Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Igniter’ will be in house for Game 5

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES

DOWN 3-1 in the Stanley Cup Final, the Golden Knights could use a boost. Maybe a wild fan could dance down the aisle at T-mobile Arena at Thursday’s Game 5, tearing off multiple T-shirts and cajoling the crowd to “Make Some Noise!”

We’d call such a person

“The Igniter.”

Wait. He exists.

Maybe you’ve seen Cameron Hughes in action at T-mobile. He’s impossible to miss, actually, bounding down the stairs like a guy who has just quaffed a week’s supply of 5-Hour Energy. Unshaven and unbridled, Hughes has been igniting the Knights for select games all season, 15 in all.

It seems like more, actually. A little Cameron goes a long way.

“I love the energy, the interactio­ns with fans, all the stuff you probably don’t see on the big screen,” Hughes says. “I love the excitement when visiting fans get to see Vegas and T-mobile Arena and they’re like, ‘Wow!’ Even they start clapping.”

You might also recognize Hughes from cut-aways during the NBA Finals. He has been an igniter for the Cleveland Cavaliers’ home games against the Golden State Warriors, so he has alternated between the two ongoing finals — and will be back at T-mobile for Game 5.

The respective arenas are full of rabid fans, but as is often the case, Las Vegas stands apart.

“What makes Las Vegas, and the Golden Knights, unique is they are the unofficial ambassador­s of the NHL,” Hughes says. “You get something at T-mobile that you don’t see at other arenas, and that is how welcoming Vegas is to fans from other

J. Keith Moyer • Chase Rankin •

cities. I think it’s a community quality, because so many new people come to Vegas all the time.”

Many, if not most, fans at T-mobile early in the season thought Hughes was just a nutty fan. But he is a full-time, profession­al “igniter” who has performed in 17 NHL and NBA arenas in a 20-year career.

Hughes first ignited a crowd when he actually was just a nutty fan, during an Ottawa Senators game in 1994.

The crowd was sleepy, and Hughes jumped from his seat and started dancing like a lunatic.

Of course, this led to a job offer.

“The Senators’ management came up to me after the game and said, ‘We want to bring you back!’” Hughes says. “That’s the origin of my story. Seventeen-hundred games later, I’m still having a blast.”

T n’ T ties the knot

Making official what has been reported in this space a while back, “Tony n’ Tina’s Wedding” is back, at Buca di Beppo at Bally’s beginning June 15. Tickets are on sale this week, at $99 apiece (VIP $129, which includes a meetand-greet and two-hour open bar, so watch out).

The show kicks off at 7 p.m. Fridays through Wednesdays. Original director Larry Pellegrini returns, along with producers Raphael

Berko and Jeff Gitlin. The show co-stars Vegas faves Rachel Swindler and Joseph Ben Shimon as the title characters.

The dinner/comedy show opened at the Rio in 2002, then performed at the Miracle Mile Shops at Planet Hollywood Resort, that hotel’s mezzanine level and the Windows Showroom at Bally’s before closing in September 2016. As before, the nuptials are non-binding …

Wassa on the move

Six years ago, Wassa Coulibaly left a choice role in “Zumanity” at New York-new York to open Baobab Stage performanc­e venue and clothing boutique at Town Square. She is closing out of her spot across from the Yard House restaurant and moving — just a few doors down, also across from the Yard House.

Coulibaly is renewing her lease for the new location in three months. Until then, she plans a series of fundraiser­s before hauling out of the original Baobab Stage. “Baobab Burlesque,” to feature several local burlesque performers (Kalani Kokonuts leading the way), is set for 9 p.m. (doors 8 p.m.) Friday. “Midnight Cabaret,” a collection of Cirque du

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Soleil artists, is set for 11:30 p.m. Friday.

A sale of Wassa Ware — Coulibaly’s own designs — will be held from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday.

An odd reference

Spiegelwor­ld founder and “impresario” Ross Mollison’s message to the Golden Knights: “Remember the America’s Cup!”

Mollison, producer of “Absinthe” at Caesars Palace and “Opium” at The Cosmopolit­an of Las Vegas, specifical­ly referred to the 1983 America’s Cup yacht race. This contest attracted internatio­nal attention as underdog Australia II, led by the savvy skipper John Bertrand, prevailed over Liberty and its brazen captain, Dennis Conner.

The Aussies trailed 3-1 in that competitio­n but won the final three races to wrest the Cup from the U.S., which had not lost in the series’ 132-year history.

“If the Aussies can win that championsh­ip, being down to the Americans, who had been so dominant,” Mollison says, “anything is possible.”

John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ johnnykats on Twitter.

Life, entertainm­ent

As of 9 p.m. Tuesday:

1. Raiders have spent $172M so far on Las Vegas stadium project

It’s fairly easy to see the progress made by the 450 constructi­on workers who are on the site of the $1.8 billion, 65,000-seat indoor football stadium being built in Las Vegas by a subsidiary of the Oakland Raiders.

2. Nellis airman arrested on child porn charges

A senior airman stationed at Nellis Air Force Base was arrested last month on child pornograph­y charges, the Las Vegas Review-journal has learned.

3. Wisconsin woman wins $1.4M jackpot at downtown Las Vegas casino

A Las Vegas visitor from Wisconsin hit a jackpot worth $1,453,640 in downtown Las Vegas on Tuesday morning.

4. Casino owner Derek Stevens buys downtown Las Vegas office building

Casino owner Derek Stevens has added to his downtown real estate holdings.

5. 2 tourists stabbed to death in Las Vegas Strip hotel ID’D

Two Vietnamese tourists found stabbed to death Friday afternoon inside a Circus Circus hotel room have been identified.

 ?? Gyorgy Varga ?? A rainbow appears in the sky after a heavy downpour Tuesday in Nagykanizs­a, Hungary. The Associated Press
Gyorgy Varga A rainbow appears in the sky after a heavy downpour Tuesday in Nagykanizs­a, Hungary. The Associated Press
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 ?? Benjamin Hager ?? Golden Knights “Igniter” Cameron Hughes cheers for the home team during Game 2 of the first-round playoff series April 13 at T-mobile Arena.
Las Vegas Review-journal @benjaminhp­hoto
Benjamin Hager Golden Knights “Igniter” Cameron Hughes cheers for the home team during Game 2 of the first-round playoff series April 13 at T-mobile Arena. Las Vegas Review-journal @benjaminhp­hoto
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