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Due to frequent sell-out nights, advance ticket purchase is highly recommended.
Opening times this week:
Monday
8:30pm - Midnight
Tuesday
8:30pm - Midnight
Wednesday
8:30pm - Midnight
Thursday
8:30pm - Midnight
Friday
8:30pm - Midnight
Saturday
8:30pm - Midnight
Sunday
8:30pm - Midnight
Due to frequent sell-out nights, advance ticket purchase is highly recommended.
Opening times this week:
Monday
8:30pm - Midnight
Tuesday
8:30pm - Midnight
Wednesday
8:30pm - Midnight
Thursday
8:30pm - Midnight
Friday
8:30pm - Midnight
Saturday
8:30pm - Midnight
Sunday
8:30pm - Midnight
Due to frequent sell-out nights, advance ticket purchase is highly recommended.
Opening times this week:
Monday
8:30pm - Midnight
Tuesday
8:30pm - Midnight
Wednesday
8:30pm - Midnight
Thursday
8:30pm - Midnight
Friday
8:30pm - Midnight
Saturday
8:30pm - Midnight
Sunday
8:30pm - Midnight

Betty Willis: Neon Sign Artist

In 2017, The Neon Museum presented the small photo exhibit “Betty Willis: Neon Sign Artist” at the Lost City Museum in Overton, Nevada.

The exhibit honored the designer in her home town and was originally curated by Neon Museum staff members Derek Weis and Tracey Sprague.

We hope our visitors and supporters will enjoy the following highlights from the exhibit.

Overton Origins

Originally from Overton, Nevada, Betty Willis has garnered international attention for designing the Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign. Willis got her start in commercial art creating newspaper ads for Las Vegas shows before becoming a neon sign designer. One of the few women designers in a male-dominated field, Willis’ career included stints at YESCO, Western Neon, and Ad-Art sign companies.

The signs created by Betty Willis and her contemporaries, whether advertising family-owned motels or wrapping entire casino buildings, were a defining element of Las Vegas’ roadside architecture. This exhibit features photographs of some of the most memorable signs designed by Willis, including those now housed at The Neon Museum.

Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas

Framed Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign

All of the limited edition prints were signed by both Willis and Hannapple. This print belongs to the daughter of Willis, Marjorie Holland.

welcome sign in 2002

This Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas photo was taken by fine art photographer William Hannapple.

Betty Willis designed the city’s most iconic sign while working at Western Neon in 1959. In 2009, the Welcome sign was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

To learn more about the Welcome sign, check out our blog post, “Put a Star on It: A Brief History of the Welcome Sign,” written by guest writer Jeffrey Carlson.

Moulin Rouge

Moulin Rouge, 1955

Moulin Rouge, 1955, UNLV Special Collections

The Moulin Rouge, with its swooping sign by Betty Willis, broke new ground when it opened in 1955 as the first major racially integrated hotel and casino in Las Vegas. Although popular, mismanagement likely led to its closure five months later. In 1960, the Moulin Rouge was the site of the historic agreement that helped end segregation at Las Vegas hotels.

Willis studied French-style lettering and drew the elegant script for the sign by hand, which was common before the advent of computer aided design techniques. Decades later she recalled that “I wanted to make it as impressive and as happy and as good as I could.”

Betty Willis Visits The Neon Museum

Betty Willis in Neon Boneyard

In 2013, Betty Willis was photographed in front of her sign after touring the Neon Boneyard.

Del Mar Motel

Del Mar sign

The 1950s Del Mar sign originally housed much of its neon tubing in the open space bordered by a perimeter of thin cabinetry.  Betty Willis designed the Del Mar so that a single section of neon could be seen from both directions, an innovation that reduced the cost and labor needed to manufacture the sign.  According to Willis other sign companies soon followed suit.

Blue Angel Motel

The Blue Angel Motel opened on Fremont Street in Las Vegas in 1957. The angel, designed by Willis, was removed from the property in March 2017 to be refurbished.

The City of Las Vegas restored and reinstalled the Blue Angel near its original location in March 2020.

Blue Angel installation

Blue Angel installation, 2020, Dennis Connor

Blue Angel Arrow

Federal Heath sign company moving the arrow to the Museum.

The blue and white arrow from the Blue Angel signage is now in The Neon Museum collection. This photograph shows the crew from Federal Heath sign company moving the arrow to the Museum.

City Center Motel

City Center motel sign

The City Center Motel sign from the 1950s has often been attributed to Willis but has yet to be confirmed as her design. Now housed in the Neon Boneyard, the sign features a cut-out skyline and an arrow that functioned as a directional tool.

Commemorative Stamp Ceremony

In 2002, the U.S. Postal Service released a set of commemorative stamps called “Greetings from America.” The retro design of these stamps resembles the large letter postcards that were popular with tourists, and Nevada’s stamp features Willis’ iconic Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign and Brian “Buzz” Leming’s Hacienda Horse and Rider. This photo is from the ceremony held for the stamp’s release in downtown Las Vegas.

Leming designed the Hacienda sign in the mid-1960s while at YESCO. It was the first sign in The Neon Museum collection and is now restored and installed as public art at the intersection of Fremont Street and Las Vegas Boulevard.

The two legendary designers passed away on the same day, April 19, 2015.

Commemorative Stamp Ceremony

LEARN MORE

Further Reading: 

Jeffrey Carlson for The Neon Museum, Put a Star on It: A Brief History of the Welcome Sign

Steve Bornfeld/Las Vegas Newswire, ABSOLUTELY FABULOUS’: Remembering Betty Willis on 60th anniversary of her iconic Vegas greeting

Patricia Leigh Brown, A Neon Come-Hither, Still Able to Flirt, New York Times

Betty Willis Video Interviews:

Clark County, Welcome to Las Vegas Sign Designer on Her Creations & Life

Las Vegas-Review Journal, Betty Willis: ‘I did a good job once