Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

ENT. Rememberin­g when famed conductor Leonard Bernstein came to town

Rememberin­g the night that a different kind of headliner played Vegas: Leonard Bernstein

- By Carol Cling • Las Vegas Review-Journal

IN 1960 Las Vegas, music meant Liberace. Or Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr. and their fellow Rat Packers. Or the various orchestras accompanyi­ng their Strip showroom stints.

Except on one hot August night, when a different kind of headliner played Vegas. And brought his own orchestra to boot.

The orchestra was no less than the New York Philharmon­ic. And the orchestra’s conductor, Leonard Bernstein, was a one-man musical supernova: a Renaissanc­e man who not only reigned in concert halls but on television, sharing his love for classical music with viewers young and old.

To say nothing of a composing career that spanned symphonies, opera, ballet — and Broadway, from the high-spirited “On the

Town” to “West Side

Story’s” star-crossed, straight-outta-Shakespear­e tragedy.

In 2018, the world is celebratin­g Bernstein’s centennial (he was born Aug. 25, 1918, in Lawrence, Massachuse­tts, and died in 1990 at 72) with thousands of concerts and other events. The festivitie­s began last year on his birthday and continue through his centennial date. Las Vegas gets into the act this month; Opera Las Vegas’ “Bravo Bernstein” concert is March 25.

Yet when Bernstein played Vegas — three days after his 42nd birthday — he was still in the first decades of his legendary musical career.

Classical music’s ‘James Dean’

The charismati­c and undeniably dashing Bernstein — or, as everyone called him, Lenny — more closely resembled, in the words of composer John Adams, movie star “James Dean than (Arturo) Toscanini,” the renowned Italian maestro.

“In an age of specializa­tion, (Bernstein) refuses to stay put in any culture pigeonhole,” Time magazine commented. “In each of his five chief spheres of activity — conducting, composing, playing the piano, lecturing and teaching — he has won wide recognitio­n as a master practition­er of his art.”

Las Vegas in the waning days of the Eisenhower era may have seemed an unlikely locale for such a worldly, world-class musician. After all, the population in all of Clark County was a little more

In 2018, the world is celebratin­g the legendary conductor Leonard Bernstein’s centennial with thousands of concerts and other events, including several in Southern Nevada.

than 125,000.

Yet, however improbably, that’s exactly where Bernstein and the New York Philharmon­ic were on Aug. 28, 1960, when they played an even more improbable venue: the Las Vegas Convention Center’s silver-domed, flying saucer-shaped Rotunda, which was demolished in 1990. (The Beatles performed there in 1964.)

Bernstein and the Philharmon­ic enjoyed enthusiast­ic receptions during their cross-country 1960 tour.

“In some places, we have received standing ovations before playing a note,” Bernstein said, in the 2009 book “Picturing Las Vegas” by Linda Chase, who grew up in Southern Nevada.

Other tour stops probably didn’t have the Rhythmette­s, Las Vegas High School’s cowgirl-costumed precision dance team, who welcomed the maestro upon arrival.

‘A rare privilege’

The Las Vegas Symphony Society and the Clark County Fair and Recreation Board were listed as concert sponsors, according to the evening’s program (preserved in the New York Philharmon­ic’s digital archives).

In 1959, the symphony society sponsored a concert by the Utah Symphony, led by Maurice Abravanel. But the New York Philharmon­ic’s arrival in Las Vegas the next year inspired a reverentia­l reaction, judging by sentiments expressed in the concert program advertisem­ents.

“It is a rare privilege for Southern Nevadans to welcome Mr. Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmon­ic,” read an ad placed by Ronzone’s of Las Vegas, “Quality Merchandis­e for Home and Family Since 1917.”

Then-Las Vegas mayor Oran Gragson saluted “this initial step toward a vigorous cultural program for our Las Vegas community” in an ad for his North Main Furniture and Charleston Appliance Center.

“A rare and rewarding occasion — tonight’s concert,” gushed dentist (and local NAACP president) James B. McMillan and wife. “For insuring the cultural future of Nevada, our thanks,” read an ad placed by insurance agent Jack Woods.

From casino bosses to union bosses, from musicians to morticians, Las Vegans applauded “this magnificen­t occasion.” (At least according to Bertha’s, purveyors of “gifts, china, crystals and furnishing­s for gracious living.”)

‘The boorish crowds’

They applauded during the concert too, “decked out in their bolo ties and leather vests, powder blue tuxes, strapless evening gowns and fur stoles of dubious origin,” Chase wrote.

The orchestra even had its own accompanim­ent, with “people talking, popping gum and taking flash pictures” with their Kodak cameras, she noted. (The “final indignity was that someone dropped a cookie crumb on (the) kettle drum,” according to Chase.)

“The orchestra struggled manfully through the evening,” she observed, “but you could feel, even with his back to us, that Lenny was seething.”

Despite the large turnout and enthusiast­ic reception, “Bernstein by all accounts was appalled by Las Vegas,” Chase wrote, from “the boorish crowds” to the gambling, which prompted Bernstein to comment that “Vegas had recovered some of the money it had paid to the Philharmon­ic from the losses his musicians suffered at the tables.”

It took Las Vegas more than a few years to build a concert hall where Bernstein would have felt at home.

UNLV’s Artemus Ham Hall opened in 1976 with a concert by the Tokyo Symphony.

When the $470 million Smith Center for the Performing Arts opened in March 2012, the opening gala in Reynolds Hall concluded with Jennifer Hudson, orchestra and choir performing “Take Care of This House” from the 1976 musical “1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue,” featuring lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner — and music by Leonard Bernstein.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Leonard Bernstein led the New York Philharmon­ic Orchestra in its 1962 inaugural concert at Philharmon­ic Hall. This year marks the 100th anniversar­y of his birth.
The Associated Press Leonard Bernstein led the New York Philharmon­ic Orchestra in its 1962 inaugural concert at Philharmon­ic Hall. This year marks the 100th anniversar­y of his birth.
 ?? Jerry Abbott Las Vegas News Bureau ?? The conductor was welcomed by Las Vegas High School’s Rhythmette­s precision dance team for his August 1960 concert in Las Vegas.
Jerry Abbott Las Vegas News Bureau The conductor was welcomed by Las Vegas High School’s Rhythmette­s precision dance team for his August 1960 concert in Las Vegas.
 ??  ?? The program cover for the maestro’s Las Vegas concert.
The program cover for the maestro’s Las Vegas concert.
 ??  ?? Las Vegans packed the 7,000-seat, flying saucer-shaped Rotunda at the Las Vegas Convention Center. Jerry Abbott Las Vegas News Bureau
Las Vegans packed the 7,000-seat, flying saucer-shaped Rotunda at the Las Vegas Convention Center. Jerry Abbott Las Vegas News Bureau

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