Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tape Face fills audience with fake fans

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES 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.

TAPE FACE has moved into Harrah’s Showroom from his House of Tape theater for his pandemic reopening. The headlining comic mime was rehearsing Saturday afternoon and said to drop in to check out the surroundin­gs if I was in the neighborho­od.

Simple enough. I arrived at the upstairs showroom and was intercepte­d by a pair of ushers with Covid-compliance forms and a temperatur­e gauge. At that moment, Tape Face (legal name of Sam Wills) was onstage working out a plate-spinning routine, for what seemed to be dozens of audience members seated in the lower section.

“Is this a friends-and-family performanc­e?” I whispered to the ushers, while observing the back of the audience’s heads. “I thought he was just building the show. I didn’t know this was a full runthrough.”

I kept talking in hushed tones, as if not to bother anyone watching this performanc­e.

“Who are these people?” I asked the staff, who looked at me like I was nuts. “I should know some of them.”

Finally, as I moved closer to the seated figures, it hit me: mannequins. A whole lot of ’em. Tape Face had populated the showroom with 100 dummies. There were more plants in this room than you’d find at Star Nursery.

I reached Wills onstage to confess, “You got me. I thought they were real.” His response was a pumped fist, and to shout, “Yes!”

As it is, Tape Face, with vaunted comic sidekick Christina Balonek as Phyllis Vanillis, returns for real at

7:30 p.m. Wednesday. The dummies will stay for as long as the production runs in the showroom. They occupy the 25-foot Entertainm­ent Moat, or in this case Comedy Moat, helping fill what would other

KATS! wise be empty seats.

“Being an old street performer, I realized that having this Comedy Moat, we needed to put something in it,” Wills said from the stage. “We needed an audience, so the best thing was to build one.” The heads cost about $10 apiece, ordered through Amazon.com, meaning the entire buy-in was around $1,000. Money well spent.

Paco’s Fiasco

Brian “Paco” Alvarez says he had not planned to work at Area15’s Museum Fiasco, or for anyone, until about three weeks ago. But a conversati­on with Ryan Doherty of Corner Bar Management helped sway Alvarez’s decision, and he’s led the opening of Museum Fiasco’s first installmen­t, “Cluster.

“I have been having a blast doing my own thing, running my own company and creating art around town,” Alvarez

says. “But I have really admired what Ryan has done downtown, and his ideas for Area15. I am having a great time with it.”

Alvarez also heads up a

Las Vegas touring company, and has joined such Vegas art figures as Gear Duran and Mario Reyes in creating murals at Adult Superstore locations in Las Vegas. Doherty founded Corner Bar, which operates Museum Fiasco and also such Fremont East hangs as Commonweal­th/laundry Room and Park on Fremont.

Museum Fiasco actually opened to the public over the weekend, after announcing a Nov. 13 launch. A wave of textured LED lights and penetratin­g sound, certain to be a haven for Tiktok videos.

The museum follows the German Kunsthalle model, which is a non-collection-based museum that hosts rotating exhibits. Alvarez is steering clear of “attraction” as a descriptio­n.

“This is a museum, which you are actually inside, and should be treated as art,” Alvarez says of a museum experience that makes the adrenaline rush. “It’s great for grown-ups, and we’re going to be touring students through here. It’s been wonderful. I feel like a kid again.”

Zany, and also wacky

Saturday night I pulled up next to a Kia sedan at the Tropicana self-parking garage. The driver was in a suit and tie, seemingly ready to do business at the hotel. I ran into him at our shared destinatio­n, Laugh Factory. He was veteran comic and the night’s headliner Bob Zany. This was the second random run-in with a comedian over the weekend (I’d unexpected­ly bumped into John Caponera on Thursday at Brad Garrett’s Comedy Club at MGM Grand).

“Please check on our cars every 10 minutes or so,” Zany said prior to the 8:30 p.m. show, where he shared the bill with host Traci Skene and featured act Brian Kim. This comic lineup of Las Vegas residents ably navigated the show’s spaced-out seating.

“They said I would never make it to a comedy club with a separated audience of 40 people, on the second-floor mezzanine of a club at the Tropicana,” Zany started. “Well, I proved them wrong!”

Club operator Harry Basil is actually seating the room at 80, max, and it was sold out for two shows per night Thursday through Sunday. Consequent­ly, the hotel has actually reported improved gaming revenue from the club’s reopening weekend.

“We’re showing least 140 coming into the hotel from outside the property,” Basil says, referring to the total crowd count for two shows. “We’ve always draw from outside the property, and a lot of those people stay and play.”

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Johnnykats ?? John Katsilomet­es
Sam Wills, aka Tape Face, shows the 25-foot distance between the stage and the audience of mannequins at Harrah’s Showroom on Saturday.
Las Vegas Review-journal @Johnnykats John Katsilomet­es Sam Wills, aka Tape Face, shows the 25-foot distance between the stage and the audience of mannequins at Harrah’s Showroom on Saturday.
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