Las Vegas
Caesars Palace
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Caesars Palace
3570 Las Vegas Blvd South
Las Vegas, NV 89109 |
| Number of rooms |
3,348 |
| Theme |
The
Roman Empire |
| Gaming space |
166,000ft² (15,442 m²) |
| Permanent show(s) |
Céline Dion: A New Day |
| Signature attraction(s) |
Forum Shops
Pure |
| Notable restaurant(s) |
Restaurant Guy Savoy
808
Bradley Ogden
Empress Court
Hyakumi
Mesa Grill |
| Owner |
Harrah's Entertainment |
| Date opened |
August 5,
1966 |
| Casino type |
Land-Based |
| Major renovation(s) |
1974, 1979, 1992, 2001 |
| Previous name(s) |
none |
| Casino website |
Caesars Palace |

Caesars Palace is a
hotel and
casino located
on the
Las Vegas Strip in
Las Vegas, Nevada. Caesars Palace is owned and operated by
Harrah's Entertainment. Caesars is located on the west side of the Strip,
between the Bellagio and the Mirage.
Caesars has 3,348 rooms in five towers:
Augustus,
Centurion,
Forum,
Palace, and
Roman.
The Forum tower features guest suites with 1,000 square feet of space.
History
In 1962, Jay Sarno, a cabana motel owner, used ten million dollars that had
been lent to him by the Teamsters Central States Pension Fund to begin plans for
a hotel on land owned by Kirk Kerkorian. Sarno would later act as designer of the hotel he planned to
construct.
Building of the 14-story Caesars Palace hotel began in
1962. That first
tower would have 680 rooms on the 34 acre (138,000 m²) site.
Sarno struggled to decide on a name for the hotel. But he made the decision
of calling it Caesars Palace with his thinking that the name Caesar would
evoke thoughts of royalty because of
Roman general Julius Caesar. Sarno thought that people should feel they were at a king's
home while at his hotel. The name of the hotel is often spelled "Caesar's
Palace", although the real name is "Caesars Palace", making everyone that stays
there a "Caesar".
Sarno contracted many companies to build the hotel, from the Roman landscapes
it presents, to the water fountains that have been stages of various events and
the hotel's swimming pools.
On August 5, 1966, the hotel was inaugurated, with Andy Williams and Phil
Richards providing entertainment; they both played Julius Caesar at a play that
night. Two days later, Latin musician Xavier Cugat and salsa dancer Charo became the
first couple to marry in the new establishment.
Soon after the hotel's opening, Sarno bought the land from Kerkorian for five
million dollars.
On December 31, 1967, Evel Knievel unsuccessfully tried to jump the hotel's
water fountain with his motorcycle.
On July 15, 1969, executives lay ground on an expansion area of the hotel,
and they buried a time capsule in the area, but the time capsule was stolen days later.
In 1973, Del Webb company was contracted to make a 16 story building to add
to the Palace's number of rooms. That project was finished in 1974.
In 1980, Gary Wells gained much media coverage, and much physical suffering, when he
unsuccessfully tried to leap over a water fountain at the Caesars Palace. He
sustained injuries in many different parts of his body.
By the 1980s, Caesars Palace had become a boxing and gambling Mecca. Joe
Louis, the former world Heavyweight champion boxer, worked at Caesars Palace as
a greeter until his death in 1981. A statue of him would be erected soon after
inside the hotel. Another professional boxer, South Korean Duk Koo Kim, went 14
rounds with Ray Mancini at the Palace in 1982, then
collapsed in a coma and died. As a result, the number of rounds in a boxing
title match was reduced to 12. Fights were (and still are) particularly
beneficial to the casino, with high-rolling boxing fans hitting the gaming
tables and
slot
machines before and after bouts, as well as wagering large sums at Caesars'
large sports book. Among the Caesars Palace's most famous fights were The Battle
of the Little Giants, the Sugar Ray Leonard vs. Thomas Hearns fights, the Larry
Holmes vs. Gerry Cooney battle, Marvin Hagler versus Thomas Hearns, the fight in
which Mike Tyson became world Heavyweight champion by knocking out Trevor
Berbick and the fight between Leonard and Hagler. Most boxing fights were held
at the hotel's parking lot. Extra security measurements had to be taken for the
fight between Holmes and Cooney, as both the KKK
and black groups had threatened to shoot the boxers before the fight began;
there were police snipers at the roof of Caesars Palace and adjacent hotels on
the fight's night.
Also during the 1980s, the hotel opened an
Atari game room
that had over 60 Atari video game arcade machines.
In 1989, Robbie Knievel successfully completed what his father could not do years
before.
The hotel's management wanted it to have a new, family-oriented atmosphere as
the 1990s
approached, a trend mirrored by many of the big Las Vegas resorts. This move was
not strange to Las Vegas hotel owners, as most hotels there were planning to
modernize anyway by adding more children features and making Las Vegas hotels
seem more family friendly and less gambler oriented. As a consequence, big time
boxing was one of the first things to leave Caesars Palace.
In 1992, The Forum Shops at Caesars opened; it was one of the very first
venues in the city where shopping, particularly at high-end stores, was an
attraction in itself. The fourth phase opened on October 22, 2004. It now has
the 2nd built circular escalator in the USA. The other one is at the Westfield
San Francisco Centre.
In 1994, the NBC game show Caesar's Challenge was taped here.
Over the years, the hotel has been owned by various companies, including
Sheraton and The Hilton International Corporation. Caesars Entertainment
(originally known as Park Place Entertainment) bought the property in 1999, before the
merger with Harrah's.
Caesars has just opened the Roman Plaza, an open-air area with a cafe on the
corner, and the Colosseum theater, where Céline Dion and Elton John are regular
performers. The Colosseum was specifically built for Dion's show, "A New Day," a
spectacular produced by former Cirque du Soleil director Franco Dragone. Dion's show was also notable for having some of the highest
ticket prices for any show in the city, with seats as high as $200 each;
nonetheless, the show regularly sells out.
Many star performers, such as
Liberace, Julio Iglesias, David Copperfield, and Gloria Estefan have performed at the hotel.
On October 2, 2004, big-time boxing returned to the Caesars Palace hotel, as
Jeff Lacy, a former Olympic boxer, knocked out Syd Vanderpool in eight rounds in
a fight between Super-middleweight world title challengers that was televised on
Showtime.
WrestleMania IX, one of the periodic World Wrestling Federation spectacles
promoted by Vince McMahon, was held here.
Currently, Caesars is in the process of another expansion, including a new
hotel tower.
In 2005,
Harrah's Entertainment acquired
Caesars Entertainment and became the owner of Caesars Palace.
File history
Amenities and Entertainment
In addition to the casino and a race and sports book, Caesars offers plenty
to do, including:
- A New Day—show starring
Céline Dion
- Business Center
- Exotic
cars
showroom
- Fall of
Atlantis—free show
- Festival Fountain—free show
- Forum Shops—more than 160 shops,
boutiques,
and restaurants
- Health Club—features a rock-climbing
wall
- Pool—4 Roman styled, and 2 Jacuzzis—Garden of the Gods Pool
Oasis, 4.5 acres
- Pure
Nightclub—36,000
sq ft.
- Spa—23,000 sq ft. with 22 treatment rooms
- The Red Piano—show starring
Elton
John
- Weddings—3 Chapels: Classico (196 guests), Romano (35
guests) and Tuscana (80 guests)
- Free shuttle to sister property
Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino approximately every thirty minutes.
References
External links
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