Pioneering Women of Las Vegas Journalism

The Pioneering Women of Las Vegas Journalism

 

From Florence Lee Jones Cahlan to Paula Francis, women have been at the forefront of journalism in Las Vegas.  As writers, reporters and television anchors, they have worked hard to be taken seriously and to prove that they are as capable of doing the job as men.

Myram Borders, the first female UPI Bureau Chief in Las Vegas.  "They didn't think a woman could handle the job".  She proved them wrong.

Gwen Castaldi, on-air reporter for KLAS-8, reporter and anchor for KVBC-3, news director for Channel 5. She has covered everyone and everything from Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal, Tony Spilotro and the Mob to the Pepcon explosion.  She is being honored by the Southern Nevada Women's History Project this evening.

Mary Hausch has played a role in Las Vegas journalism for more than 35 years.  She worked at the Review-Journal for 19 years as a reporter, assistant city editor, city editor and as managing editor for more than a decade. She was the first woman to be a city editor or managing editor in Las Vegas. For 16 years she has been a journalism professor at UNLV, specializing in media ethics and print journalism courses. She is a past president of the Las Vegas chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists..

Mary Manning, long time reporter with the Las Vegas Sun.

Jane Ann Morrison, long time reporter for the Las Vegas Review Journal and now a columnist for that paper.  She was there with Gwen and Myram covering the "Casino" era scandals of skimming, money laundering and the Mob. 

Liz Wilson Vlaming, former on-air reporter for KLVX-10.  She also worked together at KVBC-3 with Gwen Castaldi.

 

Wednesday, March 21st

Nevada State Museum

700 Twin Lakes Drive

Lorenzi Park

 

Reception from 5:00 - 6:30 pm

The Reception includes a book signing of The Skirts That Swept the Desert Floor which features 100 biographical profiles of Nevada Women.

Award Ceremony at 6:30 pm

Discussion to follow.

 

This event made possible, in part, by the generous support of KVBC-3 and KLAS-8.


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Posted on Wednesday, March 7, 2007 at 4:25PM by Registered CommenterLasVegasLynn in | CommentsPost a Comment

Classic Las Vegas Blog: Additions are coming

We have added some new features!  We hope you enjoy the Las Vegas on Film and Las Vegas on Television listings.

We tried to be as comprehensive as possible with these listings but if you know of a gem or two we missed, please don't hesitate to let us know!

Hopefully in the next few weeks we will be taking down the coming soon banners on the other pages and in their place will be lots of historical information and pictures.

So, please stay tuned, subscribe and be ready to check them all out! 

Posted on Wednesday, February 7, 2007 at 12:12AM by Registered CommenterLasVegasLynn in | CommentsPost a Comment

Classic Las Vegas Blog: Mondo Lounge Atomic Frolic

Thank you to everyone who helped make the first Mondo Lounge Atomic Frolic such a rousing success.  Everyone was great to work with and it was fun meeting so many people from different places.

The Neon Tour is going to be wonderful.  Wednesday night, (with suggestions from Paco Alvarez and Allen Sandquist), Eric Lynxwiler and I mapped out the route for the Tour.  From the Aruba to the West Side to Downtown and Motel Row to the Strip, this is a tour of Neon signage that is still working and off the beaten path.  So, if you only know the Neon of Las Vegas from the way it used to be, this is the tour for you, because there is still some left, visible and lots of historical fun.

It is a three hour tour that includes two drink stops that you won't want to miss.  The tour is one night only, Friday night, January 26th at 8:00 pm leaving from (and returning to) the Aruba Hotel on Las Vegas Blvd. South.

If you have any questions about this tour, please feel free to post them here.  

For ticket information:

http://www.mondoatomic.com/gettickets.php

Don't be discouraged by the Sold Out for Advanced Tickets for Mondo Lounge Atomic Frolic.  Tickets are still available not only for the Atomic Frolic but for the Neon Tour as well.

Hope to see on Friday night!


Over the weekend of January 26th, the Mondo Lounge Atomic Frolic will be going on at the Aruba Hotel.

 

This event is open to the public (but does require tickets) and features many different things to do.  A Burlesque evening, a Neon Bus Tour, an Architectural Driving Tour, speakers, bands and more.

 

For more information  and/or to purchase tickets toddle over to:

http://www.mondoatomic.com/

 

On Friday evening January 26th at 6:00 pm, Review Journal columnist and author Mike Weatherford will be talking about "Cult Vegas" and the Las Vegas Lounge Scene of yore.  He will also be talking on Saturday evening, Jan. 27th at 7:00 pm.

 
Also, I will be giving a talk about "Places That Aren't There Anymore" directly following Mike's talk.  Photographer Allen Sandquist is providing many of the photos for this talk.  We will have the talk on Saturday evening as well.

 
Good friends and authors, Eric Lynxwiler and Natan Marask will talk about "The Wonderful World of Neon" on Friday evening at 7:30.  This talk will also include slides and photos of wonderful neon signs.  This talk will be repeated on Saturday evening as well.

 
Be sure to sign up for the Neon Bus Tour on Friday evening after the Neon Talk.  Eric will be the host and take us all on a wonderful night time tour of Las Vegas where we will get to see beautiful neon signs from back in the day still shining bright.  The tour price includes two drink stops as well.  Eric is a great tour guide and this should be one of the highlights of the weekend.  This tour is only held on Friday night.

 
On Saturday morning, get up and head over to the Morelli House (downtown kitty corner from the old High School/now Performing Arts School) where you can purchase the tour book for the Architectural Driving Tour.  This tour book includes 164 stops along with side tours as well.  This will be a wonderful tour and the booklet you will want to keep so that you can explore the stops in more depth.  Tour Books will go on sale at the Morelli House from 10:00 am - 1:00 pm on Saturday, Jan. 27th.  Allen Sandquist and I will be maining the tables and we hope to see you there.

 
We will have copies of our DVD "The Story of Classic Las Vegas: An Overview" as well as our classy "The Story of Classic Las Vegas" tee-shirts on sale at a special Show Price.

 
We look foward to a wonderful weekend filled with good music, some history and good times.  Hope to see you there!

 For more information please go to:

http://www.mondoatomic.com/ 

Posted on Tuesday, January 16, 2007 at 12:06PM by Registered CommenterLasVegasLynn | Comments1 Comment

The Cinerama Dome: Movie Theatres of my Memory

Growing up in Las Vegas in the late 1960s and early 1970s was very different from growing up there today.  Back then, as many will, no doubt attest to, there was not much for kids to do.  We could go to Mt Charleston in the winter and play in the snow or in the summer to escape the heat.  We could go to the Lake in the summer to escape the heat.  There was the Ice Palace in Commercial Center where you could ice skate all day.

But my favorite way to spend a Saturday afternoon was at the movies.  I have always loved movies and Las Vegas, believe it or not, had some great theatres.

There was the El Portal downtown on Fremont Street.  When it opened in the late 1930s it was the first theatre to offer air conditioning.  In the 1950s and early 1960s, it often stayed open till the wee hours of the morning to accomodate the casino workers.  Back in the day, it was a segregated theatre.

The Huntridge Theatre on Charleston and Maryland Parkway was housed in a beautiful (in its heyday) Streamline Moderne building.  The Huntridge Station Post Office was right next door and the whole building was a wonder.  Lloyd and Edythe Katz who ran the theatre did not believe in segregation and so the Huntridge did not enforce it.  When I was a kid, the Huntridge is where you went to see the Disney Animated Films.  I remember going on my first date there to see "The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean" with Al Richardson.

I remember as a very young child, probably about 5 or 6, my bio-father took me to see "To Kill a Mockingbird" at the Guild Theatre just off Fremont Street.  The Guild would become an art house theatre when I was in my teens.

The Fremont Hotel had the Fremont Theatre right next door.  But my memory is hazy about it as I tend to combine it and the El Portal in my mind.

The Charleston Plaza mall housed the largest theatre of its day, The Fox.  The mall was the first indoor mall we had in Las Vegas.  The theatre, all done in red, was in the west corner of the mall.  The marquee out front was huge with lots of light bulbs.  I remember going to see "The Sound of Music" there more than once.   Later when I was a teenager, we saw "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid", "The Hot Rock" , the "Poseidin Adventure" and "The Towering Inferno" at that theatre.

We lived in Charleston Heights in the southwest corner of town (Torrey Pines and Charleston roughly) and we would catch the city bus, go downtown, transfer buses and then take another bus to either the Huntridge or the Fox.  We would catch the first bus imid- morning, stay all day at the theatre watching a double bill and then grab some dinner at Macayo Vegas and take the bus back home.  More often than not, we arrived home after dark.

Then, the Red Rock Theatre opened on West Charleston and we could walk there.  Ok, it was a long walk, but if we couldn't find another way (until Al got his driver's license)  we could walk.  It originally opened with one theatre and then expanded to three and then kept growing until it there were 11 screens under one roof.  One area was designed like a Main Street Square at the turn of the 20th Century.  We saw "The Sting" there on New Years Eve one year, "Billy Jack" (and the infamous "Trial of Billy Jack"), "American Graffitti", "The Godfather" and almost every other film made in the early and mid- 1970s.

The Boulevard Mall on Maryland Parkway was built in the mid-1960s and soon there was the Boulevard Fox theatre and the Parkway Cinemas.  We lied about our age to get into see "The Exorcist" because it was on a double bill with "The Wild Bunch" and that was the movie we really wanted to see.   I remember standing in long line with friends waiting to get into a showing of "Star Wars".

But, my two favorites were the Cinerama Dome on Paradise and the movie theatre in the original MGM Hotel (now Balley's).  The Cinerama Dome looked just like the one on Sunset Blvd here in Hollywood.  My mom took me to see "Gone with the Wind" in 70mm there in 1969 when it was reissued.  It was a wonderful theatre with tiered seating and a great sound system.  We saw "Earthquake", "The Hindenburg" and "The Three Musketeers" there over the years.  Unfortunately, the theatre bookers seemed to have a hard time getting the good first runs and the fare at the Dome was largely hit and miss. 

The theatre in the original MGM Hotel was a thing of beauty.  Lush carpet, big overstuffed love seats with lots of leg room.  There was a small table in front of each love seat.  There was a button on the front of each table.  You would press that button and a cocktail waitress would come and take your order.  The price of the movie was $2.50 and the fare changed every week.  As you entered, you got a hand-out  which gave the cast listing and a synopsis of the film.  Before each screening was a newsreel and a cartoon.  They only showed MGM films and each print was a 35mm studio print so they were gorgeous, sounded great and rarely had any scratches.  We saw many of the great MGM musicals, dramas and comedies.  A few times a year, they would show the big four:  "Gone With the Wind", "2001", "Dr Zhivago" and "Ryan's Daughter".  I loved that theatre and didn't realize how lucky we were to have it until I left home and met people from other cities that had never seen the classic studio era films on the big screen because their town didn't have a revival house.

After the movie, you could go over to Swensons and have ice cream, stroll through the Memoribilia Shop filled with posters, lobby cards and lots of Bogart and Marx Brothers collectibles.  The shop had costumes from some of the more well known movies on display.  I spent way too much money as a teenager in that Shop.

Down the hall and on the way to the pool, was a long hallway filled with make up masks in glass cases.  Each mask rested on velvet and had the name of the actor or actress on a small plaque.

All of that was destroyed in the MGM fire of 1980.

Today when I go to Balley's and take the elevator down, I can remember what it looked like in its heyday.  The art gallery, the jewelry store, the arts and crafts store, all of it and for a moment, briefly, its all still there.   It lives on in my memory.

The El Portal is now a souvenir store but they did save the neon sign.  The Fremont and the Guild are long gone.  The Huntridge sits now next to a discount mattress store which took over when the Post Office closed.  The parking lot is walled off.  But you can stll, in the right winter light, catch a glimpse of the beauty she once was.

The Fox is gone replaced by retail stores in the Plaza mall.  The wonderful, huge FOX sign is in the Neon Boneyard. The Parkway and the Boulevard Fox have given way to Linen and Things and the stores, it seems, we cannot live without today.

The Red Rock 11 Theatres were torn down and another shopping complex is being built in its place.

I don't go to the movies anymore when I am in Las Vegas but I carry with me the theatres of my childhood wherever I go. 

Posted on Thursday, November 9, 2006 at 3:57PM by Registered CommenterLasVegasLynn in | Comments5 Comments

Come Celebrate the Stardust

Stardust Memories

Oct. 25th
Nevada State Museum
700 Twin Lakes Drive
Las Vegas

Just days before the doors close forever, we look back at the
history, lore and stories of this legendary Grand Dame of the
Boulevard.

Opened in 1958, the Stardust offered rooms for $6.00 a night,

the Big Dipper Swimming Pool and a 16,500 square foot casino.

It's neon galaxy facade seemed to offer the entire universe.

The Aku Aku Restaurant, the saturn-esque original sign and the
Stardust Drive-In are all part of our collective memory.

Join us as we look back, reflect and remember this remarkable hotel.

5:00 - 6:30 Booksigning of Stephen's Press new book:

The Stardust of Yesterday with Mike Weatherford, Heidi Knapp Rinella

and Jesse Dunaway.

6:30 - 7:00 pm Writer's Discussion

7:00 - 9:00 Roundtable Discussion with long time employees,

former dancers and more!

This event is free and open to the public!

Hope to see you there!


Posted on Monday, October 23, 2006 at 5:50PM by Registered CommenterLasVegasLynn in | CommentsPost a Comment