Cashman never lost focus on Las Vegas
KAREN CASHMAN remembers the first time her husband, Morgan Cashman, drove through Las Vegas in the late 1960s.
“He knew right then he wanted to move here, and he would never leave,” Karen said Tuesday afternoon. “He made the decision then to focus on Las Vegas.”
That reference hangs for a moment : focus on Las Vegas. The Cashman Photo founder’s life and legacy was his very focus on Las Vegas.
“I had not thought of that, until now, about his focus, but he did have a real vision for this city,” Karen said. “He just loved it so much here. He loved the great hotels of the late ’60s, all the star entertainers, and he loved being part of the city’s evolution.”
Morgan Cashman died early Sunday in Las Vegas of what his widow said was heart failure. He was 83. A celebration of life memorial is set for 3 p.m. Tuesday at Palm Eastern Mortuary, 7600 S. Eastern Ave. The Cashman family requests that memorial donations be sent to the Anti-defamation League.
Twin brothers Morgan and Harris Cashman (who died in 2011) began taking photos at resorts such as Loews, Delano and Eden Roc in their original hometown of Miami in the late 1950s. Harris Cashman had visited Las Vegas and met Caesars Palace founder Jay Sarno, whose interest was piqued in these upstart brothers who shot pictures in and around fancy hotels.
“They ended up in business together, and they started taking photos at the Caesars Palace opening (in 1966),” Karen Cashman said. “They opened the photo lab there (incorporated in 1967), and Morgan was taking pictures of the big celebrities over the years. … You still see our
team, all over the city.”
Whenever a major hotel-casino opened in Las Vegas, Cashman Photo would invariably begin working from the new resort. Cashman’s reach has become undeniable, a workforce of about 500 fulltime employees. In 53 years, the operation has grown into the largest privately held media company in the country.
Cashman also serves nearly 40 Las Vegas charities, providing photos and videos of scores of events.
Cashman’s staff is ubiquitous at photo opportunities around Las Vegas.
“We’ve done weddings, thrill rides, special events, conventions,” Karen Cashman said of the company’s famous souvenir-photo business. “We’ve had many camera stores on the Strip.”
The company shoots upward of 10,000 wedding photos a year, and many more of folks filing into shows at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace, Park Theater and the Westgate’s International Theater, among other Vegas entertainment venues.
“Morgan liked the era of
Las Vegas in the late ’60s, the way people dressed up to go out,” Karen Cashman said. “He was always looking for photo opportunities. We’d see something like the Shark Reef at Mandalay Bay and he’d say, ‘Ooh, this would be a great photo op!’ And pretty soon he would be talking to the powers that be to add the photo element.”
The company’s archives include coverage of the Rat Pack, Siegfried & Roy’s first performances in Las Vegas, and Elvis Presley’s Las Vegas headlining run that started at the International in 1969. In a 2014 interview, Morgan Cashman said his company’s collection of red-carpet celebrity photos rivaled that of the Las Vegas News Bureau.
“They come to us for pictures,” he said at the time. Morgan Cashman also talked of the company drawing down the scale of its business.
“At one time, we had operations in Honolulu, Atlantic City, New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Monte Carlo, and we had a gaming license in New Jersey, and that’s not easy to get,” Cashman said. “Eventually, we decided that the satellite operations were too difficult to maintain, and we concentrated on Las Vegas.”
Morgan Cashman was working almost to the end, at the office until about
6:30 p.m.
He was known as a strict but fair boss of the company named for his family.
“He could be a real pain in the rear end, but I loved him for it,” the company’s chief development officer and executive vice president, Robert Dolan, said. “We regularly had a boys’ night out with him. He was a true visionary and a community leader, and my best friend for over 30 years.”
Those who knew Cashman were well aware of his sweet tooth. After going to bed Saturday night, he woke up and had a slice of his favorite peach pie, then fell back asleep. A few hours later, he was gone.
“He had a last slice of peach pie, yes,” Karen Cashman said. “It was peaceful. He didn’t suffer, and he was in the home and the city that he loved.”
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. As of 9 p.m. Tuesday:
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