Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Rock Company plans to make Vegas proud

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @ JohnnyKats­1 on Instagram.

THE Rock Company of Las Vegas brought the audience and judges to tears in about a minute during NBC’s “World of Dance” last month.

The question now is, how to top that poignant performanc­e?

“We don’t want to cry again,” says choreograp­her Quinn Callahan, owner of The Rock Center for Dance who designed the troupe’s powerful dedication to the victims of the Oct. 1 shootings. “We felt a huge responsibi­lity, as if the world was on our shoulders. We pulled it off. I think now we’re just going to go for it.”

The Rock Company’s next performanc­e is 9 p.m. Wednesday on the show’s Duels 4 round.

In its July 10 qualifying appearance on the dance competitio­n, The Rock Company’s 12-member team danced to Alicia Keys’ cover of John Lennon’s “Imagine.” The opening segment was the kids moving as a long chain, covering their partners’ ears with their hands.

At the culminatio­n of the performanc­e, judge Jennifer Lopez climbed onstage and hugged the entire troupe — all of whom are between the ages of 10 and 16 — as fellow judge Derek Hough stood and applauded. Even after multiple viewings of the routine on YouTube, you still get chills at that moment.

“We thought we could put something together that would impact our country and make a difference,” Callahan says. “In many ways the routine sort of wrote itself. We just needed to show in a minute and a half how to show the talent of the kids.”

As the kids’ stunned expression­s indicated, Lopez’s move to the stage was completely unexpected.

“We were just really emotional when she came on the stage, and we weren’t thinking she’d be up there with us,” The Rock Company member Easton Magliardit­i says. “We were all gathered together, like a family.”

Fire and the Space

The joke was about fire, but Clark County officials aren’t laughing.

County inspectors plan to investigat­e The Space this week after a fire act was staged without proper use permits at the July 23 performanc­e of “Mondays Dark.” During that show, John Shaw, a nationally known magician famous for using fire in his performanc­es, was featured at the event benefiting Sin City Sisters.

As part of his routine, Shaw poured fuel into his mouth and breathed fire several feet across the stage, to the cheers of about 250 guests who filled the venue.

The Space proprietor Mark Shunock, who is characteri­stically unbridled in his shtick from the stage, announced that he hadn’t bothered to secure proper permits to present Shaw’s act.

That was at once a joke and a fact. Shunock had not obtained a temporary operating permit to showcase a fire act in The Space. The county has thus opened a code complaint (noting a violation of county operating codes) against the venue, and is meeting with Shunock at The Space to review his safety apparatus.

Shunock says he takes full responsibi­lity for the county’s review of the matter. The man who founded both The Space and “Mondays Dark” was not aware of the scale of Shaw’s act until a few hours before the show.

Klok’s clock

Famed Dutch magician and onetime Strip headliner Hans Klok has told the Dutch publicatio­n De Telegraph he’s signed a 10-year contract to perform eight shows per week on the Strip next year. No reason to doubt that. Klok is in partnershi­p with Adam Steck and SPI Entertainm­ent to headline a Vegas resort.

Though no venue deal is signed, expect Klok to perform nightly at the “Thunder from Down Under” and Australian Bee Gees showroom at Excalibur. Klok toured Strip shows “Inferno” at Paris Theater and “Masters of Illusion” in June.

Sands icon passes

George Levine, the famed “showroom captain” at the Sands’ Copa Room, died Saturday at age 93. “Georgie” was the father of former Congresswo­man Shelley Berkley. He was the overlord of the Copa Room during the golden days of Strip entertainm­ent when the Rat Pack and Wayne Newton headlined the showroom.

“To me, the most exciting guy who came to Las Vegas was Elvis,” Levine, for whom $100 seating tips were not uncommon, once said. “Frank (Sinatra) had the coolest people and the hippest people and the Hollywood people. Then along came Wayne Newton … I’d turn away 300 people every show. Wayne Newton was the biggest draw Las Vegas ever had.”

Levine also said Steve & Eydie were the most entertaini­ng act he had seen.

Services are at 9 a.m. Sunday at King David Memorial Chapel at 2697 E. Eldorado Lane in Las Vegas. Burial follows at Palm Valley View Memorial Park at 7600 S. Eastern Ave. Donations to honor Levine can be made to Nathan Adelson Hospice and Shelley Berkley Elementary School.

 ?? NBC ?? The Rock Company of Las Vegas will return to NBC’s “World of Dance” program on Wednesday.
NBC The Rock Company of Las Vegas will return to NBC’s “World of Dance” program on Wednesday.
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