Las Vegas’ hub for theater, ballet, symphony, Broadway shows and educational programs remains dark amid coronavirus pandemic.
Arts & Culture
Las Vegas may be reopening, but First Friday is staying digital.
They’re proving that the show can go on even if that means meeting audiences from a rooftop, behind a plastic sheet or from outside their vehicles.
Mayfair Supper Club’s return to the present tense will be watched with great interest as shows return under COVID-19 safety directives.
Wynn entertainment director Rick Gray informed members of the production Thursday morning that they would be furloughed.
“The response went through the roof,” the owner of the D Las Vegas and Golden Gate said a day after giving away 2,000 flights to tourists across the country.
The hit musical’s run from September through October at The Smith Center’s Reynolds Hall has been postponed, Myron Martin announced Wednesday.
Canada’s Investissement Quebec company has issued Cirque du Soleil a loan of up to $200 million and offered to buy the company outright.
For 25 years, Megan Belk’s family has touched the Las Vegas entertainment community in myriad ways.
Face masks will be required for staff and guests, and sanitizer made at the museum’s speakeasy will be given away while supplies last.
Open-fire cooking replaced by online fireside chats “where people have time to talk to the chefs,” the event founder says.
“My Fair Lady,” originally slated to open the 2020-21 season, will now close out the series, a move made because of coronavirus concerns.
For people starved for face-to-face interaction, art has become a welcome and accessible means for finding comfort, control and communication.
Frankie Moreno says of The Amp in North Las Vegas, “I had never seen this place until a couple of weeks ago and I was totally blown away.”
Because of safety concerns regarding COVOD-19, the series staged at Spring Mountain State Park has been moved to 2021.