“The Empire Strips Back” is taking up where Chippendales departed at the Rio.
Shows
Mike Newquist had been reassigned in Cirque’s latest series of layoffs. He left the company less than a month later.
Murray Hill performed his first full show for an energized crowd at Plaza Showroom.
Annette Bening was in Las Vegas for The Space 2.0 announcement and praised Las Vegas’ film-industry push.
Carrot Top turns 60 years old this week, remakably. The Luxor Las Vegas headliner has been in show business for 40 years, also remarkably.
“Ka,” which launched in 2005, trails only “Mystere” and “O” in terms of longevity among Cirque du Soleil’s productions on the Las Vegas Strip.
Mark Shunock, the man behind Mondays Dark and The Space, is planning what is tentatively being called “The Space 2.0.”
The Osmonds are once more a hit as Donny Osmond recruits grandson Daxton for some AI.
Liz Tannebaum is guest-starring in “Menopause the Musical” for two shows in March.
Backstreet Boys have added even more shows to their residency at the Sphere this summer.
“Rolling Stone Presents: Amplified, The Immersive Rock Experience” is coming to Illuminarium beginning March 12.
“Bel-Aire Backyard Poolside Concert Series” has booked The Fray, Thievery Corporation and The Struts as its first three acts.
Andre Agassi was still tense many minutes after he and Steffi Graf won the Pickleball Slam 3 at Mandalay Bay.
Cirque du Soleil exec Mike Newquist says high costs, not low ticket sales, prompted the layoffs of more than 100 employees, impacting Las Vegas and the company’s Montreal headquarters.
Backstreet Boys announced a series at Sphere; the band has a history in Las Vegas.
The Venue at The Orleans offered afternoon and late-night shows, but is shutting down by March 16.
Country superstar Blake Shelton continues his residency at the Colosseum through Feb. 15.