Vegas odds defied in a year when the sure-thing “Mamma Mia!” flops and the oddball ‘Zombie Burlesque’ is a breakout hit.
Shows
Rick Thomas, once a mainstay on the Strip, brings magic show back this weekend for locals and families.
Comedian ends the year in a bigger Las Vegas venue and with sitcom “Undateable” returning for a second season.
Steve Wynn’s handpicked revue of Broadway blockbusters works backward to the Ziegfeld era in its visuals.
‘The Penny Pibbets Show’ spins off ‘Absinthe’ character in studio theater with the help of ‘Zumanity’ comedian as director.
Canadian performance company Cirque du Soleil has hired investment bank Goldman Sachs Group Inc to help in its previously disclosed effort to find a strategic partner, a spokeswoman for the company said on Friday.
Human Nature goes the extra mile to give us an Australian Motown Christmas that rings familiar.
The revue that opened Tuesday (with a grand opening Saturday) is another simple idea: Take the stand-out songs from Broadway musicals and put them all together.
Cirque du Soleil officials speak for the first time in great detail about fatal accident and the steps taken to make sure it can’t happen again.
Brian Wilson spans the generations in both his appeal and the people surrounding him onstage. On Friday, Wilson tapes an episode of the PBS concert series “Soundstage” at The Venetian.
TV personality Robin Meade joins Human Nature for its first Christmas-themed show on the Strip.
Engvall has a way with words and speaks to his age group as he sets course for grumpy-old-manhood.
Blue Collar comics Jeff Foxworthy and Larry the Cable Guy reunite just as one re-emerges while the other readies for a break.
Those who relish “Summer Nights” — be it the song, its singer or the name of her showcase — can plan for more of them with Olivia Newton-John next year.
If you’re not tuned in to the annual tradition that is Tony Sacca’s “Merry Christmas Las Vegas” TV special, you’re either new to town or unskilled in the art of deep-cable channel exploration. Longtimers know Sacca for … well, something. Years of local TV shows and commercials add up.