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Dionne Warwick, Paul Anka head up UNLV Hall of Fame honorees

Updated April 4, 2022 - 2:50 pm

Icons will rule the night as the UNLV College of Fine Arts Hall of Fame induction dinner returns to its full-capacity gala Tuesday night at Student Union Ballroom.

Entertainment legends Dionne Warwick and Paul Anka head up the list of inductees for the Hall of Fame’s 18th presentation. The event was sidelined in 2020 and moved to a limited-capacity show last year, when the list of honorees was headed up by Ann-Margret. Tuesday’s event is sold out.

Neither Warwick nor Anka are not able to attend, however. Anka is touring. Warwick is still limited after injuring her shin recently in a fall in her home in New York. Warwick will address the event via video. The superstar is currently in long-term residency at the Stirling Club at Turnberry Place.

Anka headlined at the Smith Center last month, marking the venue’s 10th anniversary.

“I am honored and very touched to be an inductee for UNLV this year. Las Vegas has been a big part of my career and means a lot to me, so this award is received with sincere gratitude,” Anka said in a statement Tuesday. “When I look back at my arrival in Vegas in the 50s, I am amazed and proud to see the city it has become today - the true entertainment capital of the world. To be a part of that and to be recognized in a place that will always feel like home is a big deal for me.”

Ballet dancer Cynthia Gregory, and the late actor and visiting UNLV professor Michael Tylo also are being inducted.

Those receiving the Koep Dean’s Medal are renowned musician, composer arranger and UNLV jazz music director Dave Loeb; Southern Pauite artist and activist Fawn Douglas; and jazz trumpet virtuoso, arranger and composer Kenny Rampton. The honor is named for former UNLV Dean of the College of Fine Arts Jeff Koep.

This year’s honoree as Alumna of the Year is Cooper Rust, who earned her Bachelor’s degree in dance in 2013 while performing with Nevada Ballet Theatre. Rust went on to create Artists for Africa, which serves more than 1,200 Kenyan children.

The Hall of Fame was established in 2003 to honor past and present figures who have made an impact in visual arts, performing arts, and/or architecture. Past inductees include entertainment legends Tony Curtis; Phyllis McGuire; Robert Goulet; The Killers; Wayne Newton; Liberace; Clint Holmes; Rich Little; Penn & Teller; Lance Burton; Siegfried & Roy; and architects Tony Marnell; John Klai; Tom Schoeman and William Snyder.

“We are so thrilled to have an in-person 18th annual Hall of Fame,” UNLV Dean of the College of Fine Arts Nancy Uscher said in a statement. “It’s a joyous occasion when we can gather and celebrate the arts and entertainment.”

John Katsilometes’ column runs daily in the A section. His “PodKats!” podcast can be found at reviewjournal.com/podcasts. Contact him at jkatsilometes@reviewjournal.com. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @JohnnyKats1 on Instagram.

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