A musical parody of the 1995 movie, the all-singing, all-lapdancing “Showgirls” begins a month-long run Thursday at the Onyx Theatre.
Arts & Culture
Las Vegas playwright Ernest Hemmings’ latest work explores the way in which the online world and social media can create the illusion of community to sometimes dangerous and tragic ends. The factual foundation of the play is the murder of Las Vegas police officers Igor Soldo and Alyn Beck on June 8, 2014.
The owners of Clay Arts Vegas, 1511 S. Main St., aren’t afraid to do several things at once, and they aren’t afraid to get their hands dirty doing it.
The First Friday arts festival is scheduled from 5 to 11 p.m. Sept. 4 at venues throughout the 18b Arts District in downtown Las Vegas, near the intersection of Charleston Boulevard and Main Street.
Downtown Las Vegas has a new resident who apparently is allowed to do something the rest of would be cited by police for doing: urinating into a public fountain.
Actor Kyle Jean-Baptiste, who made history as the first African-American to play the lead role in a Broadway production of “Les Miserables,” died Friday night in New York.
From classical musicians to circus acrobats, performers from around the world will take the stage(s) during UNLV’s 2015-16 Performing Arts Center season.
You know “The Cat in the Hat.” Everybody does. But the cat behind “The Cat in the Hat” had his secrets — some of which are revealed in “Hats Off to Dr. Seuss!”
Being dead before the show starts doesn’t stop the central character of “Death is a Drag” from having a lively role.
When Brent Sommerhauser wandered one day into his university’s glass studio and saw “people taking molten liquid and turning it into things.”
The painting, “La Coiffeusse” (“The Hairdresser”) was found in a shipping container labeled a “low-value handicraft” and valued at $33.42 by Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations.
For 34 years at the Review-Journal, photojournalist Jeff Scheid’s camera has captured everyone from mobsters to showgirls.
Born and raised in Las Vegas, artist Justin Favela has experienced much of what this town has to offer. Being an artist also gives him a different perspective on the city.
First Friday in August may bring out a smaller crowd than you’ll see in the cooler months, but there’s still plenty going on.
The First Friday arts festival is scheduled from 5 to 11 p.m. Aug. 7 at venues throughout the 18b Arts District in downtown Las Vegas, near the intersection of Charleston Boulevard and Main Street.