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Sahara Las Vegas: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 36°08′32″N 115°09′23″W / 36.14222°N 115.15639°W / 36.14222; -115.15639
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Undid revision 463164328 by Aronheath (talk) No, it is not in the city. A mailing address is just that, a mailing address it is not the location of the place.
added Beatles visit from the previous Las Vegas Sun article reference
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The resort was the site of the annual [[Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon|Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon]] for many years, mostly in the 1970s, and for a brief time in the 1990s.
The resort was the site of the annual [[Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon|Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon]] for many years, mostly in the 1970s, and for a brief time in the 1990s.


Performers at the resort over the years have included [[Frank Sinatra]], [[Dean Martin]], [[Sammy Davis Jr.]], [[Judy Garland]], [[Marlene Dietrich]], [[Jack Benny]], [[Paul Anka]], [[George Carlin]], [[Liza Minnelli]], [[Violetta Villas]], [[Shirley Bassey]], [[Wayne Newton]], [[Imogene Coca]], [[The Platters]], [[Connie Francis]], [[Bill Cosby]], [[Jeanette MacDonald]], [[Ann-Margret]], [[The Mills Brothers]], [[Joey Bishop]], [[Shelley Berman]], [[Buddy Hackett]], [[Helen O'Connell]], [[Edgar Bergen]] and [[Charlie McCarthy]], [[Kay Starr]], [[Steve Lawrence]] and [[Eydie Gorme]], [[The Drifters]], [[Don Rickles]], [[Bobby Darin]], [[Teresa Graves]], [[The Coasters]], and many others.
Performers at the resort over the years have included [[Frank Sinatra]], [[Dean Martin]], [[Sammy Davis Jr.]], [[Judy Garland]], [[Marlene Dietrich]], [[Jack Benny]], [[Paul Anka]], [[George Carlin]], [[Liza Minnelli]], [[Violetta Villas]], [[Shirley Bassey]], [[Wayne Newton]], [[Imogene Coca]], [[The Platters]], [[Connie Francis]], [[Bill Cosby]], [[Jeanette MacDonald]], [[Ann-Margret]], [[The Mills Brothers]], [[Joey Bishop]], [[Shelley Berman]], [[Buddy Hackett]], [[Helen O'Connell]], [[Edgar Bergen]] and [[Charlie McCarthy]], [[Kay Starr]], [[Steve Lawrence]] and [[Eydie Gorme]], [[The Drifters]], [[Don Rickles]], [[Bobby Darin]], [[Teresa Graves]], [[The Coasters]], and many others. In 1964 the Beatles stayed at the Sahara and played two shows at the nearby Las Vegas Convention Center.


Del Webb ran into financial problems in the late 1970s and early 1980s, it sold the Sahara to Paul Lowden (Archon Corporation) for $50 million in 1982.
Del Webb ran into financial problems in the late 1970s and early 1980s, it sold the Sahara to Paul Lowden (Archon Corporation) for $50 million in 1982.

Revision as of 09:48, 18 December 2011

Sahara Hotel and Casino
File:SaharaCasinoLogo.svg
File:C-987349729.jpg
Address 2535 Las Vegas Blvd South
Las Vegas, Nevada 89109
Opening dateOctober 7, 1952
Closing dateMay 16, 2011
ThemeMoroccan
No. of rooms1,720
Total gaming space85,000 sq ft (7,900 m2)
Permanent showsThe Platters, The Coasters & The Marvelettes
Roseanne Barr
The Amazing Johnathan
The Musical History of the King
Signature attractionsNASCAR Speed Zone Cafe
Casino typeLand-Resort
OwnerStockbridge/SBE Holdings, LLC
Operating license holderNavegante Management Group
Previous namesClub Bingo
Renovated in1960, 1963, 1996, 2003
Coordinates36°08′32″N 115°09′23″W / 36.14222°N 115.15639°W / 36.14222; -115.15639

The Sahara Hotel and Casino is a closed hotel casino located on the Las Vegas Strip in Winchester, Nevada. It was in operation for 59 years from 1952 to 2011. The hotel had 1,720 guestrooms and suites with a casino covering more than 85,000 sq ft (7,900 m2), and sits on 55 acres (22 ha) including the empty adjoining land. The hotel is the northernmost stop for the Las Vegas Monorail. The Sahara was the last remaining vintage "Rat Pack" casino-hotel, and anchored the northern end of the Las Vegas Strip. The porte-cochere entrance, topped by an onion-dome minaret, is designed to set the resort's warm Moroccan flavor and hospitality for arriving guests.

History

The hotel was opened in 1952 by Milton Prell just outside of the City of Las Vegas, and was the sixth resort to open on the Strip. The resort was built by Del Webb.[1]

In late 1954, the hotel hired jazz musician Louis Prima to be their late night lounge act, one of the earliest ones on the Las Vegas Strip. Along with his then wife Keely Smith and sax player Sam Butera, they created one of the hottest late night attractions on the Strip. In 1956 Abbott and Costello appeared together for the last time on the Sahara stage before their permanent breakup.[citation needed]

Early Sahara Stationery

In 1961, the hotel was purchased by Del Webb. In 1962, a Don the Beachcomber restaurant opened in the hotel, becoming a top attraction to not only hotel guests but a variety of celebrities as well. A 24-story tower was added in 1963 which made the hotel the tallest building in Las Vegas.[2]

The resort was the site of the annual Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon for many years, mostly in the 1970s, and for a brief time in the 1990s.

Performers at the resort over the years have included Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Judy Garland, Marlene Dietrich, Jack Benny, Paul Anka, George Carlin, Liza Minnelli, Violetta Villas, Shirley Bassey, Wayne Newton, Imogene Coca, The Platters, Connie Francis, Bill Cosby, Jeanette MacDonald, Ann-Margret, The Mills Brothers, Joey Bishop, Shelley Berman, Buddy Hackett, Helen O'Connell, Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, Kay Starr, Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme, The Drifters, Don Rickles, Bobby Darin, Teresa Graves, The Coasters, and many others. In 1964 the Beatles stayed at the Sahara and played two shows at the nearby Las Vegas Convention Center.

Del Webb ran into financial problems in the late 1970s and early 1980s, it sold the Sahara to Paul Lowden (Archon Corporation) for $50 million in 1982.

Ownership changed in 1995 when Archon Corporation sold the property to Bill Bennett. Bill Bennett owned the hotel until his death on December 22, 2002. The 27-story tower addition was added in 1987 and a new porte-cochere was added by the relocated pool in 1997.

In 1999 further renovations added a roller coaster and the NASCAR restaurant. The roller coaster, called Speed-The Ride, shoots riders from the hotel outside along the Las Vegas Strip, where it loops through the grandiose Sahara sign in front of the hotel, goes straight up a tower, stops and then takes a return trip backwards. Bergman Walls Associates were the 1999 architects.

Sahara Entrance

Rumors of the Sahara's closure surfaced in the media in February 2006.[3] In a news article on June 30, 2006, it was reported that the Sahara site, as well as a defunct adjacent Wet 'n Wild property, were for sale.[4]

On March 2, 2007, Sam Nazarian and Stockbridge Real Estate Group signed an agreement to purchase the Sahara from the Bennett family. The transaction was said to be valued between $300 and $400 million for just the hotel/casino and its 17.45-acre (7.06 ha) lot. The deal does not include the 26-acre (11 ha) lot across the Strip from the Sahara and 11-acre (4.5 ha) lot east of the Sahara on Paradise Road.[5]

Closing as the Sahara

The Sahara shut its doors on May 16, 2011. SBE chief executive Sam Nazarian stated that the hotel was not "economically viable". Nazarian said that he would help some 1,600 hotel workers find new jobs. Its closure leaves only the Tropicana, Flamingo and the Riviera remaining from the post-World War II era.[6]

On May 16, 2011 at 12:00 PM PDT, the last hotel guest checked out of the Sahara Hotel and Casino, and the doors were officially closed at 2:00PM. This marked the end of a 59-year run on the Strip. Some 1,600 jobs will be lost due to the closing. According to the Sahara's website, any previous reservations would be honored at the Circus Circus.[1] NCL/National Content Liquidators began a hotel liquidation sale on June 16th, 2011 of all items inside the property and continued until the property was completely empty. The final day of the sale was September 4th, 2011.

On November 2, 2011 it was revealed that the Clark County Commission has approved renovations of the hotel casino. The property will be remodeled, rethemed, renamed and reopened.[7]

Film history

The 1960 version of Ocean's Eleven was filmed here.

References

  1. ^ "Sahara". Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  2. ^ Steve Kanigher (May 14, 2011). "Once 'jewel of the desert,' Sahara entertains last weekend guests before closing". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved May 16, 2011.
  3. ^ "Offers they can refuse: For now, no changes on tap at Sahara". Las Vegas Sun. 2006-02-13.
  4. ^ Archon Selling 27 Acres on ‘Strip’ for $450M June 30, 2006
  5. ^ Sahara buyer sees new life for old resort March 5, 2007 The Hotel President is Arash Azarbazin, President of the SBE Hotel Group.
  6. ^ Pratt, Timothy (2011-05-16). "Las Vegas' once-glamorous Sahara hotel-casino closes". Reuters.
  7. ^ "Permits approved to revamp shuttered Sahara casino". The Sacramento Bee. The Associated Press. November 2, 2011. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)