Las Vegas Review-Journal

Iconic comic, actor, magician to be honored

- 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.

UNLV College of Fine Arts Dean Nancy Uscher says, “There is opportunit­y here that one doesn’t find in other places.”

That is true of the many students who have come out of UNLV and entered into the Las Vegas entertainm­ent workforce and creative community. It is also the case for the inductees into the UNLV College of Fine Arts Hall of Fame, all with a unique Las Vegas affiliatio­n.

This year’s event is Tuesday night at the school’s Student Union Ballroom. Those being honored:

■ Brad Garrett, co-star of “Everybody Loves Raymond” and proprietor of his eponymous club at MGM Grand. Garrett opened for Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr., among many superstars, early in his Las Vegas career.

■ The late Clarence Gilyard, acclaimed actor and professor at UNLV, famous for his roles as computer-terror expert Theo in “Die Hard,” Conrad Mcmasters on “Matlock” and Jimmy Trivette on “Walker, Texas Ranger.” Gilyard died in November at age 66.

■ The late Gloria Dea, the trailblazi­ng magician who just passed away over the weekend at age 100. Dea was the first person to perform magic on what would become the Strip, in May 1941 at 18 years old at the El Rancho Hotel. Magic legend David Copperfiel­d is following through on his commitment to present Dea’s award, in a ceremony prior to the main dinner.

■ Virko Baley, a Jacyk Fellow at Harvard Ukranian Research Institute and distinguis­hed professor of music, composer-in-residence and co-director of NEON, an annual composers’ conference at UNLV.

■ James Stanford, the multimedia artist well known for transformi­ng historic neon signage and architectu­ral elements of Las Vegas into modern mandalas.

Those receiving the Koep Dean’s Medal, chosen specifical­ly by Uscher:

■ Nelson Sardelli, the Vegas lounge legend who entertaine­d on the Strip, opening shows for Judy Garland and many other superstars. Sardelli still lords over the F.I.O.R.E. (Fun Italians Organizing Ridiculous Events) at Italian American Club.

And, honored as Alumni of the Year:

■ Cecilia Schafler, landscape architect, designer, educator, founder and president of Lage Design, named in honor of her grandmothe­r, her first design instructor.

■ Dwayne Eshenbaugh, the award-winning, Las Vegas-based architect and ardent humanitari­an whose firm, NOVUS Architectu­re, employs 10 UNLV alumni.

Gilyard is the first inductee to be honored with both Hall of Fame awards, with the Koep’s Dean Medal added after his passing.

“Shortly before Clarence died, I had the chance to tell him that we were really excited about honoring him,” Uscher says. “He’s someone who really warms my heart because he was in TV shows, he was very well-connected, he directed, he did lots of things in the industry, but he loved teaching. He loved his students. I think that that gave him as much satisfacti­on as anything.”

UNLV covers seven academic discipline­s in its College of Fine Arts.

“We have a real range of disciplina­ry honors, and this year, of course, we have the architectu­re represente­d through the Alumni of the Year,” Uscher says. “We are a multigener­ational, broadly based college.”

Past inductees into the UNLV Hall include entertainm­ent legends Tony Curtis, Phyllis Mcguire, Robert Goulet, The Killers, Wayne Newton, Liberace, Clint Holmes, Rich Little, Penn & Teller, Lance Burton, Siegfried & Roy, Ann-margret, Carrot Top, Dionne Warwick and Paul Anka; and architects Tony Marnell, John Klai,

Tom Schoeman and William Snyder.

This year’s event is sold out, with 320 in attendance. Garrett is unable to attend because of his shooting schedule for the new Peacock series “Bupkis,” based on Pete Davidson’s life. Garrett continues to headline a couple of weekends a month at his MGM Grand club, where he says, “I’m living the dream, performing across from the food court.”

Nicks honors Mcvie

Stevie Nicks’ crowd at T-mobile Arena wondered when would be the tribute to Christine Mcvie.

Nicks held it until the end, sending thousands home with some words from the wise. Like the rest of the show, the moment and message were from the heart.

“When you look at somebody that you love, in your own family or just a friend, and you know that you don’t pay enough attention to them sometimes, remember that sometimes doesn’t come again, someday,” Nicks said, having bowed at the end of “Landslide,” the Fleetwood Mac classic from 1975. “You will always regret that. So, make up the friendship bracelets and reach out to the people you love, because it’s really important.”

Nicks’ voice wavered as she reached the end of this sentiment, as she closed with, “I’ll talk to you tomorrow. Thank you.” She made sure those were the last words the Vegas crowd heard from her, spoken not sung, a tribute to Mcvie, who died last November at age 79.

Cool Hang Alert

On the topic of Garrett’s club, the star actor and comic always a hankerin’ for a solid live-music hang. Ashley Fuller and the Collective is the house band at the club entrance, from 7-8 p.m. and 9:30-midnight on Fridays and Saturdays. The band smokes, the place jumps and the club comics bring the ha-ha. Go to bradgarret­tcomedy.com for intel.

 ?? ?? KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES
KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES
 ?? UNLV College of Fine Arts ?? The late Clarence Gilyard, an acclaimed actor and professor at UNLV, will be inducted into the UNLV College of Fine Arts Hall of Fame on Tuesday.
UNLV College of Fine Arts The late Clarence Gilyard, an acclaimed actor and professor at UNLV, will be inducted into the UNLV College of Fine Arts Hall of Fame on Tuesday.

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