Louie Anderson, a longtime Vegas headliner and recent Emmy Award-winner, is hosting a series of comedy show at The Space.
Entertainment Columns
Scoring a major label record contract is a bite of the golden apple that often results in little more than a mouthful of worm chunks.
Brian Dewhurst helped launch two Cirque du Soleil shows on the Strip — “Mystere” and “O” — and is still a full-time performer at age 84.
While Caesars Entertainment has a robust lineup of shows at Harrah’s, Jubilee Theater at Bally’s has been dark for more than a year.
A memorial gathering Sunday at the Italian-American Club will celebrate a last-of-the-breed showman of the ’60s lounge era.
Pete Vallee began his run as “Big Elvis” 20 years ago, and has since performed at many lounges on and off the Strip.
Hosting the Academy Awards is a bit like dating Taylor Swift. Pretty much everybody in show business wants to give it a try, but it almost never ends well.
With 14 Oscar nominations, “La La Land” has tied ”Titanic” and “All About Eve” for the most ever. And it has a very real shot at tying “Titanic,” “Ben-Hur” and “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” for the most wins with 11. (Two of its nominations are for best original song, so the most it could win is 13.)
Brad Garrett is an acclaimed stand-up, but is also effective as a dramatic actor and plays an internet journalist in the CBS pilot of “The Get.”
Indian restaurants have multiplied across Southern Nevada over the years, a boon to vegetarians and fans of spicy sambals and tender tandoori. What really sets Angara apart is the purity of the flavors.
An original member of “Peepshow” at Planet Hollywood and co-star of “Vegas! The Show” Josh Strickland is heading to Germany to play the lead in “Tarzan.”
If Bradley Whitford were in more horror movies, I would watch more horror movies.
The way things are shaping up, “La La Land” is going to leave Sunday’s Oscars (5:30 p.m., ABC) with pretty much everything short of a best actor statue
The Killers, especially front man Brandon Flowers, love the outdoors and have long spoken out against development near Red Rock Conservation Area. But they are not planning full-time activism.
Don’t mess with a full house. True in poker, certainly, and also in the world of music festivals. The Route 91 Harvest Festival has reinforced that adage by staying put at Las Vegas Village.