Nightclubs
Moon / Playboy Club Las Vegas |
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Moon / Playboy Club Las Vegas Details
- Hours of operation: Moon: Tuesday, Thursday - Sunday, 10 p.m. to the early morning hours. Playboy Club: 8 p.m. to the early morning hours.
- Cover price:
- Front-of-the-Line Pass to Playboy Club (Monday - Wednesday): $30, per night.
- Front-of-the-Line Pass to Playboy Club and Moon Nightclub (Thursday, Sunday): $30, per night.
- Front-of-the-Line Pass to Playboy Club and Moon Nightclub (Friday - Saturday): $40, per night.
- All Access Pass (Friday - Saturday): $75, per night. (Includes Front-of-the-Line admission for one to Moon, Playboy, Rain and ghostbar. Guest's name will be on admission list at all venues.)
- Payment information: Cash and all major credit cards.
- Location: Inside the Palms Casino Resort.
- Music: Moon: Hip-hop, mash-ups, rock. Playboy Club: Varies.
- Resident DJs: Playboy Club:
- Friday: Cyberkid, OB One
- Saturday: Mark Styles, FIVE
- Sunday: OB One, Graham Funke
- Friday: R.O.B., Stonerokk
- Saturday: OB One, Ikon, P
- Sunday: Greg, FIVE
- Clientele/Age Group: 21 and older.
- Attire: Stylish nightlife attire: No tank tops, shorts, athletic wear, baseball hats, tennis shoes or flip-flops.
- Occupancy: 499 in each club.
- Parking: Self parking and valet both available at the Palms hotel-casino.
- Reservations: Call for VIP reservations.
- Seating: Yes.
- Handicapped accessible: Yes.
- ATM: There is an ATM inside the Playboy Club, as well as in the main Palms casino.
- Special events:
- Playboy Club After Dark Sundays
- Moon Tuesdays
Moon / Playboy Club Las Vegas Review
At the top of the Palms' Fantasy Tower, the art of nightlife has been taken to a bold, new level – more than 50 stories above
the streets of Las Vegas.
N9NE Group – already an innovator of Vegas nightlife and dining with its other Palms venues, N9NE Steakhouse, Rain nightclub and ghostbar – has topped even itself with the opening of Moon Nightclub and Playboy Club.
The two venues are part of a triple-threat assault on all five senses that begins with the Italian delights of Nove Italiano restaurant on the 51st floor of the Fantasy Tower. But dinner there is a mere prelude to the delights waiting on the two stories above.
Directly above Nove Italiano is the uniquely Vegas location of the Playboy Club.
Playboy Club
Playboy. The word has conjured up thoughts of beautiful women, swanky bachelor pads and swinging singles for 54 years. Now,
on the tail of a 20-year Playboy Club drought, that iconic lifestyle once again leaps off the pages of the famous magazine
and comes to life in the Playboy Club at the Palms Las Vegas.
"The bunny is back," said Playboy Magazine founder Hugh Hefner, who opened the original Playboy Club in Chicago in 1960. During
the '60s and '70s, dozens of clubs had cropped up all over the world from New York to London and Manila. Top comedy and musical
acts performed at and frequented the clubs, which were open to members who held an exclusive key.
Playboy closed its last club in the United States in Lansing, Mich., in 1988, due to the increasing conservative world atmosphere.
"The truth of the matter for Playboy in general, certainly in terms of the bunnies, there was a period in the 1980s and early
'90s when the brand was not hot," said Hefner, 81. "I think we went through kind of a politically correct period in America
and elsewhere and they were not the best days for Playboy."
Then over the last half dozen years, Hefner said a huge fascination with retro emerged, from James Bond and The Beatles to
the bunnies.
"The brand has become hotter on a global level, hotter than ever before," he said. "So we were looking for a place to re-ignite
the whole Playboy Club-Casino concept and Las Vegas seemed like the most logical place."
Playboy Enterprises, Inc., talked to a lot of different operators in Las Vegas, but Hefner said the partner that made the
most sense was the Maloof family, owners of the Palms.
"We made a deal to move into the Palms and I think it was the right choice," he said. "They are very successful at attracting
a young, hip audience, from celebrities to high rollers."
Hefner added that Playboy Enterprises plans to open Playboy Club-Casinos elsewhere in the world, including London and Macau.
"It is the relationship, however, with the Maloofs and the Palms that is really the beginning of it all," he said.
Unlike the original clubs, the Playboy Club at the Palms does not require a membership. Anyone is welcome and the club's sophisticated
ambience appeals to both men and women alike. While this club doesn't feature live performances, it does offer an exciting
blend of hip nightlife and gaming.
Located on the 52nd floor of the Palms' Fantasy Tower, the club features floor-to-ceiling windows, offering stunning views
of the Las Vegas Strip and the valley. The decor incorporates rich, dark colors, plush leather sofas and Baccarat crystal
chandeliers, which all create a vintage Vegas vibe.
An exclusive VIP area features its own bar, a cozy fireplace and even some retro Playboy brand pinball machines.
The trademark Playboy Bunny logo is prominently displayed throughout the club – from the carpeting and the buttons on the
sofas to a giant neon bunny head emblazoned on the side of the building.
For those who are fans of the magazine and its photographs, there is Playboy centerfold wallpaper and 60 plasma screens displaying
visual images from the archives of the magazine.
While Hefner had input in the design of the Playboy Club, he said most of the credit goes to the Maloofs and the Las Vegas-based
entertainment company that helped open the club, N9NE Group. Michael Morton, a principal of N9NE group, is the son of Chicago
restaurateur Arnie Morton, one of Hefner's partners in the launch of the original Playboy Club.
"So our roots run all the way back to the early days," Hefner said.
Besides being a great place to grab a cocktail and enjoy the view, the Playboy Club also offers gaming in the form of blackjack
and roulette tables. These aren't your ordinary blackjack tables. The dealers are all beautiful Playboy bunnies, clad in the
legendary bunny costume complete with cuffs, collars and cottontails.
Cocktail waitresses also wear reinvented bunny costumes recently created by edgy designer Roberto Cavalli. The new costumes
feature designs that include leopard prints and rhinestones - a fitting Vegas tribute.
The opening of the club in October 2006 brought back many memories for Hefner.
"I felt a tremendous amount of nostalgia," said Hefner, whose daughter Christie, chairman and chief executive officer of Playboy
Enterprises, also attended. "It was a very emotional weekend for me."
-- Review by Aleza Freeman and Kristine McKenzie
Moon
Just a brief elevator or escalator ride from the refined-yet-playful atmosphere of Playboy Club is an equally-appealing – yet totally different – location to indulge in sense-shattering debauchery, Moon nightclub.
Located on the 53rd floor of the Fantasy Tower, Moon creates a dramatic, surreal environment for discerning party-goers. From the color-changing, glass-tile floor to the majestic, floor-to-ceiling windows that provide unrivaled views of Sin City, every aspect of this boutique nightclub begs for attention.
A space-age theme pervades this 12,500-square-foot venue. Imagine a nightclub stationed on the moon -- all steel and glass with white and silver adornments. Cocktail servers and dancers dress in short, tight, metallic silver uniforms with black go-go boots. Lasers and space imagery fill the air and walls above the main dance floor.
Overhead, a retractable roof opens to reveal an incredible view of the desert sky and stars. When closed, the ceiling serves as a massive video screen, displaying giant images of the club captured by a series of cameras.
Behind the club's main bar, accessible through tinted glass doors, is an expansive patio, replete with more ultra-modern seating accommodations and an impressive view of the Las Vegas Strip.
Inside Moon, flanking those glass doors, are two winding, dramatic, steel-and-glass staircases – accented by lit rails – leading to a VIP balcony, which not only gives a great view of the dance floor below, but also features its own bar and a smaller, more intimate patio for a quick breath of air and a breathtaking view.
On the other side of Moon, a VIP lounge awaits behind a giant, tile-encrusted door. The lounge offers cushy seating, plasma screen monitors displaying live feeds of the Strip and a private bar. Square, lit tiles in the floor, fiber optic lights circling overhead and psychedelic lighting gels fill the room with a fun, retro, disco-like feel, while maintaining the futuristic theme of the club.
An escalator down to the Playboy club is accessible via the VIP room's back door, providing exclusive access when you're ready to return to Earth for a little bit of old-fashioned luxury and indulgence.
-- Review by Pj Perez
Questions with Hugh Hefner
So where does the world's most famous bachelor choose to celebrate his birthday? In Vegas, baby! Hugh Hefner's girlfriends, Holly Madison, Bridget Marquardt and Kendra Wilkinson, stars of the hit E! reality television series, "The Girls Next Door," threw him the ultimate 81st and 82nd birthday bashes at Palms Las Vegas.
The Palms is somewhat of a second home for Hef. A partnership between the Palms and Playboy Enterprises led to last year's opening of the first Playboy Club in 20 years, as well as the 9,000 square foot Hugh Hefner Sky Villa, atop The Palms Fantasy Tower.
While Hef admits that Playboy Enterprises was a victim of the politically correct American climate during the '80s and early
'90s, now, he declares, "The bunny is back."
When you started out in Chicago in the '50s, did you ever envision that the Playboy logo would be emblazoned on a Las Vegas
hotel and that the bunnies would be dealing cards and serving drinks to Las Vegas visitors?
Well nothing that came to pass is something that I could have imagined. When I started the magazine, I didn't put a date on the first issue, because I wasn't sure there would be a second -- I didn't have any money. So what came to pass thereafter, that it so influenced society, that it became a brand known globally, that it turned into all of these different kinds of things from playboy clubs to television shows, to casinos -- I could not have imagined. I was a kid who dreamt impossible dreams, but I could not have imagined what lay ahead for me.
Describe your perfect night in Las Vegas.
A night spent with my three girlfriends, taking in a good show and enjoying the club-casino environment at The Palms, then an evening alone with the girls in the pool and the round bed (in the Hugh Hefner Sky Villa).
How has Las Vegas changed since your first trip here?
Vegas was a very different town back then. A lot of the members of the Rat Pack were personal friends of mine. I saw them on more than one occasion. I remember I took a trip to San Francisco to see Lenny Bruce who I had just heard about, and that would actually be the late 1950s. I saw Lenny Bruce and then went up to Los Angeles and from Los Angeles to Las Vegas. So that would have been the first trip and that would be probably around '57, '58. Now its become the entertainment capital of the world. We all know the phenomenal and unique history of the city, and its metamorphosis. It's a miracle.
Would you ever consider re-locating the Playboy Mansion to Las Vegas?
No, but I think it will be, to some extent, a second home. We'll be spending more time there. I can't imagine moving from the Playboy Mansion.
The original Playboy Mansion in Chicago was turned into condominiums. Do you think many tenants move there specifically because of its history?
I suspect so. They offered us the opportunity to purchase one of the condos about a week ago for over $2 million. The amazing thing is that Playboy Mansion West, which I bought out here in Los Angeles in 1971, I bought for just over $1 million. Now it's worth, who knows, $40, $50, $60 million.
If you could invite anyone, living or dead, to a party at the Playboy Club in Las Vegas, who would you invite?
Marilyn Monroe probably first and foremost, probably Frank (Sinatra), and Elvis, and Sammy Davis who was a very good friend, and probably some of the people I grew up admiring when I was a kid: Cary Grant, (Humphrey) Bogart, the people who had an impact on me when I was growing up.
Beyond the Palms resort, what do you love about Las Vegas?
Well, the fact that it never sleeps. It's party central. I was raised in a very typical, Midwestern, Methodist home with a lot of repression, and I think that for me that was part of reason, consciously and unconsciously, for launching Playboy. Playboy was devoted to a celebration of life and I think that the party theme, the very notion of a good party, has always been my response to Puritan repression. It was not a coincidence that when I did my very first television show, "Playboy's Penthouse," in the 1960s in Chicago, the theme for it was a party. After those shows, we would go to the original Playboy Mansion and have a late night party. I think that what makes Vegas unique is the fact that the party never ends.
Well, except when you have to work.
(Laughing) Yes, but in my case my work and play are kind of connected.
You have the ideal life.
That's true.
So, if Vegas was a woman, would she be a blonde, redhead, brunette or raven-haired beauty?
At various times she would probably be any one of the above. I think there are moments when she is any of the three or four: A blonde in the afternoon by the pool and a raven-haired exotic beauty later in the evening.
What's the secret to treating a lady right when you are in Las Vegas?
In any relationship it has to do with paying attention to what's going on. Don't be self involved. I don't think that it's a good line that wins the heart of a woman. I think it is listening, paying attention to what's going on and a good sense of humor helps.
And finally, tuxedo or smoking jacket?
Smoking jacket.
Smoking jacket, you didn't even have to think about that ...
No (laughing).
-- Interviewed by Aleza Freeman

