Las Vegas Review-Journal

Las Vegas Walk of Stars still on its feet

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES 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. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @Johnnykats­1 on Instagram.

MARILYN BALL might need some superhuman powers herself to straighten out the Las Vegas Walk of Stars.

Ball, the mother of Lindsay Wagner, who played “The Bionic Woman” on network TV in the 1970s, is the Walk of Stars’ former vice president. She worked with the late Bob Alexander, who headed up the organizati­on from 2004 until his death in September. Alexander was also president of the Palm Springs Walk of Stars through 2018.

Simply, Alexander was always the trusted, go-to man for all Walk of Stars concerns. In one memorable instance, he was the point man when dozens of stars were pulled up as Clark County installed safety bollards along the Las Vegas Strip.

In all, Alexander presided over more than 100 star ceremonies, including those of Wayne Newton, Elvis, the Rat Pack, Siegfried & Roy, Frank Marino (the only entertaine­r with two stars) and Donny and Marie Osmond.

Thus, the Walk of Stars’ very future was in doubt after he passed away from pneumonia at age 77. The responsibi­lity of reorganizi­ng the organizati­on has fallen to Ball.

“Bob was a one-man band, which was fine, but I think he’s the only one who understood his filing system,” Ball said Tuesday in a phone chat from Palm Springs, California. “We have a lot of work to do, but we’re going to make lemonade out of it. We’re giving it a real try.”

The delay has thrown a scare into fans of two upcoming star recipients, the late recording and TV superstar David Cassidy and lounge legend Cook E. Jarr. Cassidy’s reps finished their labor of love in 2018. They had raised the required funds and set a date last April for Cassidy to be honored on the Strip. That ceremony was knocked out by COVID-19 restrictio­ns.

The campaign to award Jarr a star had also reached fruition. Led by Jarr devotee Mark Block, a Gofundme campaign for the Jarr star has collected the $20,000 fee required for the star and ceremony expenses.

For several weeks, fans of Cassidy and Jarr were in the dark about plans for their heroes to be honored. More pertinent, they were concerned the thousands of dollars raised for the ceremonies might have gone missing.

Block conveyed his frustratio­n as he finished his four-year fundraisin­g drive in December, as he suddenly had no luck reaching anyone in authority at the Walk of Stars. He had been hustled along by Gofundme reps, who told him they’d already sent the money to a Walk of Stars account.

The Cassidy faction raised its money in three separate online campaigns. Those fans had not even known Alexander had died until this past weekend. Officials sent frantic emails asking for help, feeling their efforts had rammed into a dead end.

But after connecting with avid Cassidy fans Lynne Frasche of Sarasota, Florida, and Carolyn Schiavo of Princevill­e, Illinois, Ball says the Cassidy star will be placed, just later than planned.

“We just need the city to open up so we can plan for these ceremonies,” Ball said. “If they paid the money, they’ll get the star.”

Wilson’s Aces-raiders tribute

The first cross-promotiona­l effort between the Las Vegas Aces and Las Vegas Raiders since Mark Davis bought the WNBA team appeared in Sunday’s Review-journal. Davis paid tribute to Aces star A’ja Wilson’s statue, which was unveiled Monday at her alma mater, the University of South Carolina.

The event at the statue’s site, Colonial Life Arena, coincided with Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The message above the teams’ side-by-side logos was “A Commitment to Excellence.” As Bogey said in “Casablanca,” “I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.”

King’s first foray

Larry King’s first broadcast special after leaving “Larry King Live” on CNN was centered on the brain health work at the Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health. King died Friday at age 87, having suffered from COVID-19 shortly before his death. He logged more than 6,000 shows on CNN.

“CNN Presents: A Larry King Special — Unthinkabl­e: the Alzheimer’s Epidemic” aired May 1, 2011. It was King’s first broadcast after stepping down from his nightly show on Dec. 16, 2010.

He chatted with an array of newsmakers who had been touched by brain disease, including former first lady Laura Bush; Alzheimer’s activist and broadcaste­r

Maria Shriver; actors Seth Rogen and Angie Dickinson; TV host Leeza Gibbons ;NFL great Terrell Owens; and Ron Reagan, the son of the late President Ronald Reagan.

CNN chief medical correspond­ent Dr. Sanjay Gupta was also on hand to discuss Alzheimer’s with King, who attended multiple Keep Memory Alive events in support of co-founders Larry and Camille Ruvo.

 ?? Erik Kabik ?? Entertaine­r Frank Marino has two Las Vegas Walk of Stars honors.
Erik Kabik Entertaine­r Frank Marino has two Las Vegas Walk of Stars honors.
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