Behind the Scenes of Viva Las Vegas: Bloopers You Didn’t Catch
What made Viva Las Vegas unforgettable wasn’t just the racing or the music — it was the electric pairing of Elvis Presley and Ann-Margret. During filming in 1963, cast and crew quickly realized their on-screen spark came from something very real. Rehearsals reportedly carried a playful tension that translated directly into the camera, especially during the number “The Lady Loves Me,” which many still cite as one of the most flirtatious musical duets of the era.
Off set, the situation was delicate. Presley was publicly linked to Priscilla Beaulieu, and his image was tightly controlled by his management team. Ann-Margret, only 22 at the time, was rapidly rising in Hollywood, and her presence in the film was so strong that some theaters promoted her name as prominently as his. Director George Sidney later suggested the pair’s authenticity sometimes slowed production — not from errors, but because genuine emotion kept surfacing in their performances.
The result is a film where the attraction feels unscripted. More than six decades later, Viva Las Vegas is remembered less as a racing musical and more as a captured moment: two stars meeting at exactly the right time, creating a chemistry that couldn’t be manufactured and still feels alive on screen today.