Dancing cupcakes and paintbrush showgirls (with the head pieces resembling splashes of paint) are the likely reasons why “Priscilla Queen of the Desert” ended up on the Strip for the summer.
Shows
It was as a senior in high school that April Vollm realized she had a knack for being funny onstage.
Meet Theresa Hitson
Boxers or briefs?
Where can you lounge by a swimming pool, sipping cocktails and tanning all day, while simultaneously supporting American troops? Why, at a Strip dayclub, of course!
Chelsea Caswell can call herself “goal-oriented” all she wants. The point doesn’t drive itself home until she mentions that, while on college spring break in Las Vegas, she applied for a job. As her friends partied it up, she went into interview mode. The “goal” being to get out of Missouri.
“Elvis wasn’t just a singer. Elvis was a cultural icon. He changed the way the world viewed popular culture when he came out onto the scene,” says Brian Simpson, an Elvis tribute artist.
Producer David King says he learned enough about Las Vegas in the past year to put together “a business course on how to open a show in Las Vegas and what to do if you get kicked out of your venue: Follow these six rules.”
Hey, “Kinky Boots.” You’ve just won the Tony Award for best musical. What are you doing next?
The porcupine-haired punk named Johnny, an exclamation point incarnate, sounded as if he had a bullhorn for a larynx as he voiced the question of the evening.
Last month, dozens of celebrity impersonators were supposed to descend on Las Vegas in all their fake glory, just as they had since 2001.
The Jabbawockeez flip the switch from black and white to color in their new show “Prism.” But really, the whole effort at Luxor brings that “Oz”-like illumination.
Superhero movies being all the rage, Ian Ziering says he is now ready to audition for them. Because this month? “I wanted to stand up onstage and be able to rip my shirt off with confidence.”