The El Cortez is the oldest continuously operating hotel and casino in Las Vegas — it’s on the National Register of Historic Places — and up at the top: the penthouse apartment of the late Jackie Gaughan — a Las Vegas legend and owner of the El Cortez since 1963. A special “Martini Tour” of the apartment was held to cap the Nevada Preservation Foundation‘s Vintage Vegas Home Tour — and I snapped away. Note that, while the El Cortez is known for its Spanish Revival style, the Gaughans’ apartment was keeping pace with the times — built and decorated, top-of-the-line, as part of the hotel’s new 14-story tower in the 1980s. Above: A spectacular Sherle Wagner roman bathtub faucet, part of the flamboyant pink marble master bathroom.
Before we dive in, here’s what Nevada Preservation had to say about the El Cortez and the Gaughan apartment:
Opening their doors in 1941, the El Cortez is the oldest continuously operating hotel and casino in Las Vegas. John Kell Houssels partnered with John Grayson and Marion Hicks, a Los Angeles based architect and developer, to build and operate the El Cortez on Las Vegas’ East Freemont Street. The casino was built in the Spanish Revival style and reflects many elements of the original architecture. Nominated to the National Register of Historic Places in 2013, it is only the second Las Vegas hotel and casino after Moulin Rouge [to attain that distinction].
John Davis Gaughan, Sr., better known as Jackie Gaughan, purchased the El Cortez in 1963 from the Houssels. Gaughan resided at the El Cortez from the time he purchased the hotel and casino until his death in early 2014. Gaughan was a well-known casino mogul who at one time reportedly owned more than 25% of downtown real estate. Gaughan eventually sold off his other investments, creating his legacy as owner and resident at the El Cortez.
His penthouse apartment was built … as part of the [new] Pavilion Tower. Designed by internationally known architecture firm Leo Daly with the interior done by Yates-Silverman, this apartment where Jackie and [wife] Bertie Gaughan lived feels like an entire house. Today, the Gaughan home retains most of its vintage fixtures and fittings, from the amazing tile and appliances in the kitchen to the pink marble commode and bath. The apartment is Vegas in all its splendor.
Jackie Gaughan. How important was he in Las Vegas history? Extremely important:
- Read this extensive obituary published by the Las Vegas Sun. Note, it says that Gaughan lived in the apartment up to 36 hours before he was taken to hospice, where he died — to be sure, he loved the El Cortez — it was literally his home.
Interiors from 1963 — or from the 1980s? Heidi Swank, executive director of the Nevada Preservation Foundation, said the documentation on this question is not clear… contradictory. That said: I’ll call it as mid-1980s! The Las Vegas Sun obituary also says that the tower was built in the 1980s, so I’m putting my chips on that decade.
Most of what I saw most certainly reminded me of interiors from the TV series Moonlighting. Remember that one, with Cybill Shepherd and Bruce Willis? All mauve and mint and brass and pink marbleDi and enormous shoulder pads and art deco on steroids. Or, on something. We watched an episode recently, on Netflix maybe — it was classic.
Entering the Gaughan penthouse
Take the elevator up to the penthouse…
Dig the door from the foyer into the living room….
… with the enormous “G” door handle. FABULOUS!
The front door to the hall had starburst escutcheons — I will say these date to 1963.
- See our story, Three sources to get midcentury modern door escutcheons — including starbursts similar to these.
A peek into the living room
I don’t have many photos of the living room, because it was full of people and it was hard to get good shots. So I focused on specific features.
There was no original furniture in the apartment — all of it was removed after the Gaughans died. The space has been pretty much unused since 2014, Heidi said. The hotel is considering options — it may be that they use the space as a long-term rental for folks like movie producers who are shooting in town and need a landing pad.
It was $100 special ticket to attend the Martini Tour. Everyone there was pretty darn excited to get inside this space — a rare opportunity!Behind the bar: Marbled mirror tiles.
- I follow Hoyne mirror tiles (affiliate link) on ebay — I love ’em. I have definitely seen that over the past several years, they have become more and more expensive — there’s been a revival, they are very desirable! See our story Mirror tiles from the 1970s – 13 designs (and there are more…)
Balconies off several of the rooms enabled spectacular views to the Las Vegas strip. Viewing tip: If you are on a desktop computer, click on the photo above (and/or any photo in any story on the blog) and it should enlarge on screen to 1000 pixels wide. In this one, look toward the bottom: That’s the El Cortez sign from the back!
It was still light out during our event — imagine the views at night!
The bedrooms:
There were lighted tray ceilings in the bedrooms — what an effective way to bring light into a space!
The kitchen was classic 1980s, I thought — light wood cabinets with almost a champagne finish, countertop tiles with a Southwest feel…
I loved the appliances! I bet they are real electricity hogs, though — I’m thinking that in the 1980s, it was still early days in terms of figuring out how to get power PLUS energy efficiency.
The bathrooms:
I saved the best for last: The bathrooms — but especially the master bathroom, which was my favorite part, all super regal, lavish with pink marble and gold-plated Sherle Wagner everywhere you looked. Above: Note the revolving toothbrush holder. I wonder if that came from Wagner or was a specialty product from Hall-Mack.
Above: This is actually the other bathroom. You can see the toothbrush holder better. Also check out how there’s a mirrored medicine cabinet — sort of “hidden” by design — along the side of the vanity. Peek-a-boo, Heidi, I see you!
The shower doors in the other bathroom were etched with a design of course, of course. I think I see a nymph of some sort in that wave…
The Sherle Wagner swan set was fantastic!
And oh my, the toilet — Heidi said she thought it was real marble — not some sort of faux acrylic, it was sooooo heavy.
Another favorite part of the whole scene: The etched mirror around the bathtub — including girls — faeries? — in bubbles. I was too gobsmacked by everything to note their exact species…
So what do we call this apartment? Hollywood Regency-meets-the 1980s? I know that for me, personally, it’s still hard to get my head around liking 1980s style. That said, I most certainly appreciate that this apartment was beautifully designed and decorated. And I’ll wager: We’ll see a 1980s revival of this sort yet.
Many thanks to the owners of the El Cortez for opening this space up to the Nevada Preservation Foundation. Along with The Smith Center (where registration was held and where I gave my talk) and the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, The El Cortez was a sponsor of the Vintage Vegas Home Tour 2016. They also catered the event, and it was scrumptious!
Link love:
Shambie says
The pink marble sink and tub took me back to my parents designing their dream home in the woods. Unfortunately, one of the bathrooms was red, and let’s just say that running water in that sink had a definite Psycho vibe…
Leslie says
Ahhhh my great grandmother was a waitress at the El Cortez for 30 years!
maria says
I think deco and the 80’s merged with the release of Miami Vice and it became a big hit tv show. Then deco suddenly took off again.
Debbie in Portland says
Nothing says “Over The Top” like an 80’s remodel! I think this style could be called “Dynasty Chic”. Can’t you just picture Joan Collins and Linda Evans lounging around in this apartment?
Emily says
About the 80s revival – I got a big smile a few months ago when Land of Nod released an 80s collection. Somehow I find it easier to embrace for a kids space 🙂
http://blog.landofnod.com/honest-to-nod/2016/03/80s-decor-inspiration.html
Michelle says
We had that same microwave, or extremely similar, growing up. I think it had been a gift to my parents from my grandmother as a housewarming/building gift or something. You just barely tapped the buttons, almost more of a hover-over. Felt very Star Trek-like. It was humongous. You could have cooked a full size turkey in it. I’d kinda kill to have such a luxurious microwave today. It was awesome.
Jennifer Williams says
The huge box from my in-laws 1970s Amana Radar Range still holds our Christmas ornaments. I think they adapted chrome-heavy older stove designs to gain credibility for the new technology.
tammyCA says
Elements in the penthouse kinda reminds me of the dramatic Art Deco 1930s movie sets (like Joan Crawford in her fancy tub in The Women). If I remember, wasn’t it Joan Crawford & her designer/actor friend that started Hollywood Regency style? Surprising that the kitchen looks so plain, ‘tho. My fantasy dream house (ha, one of many) would be a sleek, stylized mid-century Hollywood Regency..hot pink velvet, Aqua vinyl, white carpet, room divider screens and lots of shiny brass but thin, elegant lines (not the ’80s version) so my bathtub faucet would have to be a sleek, curvilinear brass flamingo! 🙂
Allison says
“Surprising that the kitchen looks so plain ”
I doubt casino owners typically do a lot of cooking at home.
The kitchen was there for the caterers when they entertained and for the occasional midnight beer. Meals were no doubt served from one of the restaurants below.
Dan says
You’re thinking of William Haines, who had a successful acting career in the early talkie era. The story is he was ordered by studio execs to get married to quash rumors of his sexuality. Instead he quit movies, and started a very successful design career with his partner. Joan Crawford said they had the happiest ‘marriage’ in Hollywood. His look was sleeker than what Hollywood Regency usually brings to mind. His signature seating was very low, usually armless, and standing on widely splayed tapered legs.
I’ve seen that glass tub from “The Women” in other movies, including a “Little Rascals”, of all things.
Neil says
Bill Haines designed some really beautiful, very Hollywood-chic mid-century furnishings, and they’re still being produced today. Check ’em out.
http://www.williamhaines.com/collection
pam kueber says
fantastic!!!
K8 says
All I can think of is “STOP LOOKING AT ME SWAN!” from Billy Madison: https://i.ytimg.com/vi/jaaMAuwwHPc/hqdefault.jpg
pam kueber says
🙂
Robin, NV says
Oh my gosh, that toilet!! That really made me smile! Thanks.
For anyone wanting to recreate a 70s-luxe bathroom, cultured marble is still available in a variety of colors – pink, blue, alabaster, even white with gold sparkles.
pam kueber says
Yup!
Linda says
So, it must have some sort of inner working that is not marble..a porcelain bowl, cast iron P trap… marble would stain over time and degrade.
Dan says
It seems it takes about 40 years for styles to cycle back. 30’s deco was big in the 70’s, MCM received new appreciation starting in the 90’s, and now I’m seeing signs of a disco era revival. Can Memphis furniture, big hair, jackets with pushed up sleeves, and faux deco mylar wallpaper be far behind?
Jukesgrrl says
They’ve had a couple of Odes to Memphis Design homes on Apartment Therapy recently. Nostalgia for millennials.
pam kueber says
Here are a few stories I’ve done on Memphis design:
Ettore Sottsass laminates from 1978 — still available today — 39 “Memphis” designs in all.
1980s design and decorating trends — let’s make a list
Postmodernism and how it influenced 1970s and 1980s interior design — I look to the V&A’s new exhibit