Oscar Goodman seems to be leaning to Tom Brady, but talk to him next week.
Kats
John Katsilometes’ column runs daily on Page 3A. Email jkatsilometes@reviewjournal.com. Follow him at @johnnykats on Twitter and @JohnnyKats1 on Instagram. Listen to the latest episodes of his PodKats! podcast here.
“Marriage Can Be Murder” was KO’d at the Grotto because of social-distancing concerns.
Sidelined Las Vegas stagehand Meg Leighton said that if her colleagues were called upon, “We would be ready to jump in.”
Haterade and Dick’s Last Resort give Neonopolis a pair of new, uninhibited businesses.
In the new Thunder show, a cast member pulls out a tape measure for a safe distance before grooving and shedding.
Lynette Chappell said of Siegfried and Roy, “Like comets, they blaze across the star-scattered sky.”
Siegfried Fischbacher was born a star, but not too big to make coins appear at the Secret Garden.
Producer Kenneth Feld said of Siegfried Fischbacher, “The world of magic said good-bye to one of its greatest innovators.”
The intimacy is genuine, even if socially distant, at the new “X Burlesque: Private Edition.” The topless revue reopened Thursday night, playing to 30 guests
The Venetian Ristorante was for generations a popular dinner hang on the corner of Sahara Avenue and Jones Boulevard. The Venetian resort opened on the Strip in 1999.
When Oscar and Carolyn Goodman were invited to the 1980 World Series, they were given the royal, and Royal, treatment. They also carted a Dodger legend to his hotel.
Barry Manilow’s run at Westgate’s International Theater resumes June 10.
Charles M. Heers, a pioneering contractor who built the first tract homes in Las Vegas, died Saturday afternoon in Newport Beach, California. He was 94.