Liberace and Las Vegas
To earn the nickname "Mr. Showmanship," it helps to own a marble-coated Las Vegas mansion, preferably with a Sistine Chapel-style mural above your California King. Liberace is the only person who has earned this title and is undoubtedly one of the greatest Las Vegas celebrity legends of all time.
Liberace, whose birth name was Wladziu Valentino Liberace, was known as "Lee" to his friends and "Liberace" to the rest of the world. His four-decade-long career in show business was marked by an unparalleled trail of opulence that no one has matched to this day. For two decades, from the 1950s to the 1970s, he was the world's highest-paid entertainer.
Liberace resided in his Las Vegas home until he died in 1987, and it became a symbol of nightlife, practice space, and an extraordinary life. His bedazzled rise to fame was an endless journey towards gaudier and grander things, and his mansion, which spanned 14,393 square feet, was one of the most defining aspects of his persona, alongside his presence on stage.
Liberace's contribution to the growth of Sin City cannot be overstated, as he significantly impacted Las Vegas during his time there.
Early Life and Rise to Fame
In 1919, Liberace was born to Italian and Polish immigrants in West Allis, Wisconsin. His father encouraged him and his sibling to pursue music as a career, and at the age of four, Liberace began playing the piano. By eight, he had already met one of his idols, the Polish pianist Pederewski. When he became a teenager, he helped his family through the Depression by tickling the ivories everywhere, from strip clubs to local radio shows. When he was 20 years old, he began performing with the Chicago Symphony and toured the Midwest with them. But as he continued to play classical music, he realized that he loved playing all kinds of music. He also noticed that if he was more entertaining and provided a little showmanship, he would reach more audiences and made more money. Consequently, he dropped his Americanized first name, Walter, and began to use his last name, an unusual step in show business at the time and an attention-getter. He then turned to custom pianos and costumes. He famously said, "I don't give concerts. I put on a show." Although he did not enjoy criticism of his piano playing, he joked that he cried all the way to the bank. Later on, he even quipped, "I don't cry all the way to the bank anymore. I bought a bank."
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