Lainey Wilson is set to perform at MGM Grand Garden, side-saddle with the National Finals Rodeo at nearby Thomas & Mack Center.
Music
Adele, who supports the monthlong Pride and LGBTQ+ causes, snapped at a fan who shouted at her on Saturday night.
John Mayer’s new show debuts Wednesday, while Flavor Flav launches June 10 from a brand-new studio on the Strip.
Ringo Starr saw his third, and final, performance of “Love” at the Mirage, as his All-Starr band closed its series at The Venetian.
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.
David Siegel, who survived a bout with COVID, says being vaccinated saved his life.
Matt and Angela Stabile have been X-ing out days on the calendar for months, methodically planning for a full return of their collection of Las Vegas Strip productions.
For a quarter century, Cirque du Soleil has been a Las Vegas Strip phenomenon. That bond is never more apparent than today, as the company leans on Vegas for support.
In a move that would have been unheard of even a year ago, Cirque du Soleil, the Las Vegas Strip’s preeminent production company for more than two decades, has filed for bankruptcy.
Veteran Las Vegas show producer David Saxe says, “We’ll be back as soon as we’re legally allowed to be back. If the demand is there, I think we’ll go seven days a week.”
Show co-producer Adam Steck of SPI Entertainment says Thunder is the first adult revue to perform in a closed theater.
Mayfair Supper Club’s return to the present tense will be watched with great interest as shows return under COVID-19 safety directives.
Marklen Kennedy developed “Labor of Love,” and his premiere party itself was a show.
For 25 years, Megan Belk’s family has touched the Las Vegas entertainment community in myriad ways.
“Absinthe” producer Ross Mollsison says, “When Caesars said that they wanted to do a television commercial that indicates Vegas is really ready to open, I said, ‘I’ll plug the tree in.’ ”