News

Jellybeanville Easter Display Has Been a Euclid Tradition for More Than 60 Years

Steve Kaselak's over-the-top decorative celebration draws about 2,000 people on a normal year and $1,000 in donations for charity.

by Dillon Stewart | Apr. 15, 2022 | 6:30 PM

Cheryl Finnegan

Cheryl Finnegan

Over Jellybeanville’s more than 60 years, Steve Kaselak hasn’t repeated a display.

"I believe I am the only person in the United States who has been doing an Easter display in their front yard for so many years," says Kaselak, who started building the display with his parents as a child.

The planning starts after Christmas, and the blueprint exists mostly in his head. He works daily, stringing together colored eggs or searching for new inflatables. In mid-March, Kaselak springs into action to finish the ode to Easter outside his Euclid home by Palm Sunday.



But come Easter Sunday, when Kaselak dresses up in a bunny outfit, he never knows what he’ll find.

One year it snowed. “The Easter Bunny borrowed boots from Santa,” he says. Two years ago, News 5’s Leon Bibb broadcast from Jellybeanville and CNN aired footage. “I knew I made it,” he says.



Most years, he expects about 2,000 smiling faces and $1,000 in donations to Northeast Ohio's Journey Center for Safety and Healing, formerly known as the Domestic Violence and Child Advocacy Center. This year, the display includes nods of solidarity to the victims of the war in Ukraine. “The Easter Bunny is prepared for whatever God blesses us with,” he says. 25401 Zeman Ave., Euclid  

Dillon Stewart

Dillon Stewart is the editor of Cleveland Magazine. He studied web and magazine writing at Ohio University's E.W. Scripps School of Journalism and got his start as a Cleveland Magazine intern. His mission is to bring the storytelling, voice, beauty and quality of legacy print magazines into the digital age. He's always hungry for a great story about life in Northeast Ohio and beyond.

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