APPRAISER
So you brought in this 1950s "Louisiana Hayride" program, but the reason I was really excited when you came to the table was the fact that we have this on the back of it. And what can you tell me about this and how you got it?
GUEST
Well, when I was in high school, in the '50s, we loved to go to Shreveport, to the "Louisiana Hayride," on the weekends. My sister and I and some more girls would go often, and I was about 16 years old then-- a long time ago. And Elvis was there, and Johnny Cash, and they weren't popular like they are now. So, anyway, Elvis was standing on the steps there by himself, and so I just had this book, and I went up to him and asked him if he'd mind giving me his autograph.
APPRAISER
Wow, and what did you think of Elvis?
GUEST
(chuckling): Oh.
APPRAISER
(laughs)
GUEST
Really handsome.
APPRAISER
Yeah?
GUEST
Really good-looking. He was young, then, too. You know, it was before he married. And I heard he made $18 a performance at that time. So he was making big money, wasn't he?
APPRAISER
Oh, my goodness. Even with inflation, that's still not a lot of money.
GUEST
No, it wasn't.
APPRAISER
And then you also have, I see, another one over here. How did you get the other signature?
GUEST
Johnny Cash, it was at the same time. He was there, too, and he was just standing in the doorway during intermission, waiting to go back on.
APPRAISER
What did you think of him?
And went up to him and got his autograph. (chuckling)
Another handsome one.
APPRAISER
We see a lot of autographs here at the Roadshow.
GUEST
Yeah.
APPRAISER
One, you've procured these firsthand.
GUEST
Right.
APPRAISER
And I believe you 100% that you got them. If you had been someone who purchased this at an auction and brought it to the table, I would have looked at these signatures and said, "They're fake."
GUEST
Really?
APPRAISER
Because they looked really weird. They're not the Elvis signature we're used to seeing, and it's not the Johnny Cash signature that we're used to seeing. But we think that this is-- we've tried to nail it down. With more time, we could probably get very specific about the date, but we believe it's 1955. And at that time, these guys weren't really that popular yet.
GUEST
No, no, they weren't. (chuckling)
APPRAISER
And I think that really what we have is such early signatures, that they actually hadn't signed enough to develop the signature that we're all used to seeing by now.
GUEST
Right.
APPRAISER
So that is pretty extraordinary, and it really affects the value. And to have these two together...
GUEST
Yeah.
APPRAISER
Because if we set this, the period here, Elvis started doing the "Louisiana Hayride" shows mid-1954.
GUEST
Yeah.
APPRAISER
He'd taped "That's All Right" at Sun Studios, and that was kind of the song that he led with. Colonel Parker got him a one-year contract. And so he ended up staying until about 1956.
GUEST
Yeah.
APPRAISER
And that's that famous show where Horace Logan says, "Elvis has left the building."
GUEST
Right.
APPRAISER
That's all happening at the "Louisiana Hayride."
GUEST
Yeah.
APPRAISER
So it's a very historic venue. But to also have Johnny Cash there.
GUEST
Yeah, the two of them.
APPRAISER
And all of this happens a year before the "Million Dollar Quartet," where you have Johnny Cash, and Elvis and Jerry Lee Lewis, and Carl Perkins recording at Sun Studios together. The "Louisiana Hayride" is such a historic venue because it launched the career of so many country artists. I mean, the list really goes on for days.
GUEST
Yeah.
APPRAISER
And it was just the place to be seen. The program itself...
GUEST
Mm-hmm.
APPRAISER
They sell for about $50, $75 when they come up. And the other interesting thing about this program is, again, because it's, it's pre-fame for Elvis and Johnny Cash...
GUEST
Yeah.
APPRAISER
They're not even in this program.
GUEST
No, no, they're not.
APPRAISER
They were not famous enough yet to even be listed among the performers at the "Louisiana Hayride."
GUEST
No.
APPRAISER
So, it's, it's fascinating. Together, having these two guys at that time...
GUEST
Yeah.
APPRAISER
At auction for the program, I would put between $5,000 and $7,000.
GUEST (gasps)
Oh! Really? I had no idea. Really? That's fantastic. I'm glad I kept it all these years. Oh, I was about to run out of my bucket list of getting on the ANTIQUES ROADSHOW. I was hoping I could come some time, so this is wonderful. And at the time, I was wishing I had a piece of paper that I could have had them autograph, but it's probably better that it's on the "Hayride" book. That helps.
APPRAISER
Way better.
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