy that may rank, historically, as his greatest single achievement. The fight was intended to resolve lingering doubts about the rightful ownership of boxingโs most prestigious title. And landing it in Memphis bailed out the promoters who had seen all the big traditional venues shun the opportunity to host the event after Tyson, already a pariah for biting off a chunk of a previous opponentโs ear, brawled with Lewis at the fightersโ signing.
Orphan event though it was, the fight was a genuine extravaganza. Co-produced for television by long-standing rivals HBO and Showtime, it was then, as Wikipedia notes, โthe highest-grossing event in pay-per-view history, generating U.S. $106.9 million from 1.95 million buys in the U.S.โ
On hand to help fill the Pyramid were such celebrities as Samuel L. Jackson, Denzel Washington, Tom Cruise, Britney Spears, Clint Eastwood, Ben Affleck, Hugh Hefner, Halle Berry, Richard Gere, Dwayne โThe Rockโ Johnson, Vince McMahon, The Undertaker, LL Cool J, Tyra Banks, Wesley Snipes, Kevin Bacon, Chris Webber, Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Morgan Freeman, Alec Baldwin, and heavyweight fighter Evander Holyfield โ the latter having been the victim of the aforementioned ear-biting.
And I was there, at ringside, covering the fight in what was my all-time plum assignment from Time magazine, for whom I worked as a part-time associate or โstringer.โ (Curious readers may consult the magazineโs files for โWho Gets the Black Eye?โ โ published online on the day of the fight.)
Given the ferocity of Tysonโs style, the fight had more than its share of excitement, but the rangy Lewis was the superior boxer and outlasted Iron Mike, knocking him out in the 8th round, ending all doubt as to who was champ and closing out the Tyson era of big-time boxing. โ Jackson Baker

