Las Vegas Review-Journal

Kats!: Venetian shared its name

- KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES The Review-journal is owned by the family of Sheldon Adelson. John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section. His “Podkats!” podcast can be found at reviewjour­nal.com/podcasts. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes @reviewjour­nal.com

A story of two Venetians, one promise between Adelson, the Ruvo family

OVER the decades, vintage Vegas and contempora­ry Vegas have been represente­d by a single title, Venetian. The Venetian Ristorante, establishe­d by Lou Ruvo, was for generation­s a popular dinner hang on the corner of Sahara Avenue and Jones Boulevard. The Ruvos opened the restaurant downtown in the 1950s, moving to Sahara and Jones in ’66.

The Venetian resort opened on the Strip in 1999, towering over the parcel where the legendary Sands once stood.

The cozy Venetian Ristorante held its name, even as the groundbrea­king resort opened amid ample fanfare and boasting a lavish Italian design. Two Venetians, operated by two prominent Las Vegas families. This was no coincidenc­e.

After Sheldon Adelson’s death Monday night, Lou Ruvo’s son, Larry Ruvo, related how the two shared the name. The younger Ruvo had operated the Venetian Ristorante — started with Al and Maria Perry, Maria’s sister Angie and Lou Ruvo — for years full time after his father’s death in 1994. Soon after, in about 1995, Larry Ruvo took a call from his cousin Lorraine Hunt, who was a Clark County commission­er.

Hunt told Ruvo about plans she had just reviewed for a fancy new resort on the Strip, to be called

The Venetian. Ruvo saw this as a moment of consequenc­e. He had attorney Pete Bernhard send a letter to Adelson’s reps explaining that he held the trademark to the Venetian name in Las Vegas.

Ruvo soon heard from Las Vegas Sands exec Rob Goldstein, requesting a meeting to discuss this name.

“I met with Rob and explained my family had owned the rights to the name Venetian for 40 years and that my family had to be given something for the name,” Ruvo said Tuesday, reviving a tale in his book “The Venetian Memories,” issued in 2009 to celebrate his mother Angie’s 85th birthday. “Rob thought that was fair and arranged for me to meet Sheldon.”

The two conferred in a constructi­on trailer on The Venetian (resort) site.

“First thing Sheldon said was, ‘I’ve checked you out,’ ” said Ruvo, who founded the Cleveland Clinic

Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in honor of his father. “He said some very compliment­ary things about me and my family. I told him I’d checked him out, too, and told him he had the reputation of being a little difficult, but my dad said never to judge a book by its cover.”

After 45 minutes of chat, Adelson asked Ruvo how much he wanted for the Venetian name. Ruvo responded by setting a baseline value, referring to Steve Wynn’s $750,000 payment to the Mirage Motel for use of “Mirage.”

“I said I thought Venetian was worth $1.5 million,” Ruvo said. Adelson came back with, “You want $1.5 million?”

“No,” Ruvo said. He countered with … nothing.

“I told him, ‘If you’re coming in to Las Vegas to create a lot of jobs for people, I want only that

you make my family proud with the name,’” Ruvo said. “My father would have raised me wrong if I were to hold you up for a million or two million dollars when you’re doing something this positive for the community.”

Adelson stood, and grabbed his small desk calendar.

“He got very animated and said, ‘Do you understand that I’m the son of a Boston cabdriver, and nobody has every given me anything for nothing?’ ” Ruvo said. “I said, ‘Well, mark down this day on that calendar because you’ll never hear from me again about this, nor will there be any lawsuits for using the name Venetian.”

True, the Venetian name lived on at the restaurant for a few years even after the Ruvos’ ownership. The business was then Slanted Clam for a short time and for the past decade has been

Herbs and Rye.

The Ruvos and Adelsons were friendly from that Venetian conversati­on forward. When Adelson became the first resort owner to provide mini-bars in guest rooms, he sought Ruvo, a high-ranking executive with Southern Glazer’s Wine and Spirits of Nevada, to help fill his inventory.

In March, Ruvo honored Sheldon and Dr. Miriam Adelson with the Keep Memory Alive Community Leadership award in honor of the couple’s philanthro­pic endeavors and contributi­ons to medical research, education and many Jewish causes and organizati­ons.

Ruvo has been especially moved by the Adelsons’ philanthro­pic passion. The family founded the Adelson Educationa­l Campus and the Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Clinic for Drug Abuse Treatment and Research and have long supported philanthro­pic efforts internatio­nally, particular­ly in Israel.

“It’s a sad day for Las Vegas, a sad day for Israel, a sad day for the charitable world and a sad day for my family,” Ruvo said. “He is a man I truly, truly respected and admired. His charity work will be his legacy. Sheldon Adelson should have a statue on the Strip. He was that extraordin­ary.”

 ?? Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal @benjaminhp­hoto ?? The trademark to the name for The Venetian resort, which opened in 1999, had been held by the Ruvo family.
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-journal @benjaminhp­hoto The trademark to the name for The Venetian resort, which opened in 1999, had been held by the Ruvo family.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal file ?? Today, the site of the Venetian Ristorante at 3713 W. Sahara Ave. is occupied by the restaurant Herbs and Rye.
Las Vegas Review-journal file Today, the site of the Venetian Ristorante at 3713 W. Sahara Ave. is occupied by the restaurant Herbs and Rye.
 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal ?? The Ruvo family establishe­d the Venetian Ristorante in downtown in the 1950s, and it moved to Sahara Avenue and Jones Boulevard in 1966.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal The Ruvo family establishe­d the Venetian Ristorante in downtown in the 1950s, and it moved to Sahara Avenue and Jones Boulevard in 1966.
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