• The song was performed by
Levi Kreis in the 2010 musical
Million Dollar Quartet, portraying Jerry Lee Lewis. • The title of the 1989
biopic,
Great Balls of Fire! about Lewis, played by
Dennis Quaid, is derived from the song title. • In 2017,
WWE held a professional wrestling event titled
Great Balls of Fire, referencing the song.
Jerry Lawler's personal attorney, who also represents Jerry Lee Lewis, informed him that the singer had actually
trademarked the phrase, prompting Lawler to inform them of this. He stated that he "put him in touch with the WWE people, gave him a name. Apparently, he called them and got everything worked out. Not only are they using the name, [but also] they are using Jerry Lee's song." •
Ric Flair revealed he started using his iconic "Wooo!" catchphrase in 1974 after he heard Jerry Lee Lewis sing the lyric, “Goodness gracious, great balls of fire, woo!” •
Cree Summer, at age 17, sang the song as the opening and closing for Madballs’
Escape from Orb. •
Dolly Parton sang it at the grand opening of
FireChaser Express. In 1998, the 1957 recording of "Great Balls of Fire" by Jerry Lee Lewis on Sun Records was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.
Top Gun franchise In the 1986 film
Top Gun, LTJG Nick "Goose" Bradshaw (portrayed by
Anthony Edwards) plays the song in a bar with his family and Pete "Maverick" Mitchell (
Tom Cruise). The song is available on the
Top Gun soundtrack special edition released in 1999. The song is performed again in the sequel, the 2022 film
Top Gun: Maverick by Goose's son LT Bradley "Rooster" Bradshaw (portrayed by
Miles Teller). During the editing process, the song was found to evoke flashbacks of Goose’s death while Maverick watches from outside the hard deck bar. Teller's performance is included on that film's soundtrack
Top Gun: Maverick (Music from the Motion Picture), on which it is labeled as a live performance.
Paramount Pictures later released the extended scene of Teller's performance as Rooster on
YouTube on June 16, 2022. ==References==