Bootlegger Bistro Owner
Says "Survival" is the Key to Beating Covid-19 Crisis
Las
Vegas has never dealt with anything quite like the coronavirus
pandemic, but the city has seen its share of challenges and crises.
Lorraine Hunt-Bono has been here for many of those trying times.
“I’ve
learned a lot about surviving all the doom and gloom we’ve
encountered. My parents told stories from 1945 when World War II
ended and everyone in their family said, ‘That’s it. Get out of
Vegas. Nothing can grow there. It’s over.’ And we kept growing,”
she said.
“Then again with Atlantic City in 1978, with the
proliferation of gaming, it was, ‘That’s it. Vegas is done.’
And we put our heads together in the community and said we’re going
overseas and going to bring the world in to Las Vegas.”
Rattle
through the various economic tragedies that have hampered the growth
of Las Vegas...
...inflation to 9/11 to the Recession to Oct. 1, 2017...
...and Hunt-Bono will remind you how her city came back bigger and
better every time. And this pandemic will be no different.
“There
really is a lot of light at the end of this tunnel, you just have to
look around and realize,” she said. “It will pass and our
infrastructure here in Las Vegas and Nevada is positioned for
continued success. We’re going to rebound and quickly. It’s
inevitable.
We’ve
been through things like this for years and those relatives will tell
us to get out of town but my mother and father would laugh it off. My
daddy used to say, ‘Las Vegas isn’t going anywhere but up. The
sky’s the limit.”
This
family is nothing short of Las Vegas royalty.
Her parents Maria and
Albert Perry moved from Niagara Falls to Las Vegas in 1943 and opened
an Italian restaurant here six years later.
They teamed with Angie
and Lou Ruvo to open a pizzeria on Fremont Street in 1955 and then
the historic Venetian restaurant on Sahara Avenue in 1963.
Lorraine,
known then as Lauri Perry, became a singer and entertainer performing
in showrooms all over the city before joining her family in the
restaurant business with the opening of the original Bootlegger
Bistro in 1972 at the corner of Tropicana and Eastern.
Hunt-Bono
was elected to the Clark County Commission in 1994, served as the
first woman chair of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority
and was elected as lieutenant governor.
In
2001, the Bootlegger moved to its current, larger location south of
the Strip on Las Vegas Boulevard while maintaining its reputation for
classic Italian cuisine, warm service and exciting live
entertainment.
Dozens of legendary performers and Vegas favorites
have graced its stage through the years including Mary Wilson from
the Supremes, Tony Curtis, Pia Zadora, Mary Kaye, George Bugatti,
Sonny Charles, Lena Prima, Frankie Avalon, Kristin Chenowith, Frankie
Scinta, Tony Orlando, Clint Holmes and many more.
Like
many local businesses, the Bootlegger was forced to close for a
couple of months in the spring but continued to serve customers with
takeout food services.
It has been back in business this summer
including dine-in with gaming but the normally robust live music
offerings have been pared down to asolo pianist or harpist.
“This
has been a very difficult time for every small family business,”
Hunt-Bono said. “We have the advantage of longevity, but the key
today is surviving the crisis. Being an old-time family restaurant,
we’ve been saving for rainy days and received help from government
entities and being able to reopen, so we’re hanging in there and
doing OK. But my heart goes out to everyone that can’t do that.
We’re trying to help wherever we can.”
Since
the Bootlegger is a Vegas institution, other restaurant and
entertainment operators have been looking to Hunt-Bono and her
husband, entertainer and host Dennis Bono, for guidance and support.
“It’s
a tough time for everyone and we talk to younger people who think
this is the end of the world, but you just have to hang in there. Six
months from now, this will be a different story,” she said.
“The
shooting in 2017 was also horrendous for tourism and the
entertainment industry, and here we are in 2020 with this pandemic
and it’s horrible again and it’s worldwide. But we will come back
because we always do. Entertainment is still the key.
We’re
going to pull out of this because we can. That Nevada pioneer spirit
is alive and well. Having lived through these scenarios, I know this
is not the end, just a dip in the road, and our economy was on a
dynamic upswing before COVID.”
Indeed,
if you drive north from the Bootlegger on Las Vegas Boulevard, you
can’t miss the reopened Strip resorts, the brand-new Allegiant
Stadium set to host the first Las Vegas Raiders football game in one
week and the soon-to-open Resorts World and Las Vegas Convention
Center expansion.
“Last
year was gangbusters for Vegas for businesses small and large, and
2020 in January and February were fantastic for the whole town. Then
the rug was pulled out from under us,” Hunt-Bono said. “But I
know in my heart and we know in the community this is only temporary.
This will pass.”
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