Get to Know: Busy time for holly jolly trolley director
Get to Know Olley the Trolley

Gary Ogden Harper is the director of operations for Ollie the Trolley and the vehicle’s seven siblings.
What does that mean, exactly?
“It means a ton of fun. You’re always helping people celebrate something or other,” said Harper, 63, who has done a variety of things in his life: He was a theology student, worked as a video producer and earned a Ph.D. in education from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
The holidays are the busiest time of year for the company that operates eight trolleys on tires. Because of Christmas light tours, December is twice as busy as any other month, he said.
Families, community groups and businesses also use the trolleys for weddings, corporate events, birthday parties and bar-hopping on St. Patrick’s Day and other occasions.
Harper is responsible for everything from dispatching to training to making sure all the trolleys are running well.
And this year he’s the mastermind and guide for two new daytime tours from Dec. 12 to 28.
“Sacred History” tours will take place each Monday and Wednesday, making stops at several of the oldest churches in the downtown area — some dating to the 1850s and 1860s. Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, First Presbyterian Church and St. Cecilia Cathedral will be among the sites on the tour.
“An Irish Christmas at Boys Town” will run Tuesdays and Thursdays. Inspired by the 100th anniversary of Boys Town next year, it will drive past downtown landmarks such as the home’s first location and the Boys Town National Research Hospital, and end up at the current campus at 132nd Street and West Dodge Road, where participants will see the Hall of History, Father Edward Flanagan’s Christmas-decorated home and the gift shop.
Harper said his longtime interest in history and architecture made the new tours a natural fit. A year ago, he saw Trinity Cathedral for the first time and was awed.
“When I went in I was, like, ‘This is a living museum,’ ” he said.
He was an associate producer on a popular documentary about Omaha buildings, “If These Walls Could Speak,” that was produced by University of Nebraska at Omaha Television and the Nebraska Educational Television Network.
And he wrote his doctoral dissertation on the historical and mythological evolution of St. Nicholas, so he will share little-known facts about Santa on the tours.
Harper also has opened up the nighttime light tours to more people, offering individual seating on Monday nights. Previously, people could take the tours only if they were associated with a group that rented the trolley.
Ollie and the other trolleys have been around since the 1980s. Harper joined the company as a part-time driver, and when current owners George Davis and Deb Skinner took over, they promoted him.
He’s not sure when the Christmas light tours started, but said they’ve been popular for at least a couple of decades. He works with two professional light companies — Brite Ideas and Holidynamics — to find areas with lots of elaborate displays.
“We concentrate on those neighborhoods so we can give our passengers the most bang for the buck,” he said.
Drivers will pick up groups most anywhere: churches, a shopping center, restaurants, bars, even private homes. The Monday night public tours will take off from the Brite Ideas building at 156th Street and West Maple Road.
Harper counts his Ollie gig as his favorite job ever. He talks about the trolleys as if they are old friends.
“All of them have their own names and their own personalities — some a little more temperamental than others,” he said.
Gary Ogden Harper
Age: 63
Job: director of operations for Ollie the Trolley
Hometown: Omaha’s Westside High area
Hobbies: writing, playing soccer
Fun facts: He was an associate producer for “If These Walls Could Speak,” a documentary about Omaha architecture that was created by University of Nebraska at Omaha Television and the Nebraska Educational Television Network. He also was a video producer and director at Rosenblatt Stadium for 14 years.
elizabeth.freeman@owh.com, 402-444-1267


