Australia’s loss is the Las Vegas Valley’s gain. International recording star and Las Vegas resident Greg Bonham is set to appear in his own show, “G’Day Las Vegas,” at The Smith Center for the Performing Arts.
Shows
The road is calling George Wallace again, even if home is already a hotel.
You saw it coming. Or we did. Or he did. Or something. Anyway, we’re talking about Eric Church calling his new album “The Outsiders,” and coming at country stardom with an outside view that makes him even bigger than a red-hot genre, without abandoning it altogether. He’s the ultimate insider outsider.
Old-school Las Vegas showmen are a vanishing breed, so we’re lucky some of them got an early start.
Though “30 Rock” ended in terms of new episodes, channel-zappers know it lives on every night. So Tracy Morgan continues the ongoing job of distancing his real self from the TV Tracy.
Each year, there is only one guy crazy enough to try to calculate the average Las Vegas show price, but a bunch of people to tell him why he shouldn’t bother. And no, the first guy ain’t me.
What better time to do a play about gender equality than now, when we see acts of insolence and denial across the country. What better way to learn how long the battle has raged than with Jeffrey Hatcher’s “Compleat Female Stage Beauty,” being presented by the College of Southern Nevada.
Gabriel Iglesias co-stars in the Marlon Wayans comedy “A Haunted House 2,” which opens Friday, giving Las Vegans the chance to see the movie and then see him live in the same day.
When The Second City sketch and improv comedy troupe had a Las Vegas branch, a plan was floated to have famous alumni visit as weekly guest stars to add some marquee value.
You will hear voices. And your ears will deceive you.
“Evil Dead The Musical,” the cult musical based on a cult movie, bombards its audience with stage blood, F-bombs, middle fingers and bad puns. And now it has two versions inside The V Theater.
“It’s a great time to be in the entertainment business in Vegas,” Ross Mollison says.
Some things never change and perhaps never should. So maybe it’s no surprise, even a bit reassuring, that “Jubilee” is still camp.
Jason Alexander will stretch the definition of stand-up in “An Evening with Jason Alexander and His Hair,” which settles into Harrah’s Las Vegas for a four-week run starting Friday.
Juan Gabriel was a big enough star to launch Las Vegas as a Mexican Independence Day party mecca, and he is big enough now to play here on a different weekend.