It’s show time, Las Vegas! Dozens of performers are descending on the Strip this weekend for the Billboard Music Awards at T-Mobile Arena.
Arts & Culture
Say amen, somebody: Organist and pianist Cory Henry has played alongside everyone from Bruce Springsteen to P. Diddy.
A 1982 piece of art by Jean-Michel Basquiat sold for a record $110.5 million at Sotheby’s auction of contemporary art Thursday night.
Myron Martin, president of the Smith Center for the Performing Arts, is in New York this week seeing a bevy of Broadway plays and musicals to fulfill his responsibility as a member of the Broadway League who votes on the member of the group that selects winners of the voter for the Tony Awards each year.
Too many buyers, not enough tickets. For the first time, Super Summer Theatre’s season opener — this year, a staged concert version of the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic “Oklahoma!” — is sold out, except for a few night-of-performance tickets available at the gate.
Human Nature is inviting fans to take part in three free shows on Tuesday and Wednesday of next week.
Downtown Las Vegas Events Center is taking on a beach scene, including a 100-foot-long swiming pool, for the upcoming Dirtybird BBQ festival.
The Crapshoot Comedy Festival has drawn immediate and understandable comparisons to the long-latent Comedy Festival held at Caesars Palace from 2005-2009.
When Heather Lang first saw a roadrunner, she described it as only a writer could: It has “legs of tumbleweed and wings of lace,” she thought.
Britney Spears is not married, nor is she pregnant, confirms her Las Vegas manager, who invokes an alien in the denial.
It was high-fives all around for then-rising band Imagine Dragons during the Grammy Awards show in 2014.
Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne’s marriage had been rocked last spring after his reported affair, but the couple renewed their vows Sunday at Wynn Las Vegas.
Members of the great rock band dined at MB Steak each night of their weekend shows at the Joint.
The Clark County Government Center amphitheater began to fill up with jazz enthusiasts as soon as the gates opened Saturday evening in anticipation of the first concert in the 28th annual Jazz in the Park series.
Saturday’s Helldorado Days parade lasted nearly two hours, as groups marched, danced, trotted, drummed or drove along the nearly mile-long stretch of Fourth Street.