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Viva Las Vegas! Elvis Presley Fan Club
Where WAS Elvis in Vegas?

This page provides information on Elvis' connections to Las Vegas.

April 1956 First shows in Las Vegas at the Frontier.

Elvis learns the Vegas crowd isnt his kind of audience. He enjoys meeting several celebrities and 24 hour atmosphere of the town. The biggest meeting (and future friendship) was with Liberace at the Riviera where they exchanged coats and instruments. Another significant event is getting permission from Freddie Bell (and the Bellboys) to record his version of 'Hound Dog.'

The 1960's-Elvis visits Vegas quite a bit during the movie years, frequently staying at the Sahara Hotel.

July 1963 Elvis films the movie, "Viva Las Vegas." The movie premieres in New York, April 1964. He and his 'mafia' stayed at the Sahara. Filming locations included: the Flamingo hotel pool area, the Convention Center (now next to the Hilton), Lake Mead, Hoover Dam, Mt Charleston, Fremont Street, driving down Paradise Road and the Little Chapel of the West.



May 1, 1967 Elvis marries Priscilla at the Aladdin in an 8 minute ceremony.

Elvis performs on stage for the first time in 9 years, July 31, 1969 at the International Hotel.

The "Jumpsuit Years", 1970-1976. Elvis performs at the International, later known as the Hilton, in Las Vegas. He usually does 2 shows a night for short periods, twice a year, from Feb '70 - Dec '76. His very last show is Dec 12, 1976, midnight. He never returns to Vegas.

Newspaper article: When Elvis Roamed Vegas

Elvis' show schedule in Las Vegas

April 23 - May 6 1956 New Frontier

July 31 - Aug 28 1969 International

1970

Jan 26 - Feb 23

Aug 10 - Sep 07

1971

Jan 26 - Feb 23

Aug 09 - Sep 06 Hilton

1972

Jan 26 - Feb 23

Aug 04 - Sep 04

1973

Jan 26 - Feb 23

Aug 06 - Sep 03

1974

Jan 26 - Feb 09

Aug 19 - Sep 02

1975

Mar 18 - Apr 01

Aug 18 - Aug 20

Dec 02 - Dec 15

1976

Dec 02 - Dec 12

More about Elvis in Concert, [click here]

THE HILTON HAS A MAKEOVER
 
Extreme makeover
By Liz Benston  LAS VEGAS SUN
Mon, Nov 7, 2005
Customers arriving at the Las Vegas Hilton are now met with scaffolding, drywall and a construction crew in the lobby as the 36-year-old property undergoes a makeover designed to make it look decades younger.
Construction walls at the rear of the casino feature photos of leggy models assuring visitors that the work going on behind the scenes "won't detour your fun." Another sign says, "Caution: Bright future ahead."
The Las Vegas Hilton, still months away from revealing its new self, has a lot to gain from the millions of dollars its new owners are plowing into the off-Strip hotel.
Colony Capital paid $280 million last year to buy the 59-acre Hilton site from Caesars Entertainment.
In a recent interview with In Business Las Vegas, a sister publication of the Las Vegas Sun, Resorts International Chief Operating Officer Roger Wagner called the Las Vegas Hilton "the buy of the century."
"You couldn't replace this building for a billion dollars," Wagner said.
Built by MGM Grand founder and MGM Mirage shareholder Kirk Kerkorian, the Las Vegas Hilton, then called the International, was then the world's largest hotel and home to resident entertainer Elvis Presley. It fell out of the limelight as newer resorts sprouted on the Strip and stagnated in recent years under Caesars Entertainment, which had attempted to sell the property to focus on its better-performing Strip casinos.
Colony snapped up the Hilton at a deflated price and has begun work on a five-year master plan to spiff up the property and use its land more effectively.
Colony in July created a new holding company to operate its six casinos, including the Hilton. Resorts International Holdings also owns Resorts Atlantic City as well as four properties purchased from Caesars Entertainment and Harrah's Entertainment prior to Harrah's buyout of Caesars. Those include the Atlantic City Hilton, Resorts East Chicago, Resorts Tunica and Bally's Tunica.
The casino holding company's headquarters is the Las Vegas Hilton.
The company has already tripled annual cash flow at the property since Caesars owned it and has revived the casino's high roller business, Wagner said. The company is pushing to attract international players, particularly high rollers from Latin America. And it expects to create a frequent gambler program next year that would allow players to rack up points across Resorts' six casinos.
The remodeling effort, expected to cost more than $20 million, will include a new porte-cochere, outdoor landscaping, a remodeled lobby and front desk, a lounge, coffee bar and upgraded casino floor. All of the work is expected to be complete by the end of December.
The finished lobby will feature sparkled marble imported from Italy and Spain, incandescent lighting instead of fluorescent lights and a more upscale front desk with flat-screen TVs.
While the casino will retain its signature crystal chandeliers, new carpeting will be put in along with new wall coverings and column finishings.
Some slot machines also will be moved around to make it easier to walk through the casino and create a more inviting atmosphere for customers entering from the lobby. Employees also will wear new uniforms.
The Hilton's main casino bar will be replaced by Tempo, an ultramodern bar and lounge with 100 seats and a private area for high rollers in the style of a Strip ultralounge.
The property's Perk Place coffee bar and deli will be replaced by Fortuna, a coffee, wine and pastry bar resembling a luxurious Starbucks. The coffee bar will also offer Internet access.
Upstairs, workers have finished upgrading many of the Hilton's more luxurious suites. The property's Lanai and Director suites feature plasma TVs, new marble floors and showers, granite vanity tops and rain shower heads as well as a private terrace.
Of the Hilton's 3,000 or so total rooms, about 300 are suites. Sometime next year, the first series of regular rooms will be remodeled.
Being a private company has its advantages, Wagner said.
"If we want to do something that's disruptive that we think will help us in the long term, we can do that without retribution" from shareholders, he said.
When the company bought the Hilton in June 2004, Colony officials said at the time they expected to spend about $70 million on improvements.
In September the property opened a new poker room, replacing several banks of slot machines in what had once been the site of a shuttered poker room years ago.
Shortly after Colony bought the hotel, the owners upgraded the Superbook, the country's largest sports book, including the installation of small LCD screens for players and more comfortable chairs.
Still to be done is more remodeling near the convention center. The Hilton's steakhouse will be remodeled, as will the Plaza Bar and the Shimmer entertainment cabaret. Shimmer, formerly a nightclub, is now home to comedian David Brenner as well as other entertainment acts.
Last year the Hilton announced a deal with singer Barry Manilow to become a resident headliner at the Hilton Theater into 2006.
"Barry is a huge marquee value for us around the country right now," Wagner said. "This property, being off the Strip, needed something to use as a destination marketing device ... The community is talking about Barry Manilow in the same vein as Celine Dion."
The Hilton is also hoping to better capitalize on its "Star Trek" attraction, which includes a tour and ride operated in partnership with Paramount Pictures.
There are a few years left in the contract with Paramount. The property hasn't decided whether to keep the attraction longer term, Wagner said. The attraction is located near the Space Quest casino, a themed casino floor primarily fed by traffic from the Las Vegas Monorail stop.
Most people coming into the property from the monorail tend to be occasional visitors to Las Vegas rather than regulars, Wagner said. That may change once more people begin to use the service and it extends to the airport.
The company is still working on a master plan for the Hilton's 59-acre site.
About 50 of those acres are vacant or underdeveloped, Wagner said.
"We are looking at all kinds of ways to stick our front door closer to where people are wandering around," he said. "Whether that means we'll build a boutique hotel right next to the convention center by the end of the property and knock something down, I don't know. We haven't made any decisions there. We've got all kinds of opportunities."
The Hilton owners are shying away from condominiums, even though plans for about 100 high-rise condos are sprouting across the Las Vegas Valley.
"There's only so many high-end people," Wagner said. "Some of the ones coming out of the ground are selling to investors who think they can spin these things off. The cost of labor and construction and the cost of goods, especially with the Katrina problem now, is going to put these developers in a position where what they sold them for today will not cover what it will cost to build them three years from now when they have to deliver the product."

MAKEOVER UPDATE
 
Sep. 25, 2007 Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
LV Hilton: posh, polished and poised
Off-Strip hotel-casino ready to reveal Resort Club rooms, lounge in continuing renovation
By ARNOLD M. KNIGHTLY REVIEW-JOURNAL
The Las Vegas Hilton has quietly undergone $100 million of upgrades and renovations since a private equity partnership bought the property in June 2004.
The latest upgrades, scheduled to be unveiled the first week of October, are 221 Resort Club rooms and a new Resort Club lounge in the north tower.
Over the past three years, the Hilton has remodeled 1,523 of its 3,000 rooms and suites, installed Italian marble floors in the lobby, remodeled the casino and the porte cochere, added a new lounge and expanded the sports book.
"This is probably phase one of different phases of enhancements for the property," said Rudy Prieto, Las Vegas Hilton general manager and chief executive officer for the off-Strip property. "We will always continue to consider what our options are in terms of redevelopment."
The room upgrades include new beds, 37-inch plasma televisions, wireless Internet access and ports for MP3 music players.
The hotel, which is owned and operated separately from the Hilton hotel chain by Colony Resorts, plans to continue the hotel room renovations in 2008. Bill Lerner, a gaming analyst for Deutsche Bank, said the remodeling has made the resort's public areas in the entrance brighter and more comfortable.
"That's a critical public face to have focused on," Lerner said. "Working on the entrance and the hotel reception and lobby are important things to have focused on. Keeping it fresh is critical, and I think they have done a good job."
Lerner said the demographic for the hotel, which is on 59 acres on Paradise Road north of the Las Vegas Convention Center, are midweek conventioneers and value customers.
The hotel has been running at 90 percent occupancy during the week and slightly higher on weekends, spokesman Ira Sternberg said.
Nearly 40 percent of the occupied rooms during the week are bought by people attending conventions at the hotel's 200,000-square-foot meeting space.
Sternberg said the property also benefits from being near the northern anchor of the Las Vegas Monorail, which averages 19,000 passengers per day, connecting the Hilton to the Strip.
Prieto said redevelopment projects on the Strip's north end should increase foot traffic to the property in the next few years.
Prieto cited the $2.9 billion Fontainebleau project, the $4.8 billion Echelon project, the possible sale of the Riviera and new ownership of the Sahara as signs that the neighborhood is undergoing a rebirth.
Also, two Turnberry residential projects near the hotel have added 1,096 condominium units to the area with another 318 planned for 2008.
Licensing agreements for use of the Hilton name and the Hilton's reservation system are set to expire in 2008.
Prieto said it was to early to know if the contracts will be renewed but added the property "has an excellent relationship with the Hilton Corporation."
The contract for singer Barry Manilow, a staple e ntertainer at the property since 2005, is also set to expire late next year.
The property was opened as the International in 1969 by billionaire Kirk Kerkorian. It was bought by Colony Resorts LVH Acquisitions in 2004 for $280 million from Caesars Entertainment.
The limited liability company is a joint-venture partnership between Los Angeles-based real estate investment trust Colony Capital and New York-based Whitehall Street Real Estate Funds, a Goldman Sachs affiliate.

Click on the photo for actual size.
johnhamilton-frontier56.jpg
by John Hamilton

The Frontier, where Elvis performed in 1956, was imploded Nov 2007.

Click to visit a page of links to local articles related to Elvis in Vegas. This is the Elvis Presley Virtual Library. Thanks for webmaster permission.

Elvis loved the see Wayne Cochran and the CC Riders perform in Vegas. Click here for the official web site.


The Aladdin has been remodeled and renamed Planet Hollwood. The original Aladdin where Elvis married was imploded in 1998.

The Stardust, where Elvis used to check out the lounge shows in the 70's was imploded in 2007.

Elvis first performed here in April 1956 at the Frontier. The Frontier was imploded in 2007. It was located across from where the Wynn Hotel/Casino is now.

In 1956, when Elvis was at the Frontier, he would go across the street and visit the Sands to see Freddie Bell and the Bellbouys. The Sands no longer exists, the Venetian is there instead.

In the 60's & 70's Elvis would visit the Stardust and catch the entertainment in the lounge. His favorite was Brendan Bowyer and the Irish Show Band. The Stardust is now gone, it was imploded in early 2007.

Read about Brendan Bowyer

Article with map: When Elvis Roamed Vegas

HISTORY OF THE HILTON

Wednesday, December 24, 2003  Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

Property has rich history in LV

Major entertainers, fatal fire, near-sale to developer have marked resort's 34 years

By ROD SMITH GAMING WIRE

For more than 34 years, the Las Vegan Hilton has been a Las Vegas landmark and an important part of the history of the casino capital of the world.

When it opened, it was ranked among the finest resorts in the world, hosting the world's top entertainers and attracting some of the richest high rollers.

"It was the first casino on our road to megaproperties to put us in the world's sights and we've continued from there," said University of Nevada, Las Vegas professor and casino industry expert Bill Thompson.

By the time the Mirage opened 20 years later, the casino-resort had lost its luster, featuring less-renowned entertainers and banking on a convention clientele.

In recent years, it has struggled to compete with its more glamorous neighbors and has failed to produce the profits owners and investors have expected.

"It's been a major player, but it's been in decline for the past 15 years, in the class of the Riviera and the Sahara while it was once first in its class," Thompson said.

Kirk Kerkorian originally built what some called his "mini-dream" on 64.5 acres of land on Paradise Road, next to the Las Vegas Convention Center. When it opened on July 5, 1969, the $60 million, 30-story, 1,519-room International was the largest resort in the world.

The hotel immediately earned its place as the home of legendary entertainment. Barbra Streisand was the featured performer at the opening gala and Elvis Presley made his famous Las Vegas comeback at the hotel during its opening month.

In 1970, Kerkorian sold the International, as well as the Flamingo on the Strip, to the Hilton Corp., using the money he made from the deal to build the MGM Grand.

This was Hilton's first venture into Nevada's gambling and resort business. It agreed to handle rooms, food and bar management at both resorts.

On Feb. 11, 1981, just 90 days after the devastating MGM Grand fire, a blaze started at the Las Vegas Hilton while it was being retrofitted with more modern fire safety equipment. Firefighters, using the knowledge they had learned from the MGM fire, used local television networks to notify people to stay in their rooms and not go out to the halls and stairwells. Because of the lessons learned, only eight people died in this fire compared with the 85 people who died in the MGM Grand fire.

In 1983, Hilton announced the building of the $15 million race and sports book which opened in the fall of 1986.

In 1988, the Hilton's showroom showcased "Elvis: An American Musical" starring Johnny Seaton, Julian Whitaker and Terry Mike Jeffrey. The musical was three years in the making and featured 48 of Presley's most remembered songs.

Following a long line of illustrious entertainers, Wayne Newton was the last entertainer to perform at the Hilton showroom, which closed in 1993 to become the home of Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Starlight Express."

The new Hilton Theatre was built specifically for the "Starlight Express." Hotel officials closed the showroom for more than two months, and after gutting it, spent $12 million to create a 1,600-seat oval room with ramps, raceways, embankments and a balcony.

In 1995, Hilton finished spending $30 million to create new "sky villa" suites on top of the 3,200-room hotel. The villas range in size from the 12,600-square-foot Villa Conrad to the 15,400-square-foot Villa Verona, which is described as "reminiscent of the Palaces of Venice."

In early 1997, in a move to attract more customers to the struggling off-Strip property, Hilton in conjunction with Paramount Parks opened the $70 million "Star Trek: The Experience" attraction.

In 1998, Hilton hosted "Wheel of Fortune." About 3,000 people watched each of the tapings at the resort. The backstage support was staggering including five 48-foot semitrailers of equipment, dozens of video and sound technicians, as well as dozens of security personnel and Hilton foot caterers. It costs $1 million to put the show on the road.

In December 1998, Park Place Entertainment Corp. became a separate and independent public company as a result of the split of the lodging and gaming operations of Hilton Hotels Corp.

The Flamingo Hilton, Bally's and the Las Vegas Hilton became the property of Park Place. Hilton shareholders were given one share of Park Place for each share of Hilton they owned. Park Place retained use of the Hilton name for three years with the exception of the Las Vegas Hilton.

The hotel is adjacent to the 3.2 million-square-foot Las Vegas Convention Center. It now features three distinct casinos, nearly 3,000 guest rooms and suites, 13 restaurants, a pool, spa and fitness centers and more than 200,000 square feet of conference space.

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Let's have a swingin' time!