A Conversation with the Mob Museum's Creative Director

Our friend, Kristen Peterson, has moved from the Las Vegas Sun to the Las Vegas Weekly in the aftermath of the lay-offs and tough times at the Sun last month.

She is the new Arts editor at the Weekly.

Here is her conversation with Dennis Barrie, the Creative Director of the Mob Museum, er the Las Vegas Museum of Law Enforcement and Underworld Crime, or something like that.  It will be known as the Mob Museum because the real title is too hard to remember and is a mouthful no matter what.

From the Weekly:

The planned mob museum has yet to receive a warm embrace from the community. Whether it’s feared gimmicky content or the outrageous use of public funds to the very idea of highlighting a violent past, there’s been a lot of complaining. So we decided to talk it out with Dennis Barrie, the museum’s creative director. Because if anyone knows about this type of situation, it’s this guy.

Barrie has spent most of his life in the museum world. He’s overseen the Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art, served as director of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum and helped create the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C., to name a few.

And there was that little incident in 1990 when Barrie, then director of the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati, was arrested on charges of “pandering obscenity” for showing the then-controversial Robert Mapplethorpe exhibit, The Perfect Moment. He was acquitted following a highly publicized trial.

What do you say to concerns that this museum will glorify the mob?

I think places should be honest with themselves. This is an interesting part of Las Vegas’ history. We know the mob is controversial. Some people say that a mob museum is glorifying the mob. We’ve taken a very different view. Not to glorify the mob, but to take a look at the history of organized crime and its impact on America—what that has done to our nation and to law enforcement— and to tell the story the way it was, the way it is. There are volumes of books on mobs and mobsters. But people tend to look at the sensational aspect of it.

The post office and federal building, proposed site of the mob museum.

The post office and federal building, proposed site of the mob museum.

The story of mobs goes back to the various ethnic enclaves of America. Organized crime comes out of the tough neighborhoods of any society. These characters rise from the slums and wind up controlling big parts of the world in business, politics and all sorts of things.

What are the challenges with this museum?

You’ve really got to look at ways of presenting topics that are engaging and that will draw half a million people a year to ensure operating success. In Las Vegas that’s a real challenge because there is so much glitz. The biggest challenge is getting people to come off the Strip into Downtown Las Vegas.

Is it for tourists?

The local population, at least at this point, doesn’t go to museums—your percentage is about 2.5 percent. So mostly it’s a tourist destination, so for whatever you develop, that’s something you have to take into consideration.

Do you see it as an economic booster?

There is a point in which any city has to have more. In Las Vegas, there are some people who could never leave the casino. But by the third or second day many people want to do something else, whether it’s shopping or the Hoover Dam. The city has to recognize that more attractions and museums diversify options for your audiences.

What about serving students in the community?

There will be an educational department and programming. You can do a whole American history tour at the museum because of all the topics you can discuss—ethnicity in America, immigration in America, prohibiting of substances in America, the legal system in America, race, entertainment, international politics, unions. All of that is built right into the subject. There’s not a topic it doesn’t touch.

How does this subject compare to that of the spy museum?

There are similarities in terms of topics—politics and American history and the difficulty of the topic. The Spy Museum was not easy, nor is the Mob Museum, because of the secret nature of the world you’re exploring. Not everybody loves the CIA or the FBI or the KGB. They’ve always been controversial agencies, so we had people that challenged us about doing a legitimate museum about espionage, that somehow we’d be glorifying these agencies and whitewashing some of the things they’d done that aren’t so savory or caused us political and moral difficulties. We said we were going to do an honest account of the history of espionage, and we kept our word on that.

How do you separate the attraction from the museum?

Whether it’s the Spy Museum, the Rock and Roll Museum or the Mob Museum, these topics have a lot to teach you about American and world society. They’re real touchstones to understanding what went on in the 20th century. They can be very serious places and still be entertaining.

Where do the acquisitions come from?

We’ve had cooperation from collectors of crime memorabilia, law enforcement memorabilia, cooperation from the FBI, cooperation of law enforcement agencies from Las Vegas and other cities, and we’ve had cooperation from family members whose family relation was in organized crime. We have the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre wall from Chicago that was owned by a woman who was in Las Vegas, whose uncle purchased it when they were tearing down the building in Chicago.

Do you see the mob museum as a conflict of interest for our mayor, who represented noted mobsters?

I think Mayor Goodman is fairly open about his past. I don’t think it’s a conflict of interest.

You were the only museum director arrested for pandering obscenity with the 1990 Mapplethorpe exhibit. How did that incident influence your approach to museums?

It made me firmly committed to telling it like it is. You’ve really got to be honest with your audiences.

Las Vegas Mob Museum gets more money

While the Neon Museum continues to struggle to find funding to build their dream, the Mob Museum continues to get financial support from the Las Vegas City Council.

 

 

From the Las Vegas Sun:

The Las Vegas City Council quietly approved spending nearly $2 million more last week for the mob museum project, which is on track to open in 2011 in the city's downtown.

But City Councilman Stavros Anthony made it clear he still doesn't like the project, which will be officially known as the Las Vegas Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement.

Anthony didn't speak out today about the project, which is estimated to cost about $50 million. But his actions were fairly loud and consistent with his past votes.

He asked to have the item pulled from the council's routine consent agenda so it could be voted on separately. Then he was the lone vote against the extra funding among the seven council members.

Anthony had also voted against additional funding for the retrofit project back in November. At that time, he had explained he could not justify spending money on such a museum.

The extra money approved today, amounting to $1,958,908, is needed to take care of some structural retrofit work on the historic 1933 federal office building and post office building at 300 Stewart, which will house the museum.

The work includes modifying the beams on the second and third floors, removing more hazardous material from the building, doing more work on the exterior plaster and courtroom ceilings and installing a new remote fire pump assembly that's needed because of failing water pressure in the downtown area, according to the city's finance and business services department.

The museum, which is expected to open in the first quarter of 2011, would tell the tale of how federal and local law enforcement officers fought the mob and eventually drove it out of Las Vegas' casinos.

The exhibits would features items from the FBI, plus artifacts from mob life, including many donated from the children and grandchildren of top members of organized crime and their underlings.

The museum has been pushed by the city's mayor, former high-profile mob lawyer Oscar Goodman, and by the FBI.

Councilman Ricki Y. Barlow, who made the motion to approve the extra funding today, has said in the past he supports it as an additional tourist attraction for the downtown.

Happy Birthday, Elvis!

 

 

Elvis would have been 75 years old today had he not died almost thirty-three years ago.  He was one of the premiere entertainers of the 20th Century, that uniquely American century that we are not likely to see again in our lifetimes.

Like Frank Sinatra before him, Elvis found a renewed sense of performing in Las Vegas.  His coming was heralded in the press and billboards for months before he graced the stage of the newly opened International Hotel (now the Hilton).

He had first come to Las Vegas in the 1956 and played the New Frontier Hotel where he was on the bill with Shecky Greene and Freddie Martin and his Orchestra.  The gig hadn't gone well.  The audience was not quite ready for the boy from Tupelo's style. 

Over the years, Elvis returned to Las Vegas to enjoy watching other entertainers.  He and the late Freddie Bell became friends and when Elvis say Freddie do a rendention of "Hound Dog", Presley wanted the song.  Freddie said sure and Elvis went to the top of the charts.

He came back to Las Vegas in the early 1960s to shoot "Viva Las Vegas" with Ann-Margaret.  The film, playing today on Turner Classic Movies as part of an all-day tribute to the King, is one of his best.  Before he was drafted, he had an up and coming career in the movies.  "Loving You" was a hit.  Howard Hawks had wanted him for the part of Colorado in his upcoming western, "Rio Bravo" starring John Wayne and Dean Martin.  But the Army had other plans and Elvis was drafted.

After he returned from the service, he began making a series of musicals.  Some are good, some are hokey.  "Jailhouse Rock" and "Viva Las Vegas" are the two best.  "Viva" has the additional bonus of footage of Las Vegas from the early 1960s when the town, Fremont Street and the Strip looked much different than it does today.

He married Priscilla at the old Aladdin Hotel in 1967.

 

It was supposed to be a secret but UPI bureau chief, Myram Borders, who had grown up in Las Vegas and had returned as a well-known and respected journalist, received a call in the middle of the night. 

"This guy is saying 'I have a big story for you but I need money' and I told him the UPI doesn't pay for stories.  I suggested he call some fairly large newspapers in the East which I knew would be closed anyway.   Well, he called back awhile later saying 'no one's answering'.  I said well, what's the story and he said 'Elvis Presley is gonna get married a the Aladdin Hotel.'" (Interview with Myram Borders, 2003)

"So I went out to the Aladdin and started wandering around the hallways, kind of seeing any indication of a wedding, which I couldn't and the security guards thought I was a hooker, trying to go from room to room or something.  They were trying to chase me out of the hotel all the time and all I was doing was walking up and down hallways.  Finally, about 7:30 or 8:00 in the morning I saw one of the Nevada Supreme Court Justices, David Zenoff, walk into the hotel and I thought 'it's true'.  I asked him why he was there and he said 'I'm gonna marry Elvis Presley'." (Interview with Myram Border, 2003).

How had Elvis come to choose the Aladdin as the spot for his nuptials?  He could have been married at any hotel any town or even the Little Church of the West which was famous for its celebrity clientele.  Well, Presley and Prell, according to George Stamos, had a long-time friendship that dated back to the 1950s.  Though Presley never appeared at a Prell hotel, he was often seen in the Casbah Lounge at the Sahara during the years it played host to Louis Prima and his band, Freddie Bell and the Bellboys and many others.

According to Paula Clark, no expense was spared on the Presley wedding.  "Colonel Parker gave us instructions to use 'unlimited funds' in preparing the wedding and reception.  To miss the crowds, Prell had arranged for them to get their license down at the County Courthouse at 2:00 am.  Just before the wedding, Clark realized that there were no provisions for the press and a ballroom was quickly converted complete with donuts and coffee.

As  100 friends, family and a bevy of writers and photographers gathered to watch the King of Rock and Roll marry Priscilla, Myram Borders' story of the impending wedding hit the wire.  She had scooped them all.

In 1968 he had appeared on NBC in a televised special, "One Night with You".  Dressed in black leather and with a small audience seated around him at the lip of a round stage, Elvis reminded Americans across the country, what his brand of magic was all about.  For a country used to seeing him in M-G-M musicals romancing girls, the performance was electric.

That one night of television paved the way for Elvis to return to the stages of the Las Vegas Strip.  Kirk Kerkorian was building the International Hotel when he signed Elvis to perform there.  Barbra Striesand opened the hotel in July of 1969.

Elvis followed her and Las Vegas was never quite the same.  Sinatra had been the King of the Las Vegas Strip for over a decade.  "Liberace could fill a hotel, Sinatra filled the town." Don Payne, former head of the Las Vegas News Bureau, told me in an interview a few years back.

Elvis' arrival at the International heralded the era of a new King in town.  His shows sold out almost as soon as they were announced.  He played the hotel twice a year, in January and August.  "Elvis: That's the Way It Is" (also on TCM later today) captures not only the experience of seeing Elvis live but also the behind-the-scenes drama as well.

His voice and his style were unique.  We had never seen anything quite like Elvis Presley when he blazed on the scene and held us enthralled with his performing.

All these years later, we likely never will again.

Happy Birthday, Elvis!

Here's the schedule for Turner Classic Movies' salute to the King (Friday, Jan. 8th - All Times PST):

3:15 AM Harum Scarum (1965)
  An American film star is kidnapped in the Middle East. Cast: Elvis Presley, Mary Ann Mobley, Fran Jeffries. Dir: Gene Nelson. C-85 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format
4:45 AM Kissin' Cousins (1964)
  A singing military officer gets mixed up with his look-alike hillbilly cousin. Cast: Elvis Presley, Arthur O'Connell, Yvonne Craig. Dir: Gene Nelson. C-96 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format
6:30 AM Spinout (1966)
  A singing race-car driver has to choose among three amorous females. Cast: Elvis Presley, Shelley Fabares, Diane McBain. Dir: Norman Taurog. C-93 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format
8:15 AM Roustabout (1964)
  A female carnival owner hires a hot-blooded young singer to save her touring show. Cast: Elvis Presley, Barbara Stanwyck, Joan Freeman. Dir: John Rich. C-101 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format
10:00 AM Girl Happy (1965)
  A rock singer is hired to chaperone a gangster's daughter in Fort Lauderdale. Cast: Elvis Presley, Shelley Fabares, Gary Crosby. Dir: Boris Sagal. C-96 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format
11:45 AM Speedway (1968)
  A race car driver tries to outrun the beautiful tax auditor out to settle his account. Cast: Elvis Presley, Nancy Sinatra, Bill Bixby. Dir: Norman Taurog. C-94 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format
1:30 PM Blue Hawaii (1961)
  A Hawaiian playboy defies his possessive mother to take a job with a tourist agency. Cast: Elvis Presley, Joan Blackman, Angela Lansbury Dir: Norman Taurog. C-101 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format
3:15 PM Viva Las Vegas (1964)
  A race-car driver falls for a pretty swimming instructor who wants him to slow down his career. Cast: Elvis Presley, Ann-Margret, Cesare Danova. Dir: George Sidney. C-85 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format, DVS
4:41 PM Short Film: Romantic Nevada (1943)
  C-9 mins,
5:00 PM Elvis on Tour (1972)
  Extensive concert footage highlights this documentary about the King's touring in the early '70s. Cast: Elvis Presley, James Burton, Glenn D. Hardin. Dir: Robert Abel, Pierre Aldridge. C-93 mins, TV-G, Letterbox Format
6:42 PM Short Film: Look At The World Of Soylent Green, A (1973)
  C-10 mins,
7:00 PM Elvis: That's The Way It Is 2001 (2001)
  Restored version of the King's classic Vegas concert film. Cast: Elvis Presley. Dir: Denis Sanders. C-96 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format
9:00 PM Jailhouse Rock (1957)
 

After learning to play the guitar in prison, a young man becomes a rock 'n roll sensation. Cast: Elvis Presley, Judy Tyler, Mickey Shaughnessy. Dir: Richard Thorpe. BW-96 mins, TV-G, CC, Letterbox Format, DVS

 


30,000 revelers celebrate the New Year on Fremont Street

For those who missed the "TributePalooza" on New Year's Eve, the bands will be playing all weekend!  Need show tickets?  Click here!

From the Sun:

The self-described "happiest mayor in the universe," Las Vegas' Oscar Goodman, saw a world of hurt in his city last year.

Unemployment spiked. Tourism was down. The ripple of economic woes affecting America touched many in the city so dependent on tourism.

But the last night of 2009 offered Goodman a chance to focus on better times ahead. As the clock ticked toward midnight, with a ceremonial wave of his martini glass, Goodman bid adieu to 2009.

"What I see tonight on Fremont Street in downtown Las Vegas is the end of the stupid recession," he told a crowd of thousands gathered to celebrate New Year's Eve. He said Las Vegas, "the greatest city in the world," is a place for people to have a good time and not to worry.

"America is coming back because what America needs is a party," he said as the clock inched closer to midnight. As he led the masses in a countdown, a roar erupted. Fireworks popped, couples kissed and dozens clinked plastic footballs filled with beer as 2009 disappeared.

Flanked by showgirls, Goodman kissed his wife, Carolyn, and waved to the crowd.

Under the canopy of lights that is the Fremont Street Experience, digital fireworks made their way across the 1,500-foot screen as real ones dazzled above the crowd.

"It was amazing, just awesome," said Robert Manjarrez, 30, an elementary school teacher from Clovis, Calif.

This was the second year in a row he had come to Fremont Street for New Year's Eve, saying he had such a good time last year he had to come back.

"Compared to last year, the whole experience was much better. Last year we couldn't really see the fireworks. This year was 10 times better."

As for what lies ahead, he echoed Goodman's sentiments.

"I just hope the economy and everything else gets better because last year was tough. This year has got to be an improvement," Manjarrez said.

For Las Vegans Jill and Joe Cuevas, 2009 was a rough year. They were eager to celebrate its demise and did so by sporting the outfits they got married in about a year ago.

In true Las Vegas fashion, the two were dressed in the Elvis-themed attire they wore Dec. 21, 2008, when they went down the aisle in a pink Cadillac at the Viva Las Vegas wedding chapel. Both were adorned with plastic wigs with lit-up "Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas" signs.

"Tonight we met Oscar Goodman and his wife, who told us that we look awesome. It made us feel good," 25-year-old Jill Cuevas said. "We had a rough year. We're just hoping for happiness."

Her husband chimed in: "And love." Then he kissed her.

Sally Piper, who came to Las Vegas from Mesquite with her fiancé, Mark Peterson, said she's been out of work since the town's Oasis casino closed.

But already, 2010 was full of hope — she got a job offer just before Christmas and the former cocktail waitress was ready to start work at a hospital.

"We actually came to Vegas to celebrate this year," Piper said. Fremont Street, with the fireworks, live music and rich history, was the perfect place to toast to better times. "You don't get all that on the Strip," she said.

Some came from much further away than the far reaches of Clark County: Dennis and Diana Bryson were visiting from North Pole, Alaska. It was their third trip this year to Las Vegas, this time to celebrate their 11th wedding anniversary.

"This was a spontaneous trip. We just bought tickets last week," said Diana Bryson, wearing a purple hat with "2010" emblazoned across the front.

"It was so dead in July when we were here. This is just great. This is how it should be all the time," she said, gesturing at the crowd. As for 2010, "it's got to be better — it can't get any worse."

Earlier in the evening, anticipation for the midnight festivities was at the tip of everyone's tongue.

Larry Workman, 69, and his wife, Shirley, from Orange County, Calif., hoped New Year's Eve 2009 was a repeat of 2008.

"We were here last year, right here on Fremont. We had such a great time we decided to come back and we brought eight people with us," he said.

His sister came in from North Carolina. Two friends came in from Denver, two others from Costa Mesa, Calif.; his niece, an exchange student, came in from Glasgow, Scotland.

"I thought it was kind of a neat deal with all the lights, all the people in the streets and the fireworks up above," he said.

Denise Bostic has lived in Las Vegas for more than a decade but never spent a New Year's Eve on Fremont Street — at least, not until Dec. 31, 2009. Friend Ed Arens talked her into coming downtown and celebrating the holiday, which is also his birthday.

"I have been on the Strip before but I'm way too old for that," she said with a laugh outside the Fremont Hotel & Casino.

As for the new year, Arens said he hadn't thought of a resolution, but Bostic quickly offered, "If you make them, you break them, so why bother?"

Throughout the night, tribute bands paid homage to Aerosmith, Depeche Mode, Guns N' Roses, INXS, Led Zeppelin, No Doubt, U2 and Van Halen at the stages along Fremont as part of the second-annual TributePalooza.

The five-block area in front of the 10 casinos that line the street closed at 5 p.m. to those under 21 so the celebration could begin.

As Blasphemous Rumors, the Depeche Mode tribute band, got the crowd grooving, Jeremy Nelson, 27, of Palm Springs, Calif., and friend Brent Weiand, 27, of Arlington, Va., stood back, taking in the scene from in front of La Bayou casino.

Nelson, originally from Indiana, recently moved to California and the two decided to meet up in Las Vegas for the "wild party" on Fremont Street and, of course, some gambling.

"We're just here to have a good time and maybe win some money," Nelson said.

He said this year was his first time celebrating the holiday in Las Vegas. He usually spends the holiday at a local bar, he said.

"He drove over, I flew in — we were just thinking Vegas would be something different this year," Weiand said. He added that he had doubled his money since he'd gotten to town.

While the New Year's Eve celebrations are a big deal in Las Vegas, they're rivaled by those in New York City.

Jodie Wright and her boyfriend, Mike Lopez, hail from the Big Apple, where partiers have been ringing in the new year at Times Square for more than 100 years. As the sun was setting on the last day of 2009, the two said they had high expectations for their evening of revelry under the glow of Las Vegas' neon lights.

Despite the history of their hometown, both said they were expecting their evening in downtown Las Vegas to be more enjoyable than New York.

"I did Times Square in 2001 — we were in a hotel overlooking it. But unless you're really down there, it's not great," Lopez said. "And in Times Square, you're stuffed together. You can't move. It's terrible."

Wright said she was looking forward to a more relaxed atmosphere.

"I'm expecting it not to be as packed as Times Square, which makes me happy," she said. "We picked celebrating here over New York because fireworks are fireworks wherever you go, but we think this will be a little more lively and more festive."

As the day progressed, dozens of people streamed through an area near the Neonopolis, where a booth was set up to sell wristbands. The wristbands, which went on sale at 10 a.m., cost $10 for those with a Nevada identification card and $20 for out-of-state revelers.

Wristbands were also available at gates leading to the Fremont Street Experience.

New Year's Eve is the only day a ticket is required for entry into the Fremont Street Experience. Last year, the 30,000 tickets available were gone by about 11:15 p.m., said Fremont Street Experience marketing director Thomas Bruny. This year, capacity was increased to 35,000, he said.

The event didn't sell out but Bruny said attendance was "great," estimating that numbers were similar to last year.

Booths selling 2010-themed garb, like novelty sunglasses, hats, beads and T-shirts, were set up throughout the area. Before the festivities kicked off, near one of the booths was Brajesh Piwanji, 24. Pinwanji said he didn't drink, but that wouldn't stop him from having an enjoyable evening.

"I'm expecting fun and a lot of fun things to do," he said. Piwanji, who lives in San Jose, Calif., recently moved from India. This was his first New Year's Eve in the United States.

Not everyone milling around Fremont Street on Thursday planned to stay 'til the clock struck 12. Before the area was closed off, plenty of families with strollers were spotted taking in the sights.

Although the celebration technically drew to a close in the early morning hours Friday, the entertainment was to continue through the weekend. The musical acts pick up again Friday and Saturday nights starting at 8 p.m. with free "Rock 'N' Recovery" concerts.