Thanks, all. It was the reflections from the plexiglass, and the poor angle for appliance gawking, that prevented me from seeing the range very well. It is a funny arrangement with the big Thermador cooktop and those rather small ovens. I guess Elvis's cook liked electric cooking. From the corner of the control panel in the video, I thought those three round lights on the control panel looked sort of Tappanish. I don't think the white knobe and the blue on the control panel look as dressy as the ones with black knobs and accents. Another appliance mystery solved.
Jon, we have seen that even Monarch had a range like this and Westinghouse, in their Continental had a cooktop where the back two elements disappeared when the front of the cooktop was flush with the cabinet. That was in the early model without the lower oven. Norge had a high level oven range but I think it had a lower oven, too. There was also a Thermador that was styled like the Tappan and don't forget the one by Modern Maid which could be used as the top half of the cook and clean center. Does anyone remember all of the Magic Chef high oven ranges in both gas and electric? Friends of my parents had the 36" wide model with the upper and lower ovens. The high rise in Silver Spring where I lived had ranges by Welbilt and in the non-studio apartments, they had 30" gas ranges with high and low ovens. The upper oven was of a funny design with the baking compartment floor about 5 or 6 inches above the oven bottom and the burner was visible under the floor of the baking compartment and I guess you could broil under the burner. It looked like a tough thing to keep clean. In the 70s, many of these manufacturers put a microwave oven on top and that's when Litton got into the range game, sadly with a losing lineup.