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.
GM and comic headliner Harry Basil says this isn’t the end of the Laugh Factory in Las Vegas, just at the Tropicana.
Dead and Company follows U2, closing in March, and Phish at the Sphere.
Isaac Velasquez has posted Zouk LV and Ayu Dayclub as his jobs, along with the sentiment, “Love. Life. And the pursuit…of money…”
The Edge is quoted by Irish press, musing about playing The Sphere in ‘24: “That could happen, and we’d love it if it did.”
Bono visited Guardian Angel Cathedral on Sunday, established just off the Strip in 1964.
Titled “Las Vegas Will You Marry Me,” the city’s 70th anniversary celebration as the “Wedding Capital of the World” is set for September at Caesars Palace.
Jon Lovitz and Paul Reubens intersected at the peak of their popularity.
Transfix, featuring several international artists, opens in April on the Enchant site.
The Rogers Foundation chair Beverly Rogers says of her namesake theater, “We want to know what we can add. We want you to tell us if we could live without something.”
The knighted legend performed his first and (according to the tour title) only concert at Allegiant Stadium on his “Farewell Yellow Brick Road” tour on Tuesday night.