LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,766
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
You can't get much more neon onto one building than this. The International Casino, seen here in 1937, was the last word in multi-purpose entertainment, combining elements of a ballroom, a supper club, and a burlesque theatre into one structure, which spanned the entire block between West 44th and West 45th Street on Broadway. And if you didn't like the Casino, you could always go downstairs and take in a movie.
The "Wrigley Spectacular" on the roof was one of the definitive Times Square displays of its time -- it combined neon with colored incandescent bulbs to create a semi-animated aquarium effect, although what being underwater has to do with gum is left to the imagination. Alternating flashing slogans got the point across -- the messages at the top left were "KEEPS THE TASTE IN TUNE" alternating with "AIDS THE DIGESTION," and at lower right "STEADIES THE NERVES" alternates with "THE FLAVOR LASTS." Maybe so, but they still had to scrape it off the carpet at the Criterion with a damn putty knife.
The Casino featured a pretty broad range of musical entertainment, and unlike many of the nightclubs along Broadway it didn't have a segregated booking policy: Harlem bands like Chick Webb's appeared, as did more sedate outfits like "George Olsen and his Music of Tomorrow." But it was too grandiose to last for very long, and when the Bond Clothing store took over the 45th Street side of the building in 1940, its days were numbered. Decades later a disco operated in the space before giving way to "the world's largest Toys R Us store," speaking of too grandiose to last.