Times Colonist

Atlantic City in an upbeat mood as two shuttered casinos reopen

- WAYNE PARRY

ATLANTIC CITY, New Jersey — Movie stars lent an air of celebrity glitz to a gritty seaside gambling resort Thursday as Atlantic City reclaimed two of its shuttered casinos, and more than 6,000 of the 11,000 jobs it lost during a brutal stretch of casino shutdowns.

The Hard Rock, which was the former Trump Taj Mahal, held a mass guitar-smashing ceremony inside its concert arena that holds nearly 8,000 fans. Black Panther star Michael B. Jordan was among those helping to christen the facility.

Just as that wrapped up, the Ocean Resort Casino, the former Revel, held a ribbon-cutting a few hundred yards north on the Boardwalk at which actor, singer and diehard New England Patriots fan Mark Wahlberg had to eat crow in front of hundreds of Philadelph­ia Eagles fans who reminded him of the outcome of February’s Super Bowl.

“I gotta say: E-A-G-L-E-S!” Wahlberg shouted out from a staircase on the Boardwalk outside the Ocean Resort. The actor and his family have one of the casino’s many restaurant­s.

“We hope to be here at lot,” he said. “Come enjoy this beautiful place.”

The mood was celebrator­y in a city that has had little to celebrate in recent years. After losing five of its 12 casinos since 2014, Atlantic City now has nine. The openings have generated cautious optimism for the seaside gambling resort that once was the only place in America outside Nevada with casinos, but which has struggled mightily as gambling spread in surroundin­g states.

“We believe in Atlantic City,” said Jim Allen, CEO of Hard Rock Internatio­nal. “We truly believe that Atlantic City’s best days are in front of it.”

The two shuttered casinos reopened ahead of schedule Wednesday afternoon after being cleared to do so by New Jersey gambling regulators.

Allen said the company had spent $500 million US renovating the former Taj Mahal property.

“We promised you we wouldn’t just paint it and put up a guitar,” he said.

Julie Herron, of nearby Galloway Township, New Jersey, was awestruck when she walked inside the Hard Rock on Thursday.

“It’s beautiful, just fantastic,” she said. “It’s really uplifting. The music is awesome, just the rhythm. Sometimes all you need is rhythm.”

Inside the casino, the line to sign up for players’ cards stretched from the casino floor out into a lobby, but no one was complainin­g. Similar long lines for players’ cards were evident at Hard Rock, too.

Elvis Presley’s Rolls Royce is one of the first things patrons see after they pass underneath the giant replica of a Gibson Les Paul electric guitar (cherry sunburst model) at Hard Rock casino’s front entrance.

“I’ve been an Elvis fan forever,” Joe Emanuele said. Driving (very carefully, with a police escort) from a warehouse in nearby Pleasantvi­lle, New Jersey, to the casino site, Emanuele, whose vast portfolio at Hard Rock Internatio­nal includes securing music memorabili­a, parked his derriere in the same leather seat that once supported the “King of Rock ’n’ Roll.”

“You feel a little bit of prestige behind the wheel,” he said. “This is Elvis’ car that he picked the Beatles up in when they first came to Los Angeles.”

The car is part of a vast trove of memorabili­a on display at the Hard Rock.

There are gowns worn by Stevie Nicks and Whitney Houston, and guitars played by Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan and Katy Perry. There’s also a leather stage outfit worn by Aerosmith lead guitarist Joe Perry.

 ?? SETH WENIG, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Performers dance on stage during the grand opening celebratio­n at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, on Thursday.
SETH WENIG, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Performers dance on stage during the grand opening celebratio­n at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada