To the left was a huge photo of Ilitch, his wife and the Stanley Cup. To the right was a huge photo of Ilitch as a United States Marine. In the center was a movie screen and a slideshow set to music. Had it been fiction, it would have seemed unrealistic, just a movie. But it was fact, the story of Ilitch's life, a story of the American dream.
There were photos of Ilitch growing up on Detroit's west side, the son of Macedonian immigrants, serving in the Marines, playing minor-league baseball for the Tigers, turning Little Caesars from one store in the suburbs into a national chain, sponsoring amateur hockey.
There were photos of Ilitch buying the Red Wings in 1982 when they were known as the "Dead Things," renovating the Fox and moving Little Caesars headquarters into the building in 1989, buying the Tigers in 1992, kissing the Stanley Cup one of the four times his Red Wings won it, opening Comerica Park across Woodward in 2000, being inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2003, giving millions to charities.
There were Ilitch quotes:
"I don't like the word 'can't.' To be successful, you have to believe that you can."
"You need a playful mind willing to entertain even the most ridiculous idea."
"It's always been my dream to see a vibrant and energized downtown Detroit."
"I look at me and Detroit as one. The city is like a family member to me."
There also were personal photos, of baptisms, Halloweens, birthdays. Mike was married to Marian for 61 years. They had seven children, 22 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.