Popular Culture Review Vol. 22, No. 1, Winter 2011 | Page 17

Defending a City’s Image 13 and Helldorado were particularly effective in conveying an image of Las Vegas as a frontier town. Almost all the patrons in the hotels and casinos are dressed as cowboys and cowgirls, and the opening scene in Las Vegas Nights features singing cowboys on horseback riding downtown in front of the various gambling clubs. At the end of the opening credits for the film, one reads: Las Vegas The Last Frontier Town of the Old West Where you do as you please From Sunrise to Sunset 25 After that Anything Goes! Helldorado, besides featuring western movie notables Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, was shot largely at the Hotel Last Frontier and provided plenty of footage of the annual Helldorado rodeo and parade.^^ Several of the other films of the 1940s—Flight to Nowhere, Lady Luck, The Invisible Wall, and Once More My Darling—^portrayed Las Vegas as a wonderful resort town with swimming pools, nicely landscaped grounds, golf courses, cocktail lounges, elegantly dressed patrons, and fine shopping. Increasingly in the 1950s and 1960s, hotels took the lead in negotiating with producers of situation comedies, dramas, and variety programs on television, as well as film producers, to give their properties access to ever larger television and movie audiences. The Sands Hotel was the most successful, with favorable exposure on shows starring Danny Thomas, Milton Berle, and Red Skelton, as well as Dave Garroway’s Wide, Wide, World, I Spy starring Bill Cosby and Robert Culp, and the popular game show Queen fo r a Day. Several films including Meet Me in Las Vegas, Ocean’s 11, Pepe, and Kiss Me Stupid also 27 showcased the resort hotel. Yet, community leaders and hotel spokesmen were always quick to criticize films that included disparaging remarks about Las Vegas. For example, lines in the 1946 films Lucky Lady and ’Till the End o f Time suggested that there were crooked games in Las Vegas and that it was a place that one could not only lose all their money, but also get tossed out of casinos. As they would later oppose 28 711 Ocean Drive, the chamber of commerce protested these characterizations. Hotel publicists also were careful to gain control of scripts for programs or films shot on their properties to catch negative comments about Las Vegas. Sands Hotel publicist A1 Freeman, for example, persuaded Sheldon Leonard, the producer of the I Spy television series to delete the following line from a script, “Think about Las Vegas. If you don’t gamble there’s nothing to do.’ A few years later. Freeman rejected a proposal from the NBC program The Name o f the Game to film an episode at the Sands because there was too much violence in the script and it included “several gangster-type characters.” Other than the case of 711 Ocean Drive, the strongest action taken by the chamber of commerce against a production involved the proposed television series Las