Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Absinthe’ struggles at 50-person limit

- KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES The Review-journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson. Las Vegas Sands operates The Venetian and Palazzo.

“ABSINTHE” can’t afford these pandemic restrictio­ns. It’s a big production that prefers to play it big. As it is, the show’s audiences could fit inside a tent you would find at Target.

We’re exaggerati­ng. Almost. But the latest COVID message from the hit show is if it doesn’t get bigger, it will go home.

“We can’t stay open with 50 seats,” “Absinthe” producer Ross Mollison said Tuesday by phone from Brooklyn, where he has been staying this month after he scrapped plans to fly back to Vegas. “If we have to stay at 50 seats, ‘Absinthe’ will close. We have been willing to suffer financiall­y for three weeks and have kept the show going safely, just to do the right thing for our company.”

“Absinthe” is Spiegelwor­ld’s unqualifie­d hit show and a focal point during COVID-19 reopening. The production at the Spiegelten­t at Caesars Palace is facing a daunting problem under current pandemic safety directives. This is a show that, PRE-COVID, filled a 660-seat theater 14 times a week.

As any kid with an abacus can figure, “Absinthe” cannot turn a profit playing to 50 ticket buyers per show.

As Mollison said, “We can’t go on indefinite­ly this way.”

The production is performing at a loss anyway, fingers crossed that Gov.

Steve Sisolak might return to a 250-person minimum for public gatherings statewide. It was already under a pressure test while performing at 150 or so seats. That was before the governor’s three-week “pause” was announced Nov. 22, cutting the limits to public gatherings to 50 people.

The state’s surging COVID statistics indicate there won’t be a relaxation of public-gathering restrictio­ns, or a return to the 250 limit, anytime soon.

But Mollison has been petitionin­g the governor’s office to make an exception for “Absinthe,” hoping his show’s stringent health safety measures will allow it to continue to perform. Spiegelwor­ld has arranged to test its cast and crew every week and is able to isolate anyone who tests positive.

The “Absinthe” tent itself is regularly disinfecte­d, seating is distant to the defined requiremen­ts, performers and audience members masked.

The modificati­ons have become givens during the coronaviru­s crisis, of course. A month ago, Spiegelwor­ld officials were optimistic they could keep “Absinthe” onstage, while also reopening “Atomic Saloon Show.” The company had a plan to stage that show at Palazzo Theater beginning Jan. 6, temporaril­y moving it from its Atomic Saloon venue at The Venetian’s Grand Canal Shoppes. The company even inadverten­tly posted a YouTube video announcing the move.

But “Atomic” is now idling, waiting for the time when larger audiences for live entertainm­ent are permitted.

Mollison has doubtless tried every avenue to bring live entertainm­ent back to the Strip.

“We have shown that we are operating in a safe environmen­t,” Mollison said. “We’re asking the governor to reconsider the limits put on our show, so we can keep some of our people working, and put the people who are unemployed back to work. It’s been nine months for most of our cast and crew. We are now heading into Christmas. We need to get back to what we do and stop the suffering.”

Lacing ’em up

Jamie Hosmer, a member of the Las Vegas COVID Shutdown Hall of Fame (and yes, we are putting a list together), has released “Comfortabl­e Shoes” on Spotify, Apple Music and all music-streaming services. Hosmer has been soaring on Facebook Live throughout the pandemic, has appeared on national TV on Fox’s “I Can See Your Voice” and is performing online with his regular band, Santa Fe & The Fat City Horns.

As always, Hosmer is in fine voice and musically dexterous. His guest players include Jerry Lopez, Dave Richardson and Rochon Westmorela­nd of Santa Fe and that band’s horn section; Hammond B-3 master Ronnie Foster; singer-songwriter Michael Peterson; Michael Cavanaugh of the Billy Joel musical “Movin’ Out”; guitar virtuosos Christian Brady and John Wedemeyer; high-demand bassist Dave Inamine (the Australian Bee Gees among his gigs), and vocalist Rob Hyatt of Fifth Avenue.

The string section includes musicians who have performed for such superstars as Aerosmith, Shania Twain and Celine Dion. That lineup is Jennifer Lynn, Monique Olivas, Crystal Yuan and Mandy Andreasen.

Santa Fe fans will recognize “The Answer,” one of the highlights on the nine-song release.

Hosmer’s “Comfortabl­e Shoes” title is from the song’s lead track, a message to be unafraid to chart new paths. That title also matches Clint Holmes’ autobiogra­phical musical, which was written in 1996 and was showcased six years later. Hosmer played in Holmes’ backing band at Harrah’s for six years and they are friends.

Holmes is fine with Hosmer’s decision to call the album “Comfortabl­e Shoes.” We can’t resist noting that both projects have (pause) sole (boom!).

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.

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Johnnykats ?? John Katsiomete­s
The return of “Absinthe” at the Spiegelten­t on Caesars Palace’s grounds in October had a 150-capacity audience. Now the limit on the crowd is 50.
Las Vegas Review-journal @Johnnykats John Katsiomete­s The return of “Absinthe” at the Spiegelten­t on Caesars Palace’s grounds in October had a 150-capacity audience. Now the limit on the crowd is 50.
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