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    The King Inspired A Houston Family to dream of success

    In Elvis the Newinns Trust: "Welcome to Vietnamese Graceland — Houston style"

    Carol Rust
    Feb 17, 2010 | 7:39 pm
    More tributes to Elvis

    A beaming Henry Newinn taps the microphone with his finger as he stands on a cramped stage in his dining room. Behind him, a red neon sign says, “Elvis.” All around him, likenesses of the king of rock 'n' roll appear on plates, lampshades, canvases, the doors of an armoire, a skillet hanging on the kitchen wall, on the labels of a collection of Elvis wines.

    “Welcome to Vietnamese Graceland, Houston-style,” he says. “We wish you many happinesses.”

    He hands the mic to his 36-year-old son, Elvis John, as the intro to “I Can’t Help Falling in Love” swells from the speakers of a nearby karaoke machine. Henry and wife Tania smile dreamily as John’s buttery baritone begins: “Wise men say…only fools rush in….”

    They’ve heard it before, hundreds of times. Henry, too, performs the King’s hits. For the Newinns, there’s no such thing as too much Elvis.

    They have transformed their 4,000-square-foot house in west Houston into a live-in shrine to the megastar, with framed vintage photos staggered up the stairs, old TV Guides with Elvis’ face on the covers stacked on the coffee table, Elvis hand towels and shower curtain in the bathroom, a Graceland dollhouse, stacks of guitar-shaped candy tins bearing his autograph and a wardrobe of rhinestone-studded jumpsuits that John, a sales coordinator for a local TV station, wears when he performs at charity fundraisers.

    And their two-car garage has never housed an automobile. It is a larger-than-life continuation of the shrine, with a robotic Elvis bust that moves its head from side to side as it croons the King’s hits when Henry pushes a button.

    So what’s all the fuss about Elvis? To the Newinns, Elvis epitomizes America, and America is “the top land of opportunity,” Henry says – and their adopted home.

    Henry was a teenager when American GIs first brought Elvis music to Vietnam in 1956. “I loved it, and I went crazy when I first saw Jailhouse Rock. All the teenagers did. We wanted to be like Elvis.”

    Henry started performing Elvis’ hits at his sister’s nightclub in Saigon, curling his hair into a pompadour style with heated ivory chopsticks in the absence of hairdryers. He later went to work for the U.S. State Department in a province outside Saigon where, in 1975, he got word that advancing communist soldiers were 15 miles away. They grabbed their infant son John and a pillowcase stuffed with his diapers and fled, rowing out into the South China Sea where U.S. Marines with the 7th Fleet picked them up and eventually took them to the United States after the fall of Saigon. He and Tania finally landed in Houston, lured by warm weather similar to that in Vietnam and the large Asian community. Lonely and homesick, they scraped by on Henry’s scant wages as a busboy.

    Then one day, Henry was driving down Telephone Road and saw a man selling black velvet portraits of Elvis from the back of his pickup. He saved his tips and returned with $5 to buy one. It became the family’s inspiration.

    “We were in the ocean, and Elvis was our life preserver,” Henry says. “He gave us confidence to continue working in America.”

    Both obtained engineering degrees and got jobs at large Houston companies. Son John and daughter Carol, who was born in the United States, grew up performing for the family and became confident on the stage. John became “Elvis John” and has won top honors as an Elvis impersonator in competition at Graceland. He recently taped an Elvis tribute to celebrate the Chinese New Year for a local Vietnamese TV station, one of many requests for performances he gets throughout the year. Carol became the first Vietnamese-American cheerleader for the Houston Texans in 2006 and now works as a banker in Los Angeles.

    Henry and Tania used Elvis’ life as an example to their children. “We taught them that Elvis moved from scratch up to the top, and they could achieve great things, too, because Elvis did, and because they live in America, where everybody has a chance,” says Henry.

    In the garage, a certain black velvet portrait, a little worse for the wear, has the central place of honor on the wall, with smaller pictures of Elvis on either side. Of all their memorabilia, it is their favorite.

    It reminds them of their carefree, Elvis-crazed days in Vietnam before the communists came, of their first months in Houston feeling isolated, living on the edge of poverty and missing their home half a world away. Henry can still feel the surge of joy that rose inside him when he first spotted the man on Telephone Road selling the portraits and the determination it inspired inside him to thrive.

    More than anything, it reminds them of how far they’ve come. It’s their story of success. It’s Elvis’ story.

    Elvis John, left, and Henry Newinn

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    Movie Review

    Rachel McAdams goes feral in Sam Raimi's gory new comedy Send Help

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 29, 2026 | 2:30 pm
    Rachel McAdams in Send Help
    Photo by Brook Rushton
    Rachel McAdams in Send Help.

    Director Sam Raimi has gone through different phases as a filmmaker, including leading the first Spider-Man trilogy and joining the MCU with Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. But he first gained notice with the gory and funny Evil Dead movies, a sensibility he’s returning to with his latest film, Send Help.

    Linda Liddle (Rachel McAdams) is a meek and eccentric middle manager at a financial firm that’s just named Bradley Preston (Dylan O’Brien) as its new nepo CEO. Bradley’s dad had promised Linda a promotion to vice president, but she gets passed over in favor of one of Bradley’s frat buddies, sending her into a mild rage. Still, she gets invited along on a planned business trip to Thailand, during which she hopes to prove her worth.

    Unfortunately for most of the passengers on the private plane, it crashes into the ocean, leaving only Linda and Bradley alive on a deserted island. Linda, who has privately developed survival skills, adapts quickly to the forbidding environment, while Bradley tries to revert to bossing her around. But Linda quickly understands the power dynamic has shifted, and she uses this knowledge to try to keep Bradley in line, turning their stranding into a battle of wills.

    Directed by Raimi and written by Damian Shannon and Mark Swift, the film is the classic “so bad it’s good” kind of experience. McAdams, inarguably an attractive and charming person, is given stringy hair, an antisocial personality, and quirks like eating tuna fish at her desk to make her as off-putting as possible. Bradley, along with almost everyone else at her office, is stereotyped just as hard in order to set up the twist of fate.

    When the action shifts to the island, things get even more over the top. The audience has already been primed for Linda to demonstrate her survival expertise, but the film does way more than just show her making fire. Whether it’s flawlessly building a shelter or hunting a wild boar, everything Linda does is portrayed in a slightly off-kilter manner. Then they turn everything up to 11, indulging in gore that is so unnecessary that you can’t help but laugh.

    The filmmakers prove they’re in on the joke the rest of the way, including a variety of preposterous but hilarious scenarios that would cause massive eyerolls if they were actually trying to take the film seriously. While they do a great job of showing Linda’s ability to handle herself in the wild, they also show that she is somehow the only person in the world who could get a glow up after a plane crash and weeks living in nature.

    McAdams, an Oscar-nominated actor for Spotlight, is way too high class for a movie like this, which makes her presence here all the more interesting. She is all-in on whatever Raimi wants her to do, and she’s at her most fun when she goes the animalistic route. O’Brien, who was great in the recent Twinless, doesn’t get as much of an opportunity to show his range, but he still proves to be an interesting foil for her.

    Were it released in any other month, Send Help might be looked at as bottom of the barrel material. But with the movie year just getting started, it’s easier to forgive its outrageous plot twists and just have fun, especially since Raimi and his team put the rest of the film together so well.

    ---

    Send Help opens in theaters on January 30.

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