From showgirl feathers to shimmering chandeliers, casino kitsch finds
new life
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[October 22, 2024]
By RIO YAMAT
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Crystal chandeliers that once glimmered above a swanky
lounge, bright blue costume feathers that cloaked shimmying showgirls,
and fake palm trees that evoked a desert oasis are just some the
artifacts making their way from the latest casino graveyards of Las
Vegas into Sin City history.
The kitsch comes from the Tropicana, which was demolished in a
spectacular implosion Oct. 9 to make room for a new baseball stadium;
and from The Mirage, the Strip's first megaresort, which dealt its last
cards in July and is set to reopen as a new casino nearly 40 years after
it originally debuted.
As the neon lights dimmed and the final chips were cashed in, a
different kind of spectacle unfolded behind the casino doors. Millions
of items big and small were meticulously sorted and sold, donated and
discarded.
“You take this hotel-casino and you turn it upside down, shake
everything out of it until it’s empty,” said Frank Long, whose family
business, International Content Liquidations, led the effort to unload
the Tropicana's merchandise before its implosion.
Long, 70, a third-generation auctioneer, likes to say he’s in the
business of “going, going, gone." He jokes that his Ohio home is
“decorated in early hotel,” having helped clear out dozens of them as
well as casinos across the country. In Las Vegas, that includes the
Dunes, Aladdin and Landmark.
“Vegas buyers are special,” Long said. “This is their community, and
they want a piece of it.”
Trolling for a piece of history
On a hot day in June, two months after the Tropicana shut its doors,
Long welcomed buyers onto the casino floor.
The whirring slot machines were long gone, transferred to other casinos.
In their place sat an odd collection of things: desks and chairs, rattan
night stands, table lamps, pillows and sofas. Piled high in what was
once the high-limit gambling room were mattresses and box springs. Small
crystal chandeliers going for $1,000 hung suspended from old luggage
carts.
“Fill up your entire truck for 100 bucks,” Long told shoppers, grinning.
Buyers of all ages filled wagons and luggage carts with arm chairs
priced at $25, mirrors at $6, floor lamps at $28. Behind red velvet
ropes where guests used to check in, customers waiting to pay stood in
line with 43-inch flatscreen televisions. One man hugged a mattress and
box spring, trying to keep them from toppling over.
In the Tropicana's vast conference hall, piles of large vintage
spotlights labeled “FOLIES” sat in waist-high bins marked for donation.
They were off-limits to buyers, destined for the Las Vegas Showgirl
Museum.
The Tropicana was home to the city’s longest-running show, “Folies
Bergere,” a topless revue imported from Paris. Its nearly 50-year run
helped make the feathered showgirl one of the most recognizable Las
Vegas icons.
Elvis' image among the forgotten treasures
One of Long's favorite parts about the job is sifting through forgotten
corners of casinos.
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People line up to pay for items during a sale at the shuttered
Tropicana hotel-casino Saturday, May 25, 2024, in Las Vegas. (AP
Photo/John Locher)
Inside the Tropicana, his team
rescued black-and-white photographs of stars who wined, dined and
headlined there. His favorite was a candid photo of Elvis Presley
found in an unused office.
In its heyday, the casino played host to A-list stars including
Elizabeth Taylor and Debbie Reynolds, Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis
Jr.
Long said his people have fun with the job, too. The tedium of
collecting several thousand pillows from the Tropicana's two hotel
towers turned into “the world's biggest pillow fight."
When Sarah Quigley learned the Tropicana was closing, she knew she
needed to act fast if she wanted some of the casino's historical
records for the Special Collections and Archives at the University
of Nevada, Las Vegas.
Quigley, director of the special collections, wasn't the first to
call.
But after a meeting with the Tropicana's management team, UNLV's
special collections acquired five boxes of records from 1956 to
2024, including vintage 1970s ads for the Tropicana's showroom, old
restaurant menus, architectural blueprints and original film reels
of the dancing “Folies” showgirls rehearsing in the mid-1970s.
Salvaging the neon Vegas is famed for
The Neon Museum, which rescues iconic Las Vegas signs, got the
Tropicana’s red one and The Mirage’s original archway that welcomed
guests for 35 years. In a herculean effort, the 30-foot sign was
placed on a flatbed truck in August. A chunk of the Strip closed so
the piece could be slowly driven to its new home at the museum.
The Mirage opened with a Polynesian theme in 1989, spurring a
building boom on the Strip that stretched through the 1990s. Its
volcano fountain was one of the first sidewalk attractions, and
tourists flocked to the casino to see Cirque du Soleil set to The
Beatles or Siegfried and Roy taming white tigers.
In just a few years, the Strip's skyline will look different. The
Mirage will become the Hard Rock Las Vegas in 2027, with a hotel
tower shaped like a guitar. The following year, the new baseball
stadium is expected to open on the former site of the Tropicana.
While the last of the Tropicana's buildings came tumbling down in 22
seconds, pieces of the Las Vegas landmark have found a new life in
nearby museums, curated collections and homes.
“There's history here,” said Aaron Berger, executive director of the
Neon Museum. “You just have to look past the glitter to find it."
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Associated Press video journalist Ty O'Neil in Las Vegas contributed
to this report.
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