THE KID FROM THE ORPHANAGE WHO MADE ELVIS ASK FOR HIS GUITAR He didn’t grow up in a house. He grew up in foster homes and orphanages — shuffled around Atlanta for seven years before he even had a family again. But somewhere in that chaos, a little boy picked up a guitar and said five words that changed everything: “I’m gonna be a star.” No one believed him. Why would they? Jerry Reed signed his first record deal at 18. It flopped. He joined the army. Came back. Failed again. Sold records “like hotcakes — 50 cents a stack,” as he joked. Then Elvis Presley heard “Guitar Man” — and couldn’t record it without Jerry in the room. No session player in Nashville could replicate that sound. Only the kid from the orphanage could. 300 songs written. Two Grammys. Country Music Hall of Fame. Movies with Burt Reynolds. A guitar style so unique they had to invent new ways to describe it. And through all of it — one woman. Priscilla. 49 years. No scandal. No drama. Just a man who loved his wife, raised two daughters, and never forgot where he came from. He didn’t call himself a singer. He didn’t call himself an actor. He called himself an “entertainer” — and said that covered it pretty well. Born with nothing. Became everything. Stayed grateful.
The Kid From the Orphanage Who Made Elvis Ask for His Guitar Jerry Reed did not begin life with the…