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"The music and the fashion of that era was the ultimate," said one of the contestants, David Lochner of suburban Philadelphia. "Clothes looked much better. People got all dressed up." His partner, Sascha Newberg, said the dancing of that era required much more involvement than it does today. "You meet so many different people, and everyone has their job and their role, with all the moves," she said. "Instead of just sitting in a bar smoking, you have a real social interaction. A lot of people know nothing about this kind of music or dancing. It's like looking at a rotary phone and hearing it ring." On New Year's Eve, Resorts dressed six of its cocktail servers in flapper costumes, with black sequined headbands and feathers tucked inside, strands of pearls cascading down one side. A strolling violinist in a zoot suit greets arriving gamblers in the lobby, a singing bartender is memorizing all the top hits of the
'20s. Most of the casinos workers will don those costumes for good when Resorts has its grand re-opening around Memorial Day weekend. When "Boardwalk Empire" debuted in September, Caesars erected a giant billboard with the show's logo in its lobby, and it quickly became one of the most photographed spots in Atlantic City. Bally's painted murals of '20s-era bathing beauties on its Boardwalk facade, and started a self-guided walking tour of "Boardwalk Empire"-related spots. And casinos throughout the city offered food, drink and hotel promotions geared to the series, like hotel rooms (long-since sold out) for $19.20 a night, dinner and buffet specials for the same price, whiskey-based drinks straight from the show, and even old-fashioned straight-razor shaves in a barber shop chair, just like those Nucky Johnson used to enjoy. "People dig knowing where all those characters went and what they did," Marrandino said. "This thing is hot right now."
[Associated
Press;
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