WHO REALLY COINED THE PHRASE?
Horace Logan
Don Walker,
Staff Writer of the Shreveport Times
Former Louisiana Hayride producer and emcee Horace Logan - better known as the man who coined the phrase... "Elvis has left the building" - died October, 2002 aged 86 in Southwest Texas .
It was Logan who introduced radio listeners to the Louisiana Hayride when the country show hit the airwaves in its first broadcast in 1948. The Hayride boosted the careers of 25 artists - including Elvis Presley - into national prominence.
Logan began in radio when he was 16, after winning a contest to become an announcer on KWKH-AM. In 1998, he authored Elvis, Hank & Me, a memoir of his decade (1948-1958) as the original producer of the legendary Hayride, a country music show performed before a live KWKH audience in Shreveport 's Municipal Auditorium.
In 1956, as he tried to quiet a frenzied Hayride audience after another Presley performance, Logan announced, "Elvis has left the building."
"He was in charge of booking artists on the Hayride. I give him lots of credit for making the Hayride what it was," said Tillman Franks, a veteran Shreveport musician and songwriter who was a close friend of Logan 's. Franks became producer of the Hayride when Logan retired.
Logan was a colorful personality and Hayride emcee who "came out all dressed in black like a cowboy with a black hat and actually wore pistols," said Maggie Warwick, Shreveport singer and songwriter. Logan booked her on the Hayride after she and her sister won a talent show in Texas. Her first appearance on the Hayride was in 1957.


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