Cork Proctor worked the lounge circuit in Las Vegas and Reno beginning in the 1970s, when he opened for such stars as the Supremes and Mel Tillis.
Music
Chazz Palminteri knows talent, and he knows the Bronx Wanderers. This is how a hit show came to be.
Rapper Flavor Flav dropped in to Red Lobster on Flamingo Road and Eastern Avenue last week, ordering the entire menu for himself and his family.
The Burlesque Hall of Fame Weekender, George Clinton and P-Funk, and Zach Bryan lead this week’s entertainment lineup.
The company seeks another sellout as its presents Giacomo Puccini’s classic “La bohème” this weekend.
With the Dead & Company back in town, so is Shakedown Street, peddling everything from car emblems to clocks to patches to jewelry to infant onesies.
Our pupils are rotten from all the eye candy. Our cute fuzzy boots totally need to be re-soled. And don’t even ask us about our hearing because we can’t hear you.
“Drumline Live,” a touring production inspired the 2002 movie that helped bring HBCU band culture to the mainstream, comes to The Smith Center next week.
The venue is an attraction in and of itself. Every component of it: the inner bowl, its exoskeleton, and even the atrium, which greets visitors upon entrance with scads of innovative flourishes.
The Triple Down has arrived at the Punk Rock Museum, which opened this year in downtown Las Vegas.
From EDC to Life is Beautiful to Lovers & Friends and more, it’s boom time for festivals in Las Vegas.
From teeth-marked combat boots to Black Flag drum kits, it’s all here at new home for punkers.
Life is Beautiful is turning 10, and the festival will celebrate with a band that helped start it all.
For the first time, the three-day music and arts festival will offer a pre-sale ticket window exclusively for those with a Nevada billing address.
The three-day festival returns to downtown Las Vegas Sept. 16-18.