Las Vegas Review-Journal

Manilow, Sting show tickets still on sale

- 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.

IF you’re seeking the most optimistic indication of when headliners will return to Vegas theaters in 2021, dial up “Copacabana.” Follow the Lola, Tony and Rico saga with a date with “Roxanne.”

Tickets for Barry Manilow’s February performanc­es at Westgate’s Internatio­nal Theater remain listed on Ticketmast­er and also through the resort’s website and Manilow’s official fan page. The first dozen shows cover Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from Feb. 11-March 13. The superstar recording artist is due to perform again May 6-June 19.

If those dates hold, Manilow would be well ahead of any other headliner to play Las Vegas this year. A company spokesman said there is no update to the 2021 schedule.

But as rose-colored as my glasses are, I can’t see those February dates coming off unless there is a significan­t reversal in pandemic trends. I’ll leave it to the superstar’s camp and hotel officials to make the formal call on this, but if Manilow is playing the Internatio­nal in February, I’ll lead the conga line into the theater.

Sting is the next theater headliner scheduled, for eight dates May 7-May 22 at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace. His “My Songs” production was set to kick off last May but was pushed initially to August-september and then finally into this year.

Similar to Manilow’s show, Sting’s production is a barometer of the progress we will have made in suppressin­g COVID-19.

“It is our plan to open the show at full capacity in May,” a company spokesman reiterated Saturday. “As we have done, adjustment­s will be made to our plan if need be, but as far as now, May at full is the plan.”

OK, fair enough. If we can get ahead of COVID-19 by May, pass the light stick.

Piven, Tyson … and you

A pair of heavyweigh­ts in their respective fields, Mike Tyson and Jeremy Piven, were a powerful combinatio­n (as we succumb to boxing metaphors) at Circa last week. Tyson was on the property Tuesday and Wednesday. Piven rolled in Wednesday, too, just ahead of New Year’s Eve and met Iron Mike for dinner at Barry’s Downtown Prime. Circa casino director Richard Wilk posted pics of the summit on social media. Those in the pics pulled their masks down to be photograph­ed.

“Circa gets it right, it embraces old-school Vegas while keeping it fresh,” Piven, who portrayed Ari Gold in HBO’S “Entourage,” said in a text Saturday. He added that he wishes for a comedy venue in the hotel. And so do I.

Piven has long wanted to find a suitable stage to perform stand-up, following his appearance at Treasure Island on Feb. 1, 2019. The Legacy Club space, conceivabl­y, could host comedy at the property. About 78 strides across Main Street, the Plaza Showroom, set for 450 for comedy under normal circumstan­ces, has also hosted several stand-up shows over the years. Louie Anderson and Doug Stanhope have headlined the room.

Referring to Circa and Legacy, Piven said, “I genuinely love that spot. It could be done. It’s Vegas, anything’s possible.” Piven in DTLV? I like the sound of it.

White out

UFC President Dana White also visited Circa leading into New Year’s Eve. White toured the resort with Circa co-owner Derek Stevens and also met up with chef Barry Dakake.

Wild, and also Night

Vegas dancer Lucie May headed up “Wild Night” at Notoriety at Neonopolis late Wednesday. The variety show was likely the most extensive production inside Robin Leach Theater. Yes, seated for 50.

The night also marked former Tropicana Theater headlining magician David Goldrake’s first performanc­e since February.

Goldrake is the famed magic man out of Luxumborg whose name has long come up in talks in venues around town. Those haunts include the Magic Attic at Bally’s, but that seems to have passed, as Goldrake has made no formal announceme­nt about his future.

Goldrake was tucked in the middle of a wide-ranging lineup that also featured host Steven Briggs, the Wild Ones dance troupe ( Trynity Marchant and Alli Zajac), acrobats Mickael Bajazet and Vita Radionva, burlesque artist Lolita Haze, comedy headliner Uber Macaggi Rossi and the Stoney Curtis Band (Curtis, Paul Disibio and Barry Barnes) with vocalist Kyle Frost closing the night.

This was a performanc­e where you really didn’t know what to expect next. One moment, Rossi was performing a Jerry Lewis-inspired pratfall. The next, Frost was killing it with Stoney’s band. In both instances and in all the other acts, the performers totally sold out. The production served as yet another instance of off-strip, nonresort shows finding a way to entertain in COVID-19.

Virtual cool hang alert

Santa Fe and the Fat City Horns perform their first show of the new year at 6 p.m. Monday. Jerry Lopez and the cats can be found at santafeban­d.com/live, with Ashley Fuller and Skip Martin guest-starring. I strongly recommend The Healing, in all its forms.

Some buzz out there …

About a yet-unreported female adult revue in the works to be pitched to Strip resorts in 2021. Consider this a tease to the tease.

 ?? Westgate Las Vegas ?? Barry Manilow performs at Westgate Las Vegas. Tickets for Manilow’s February performanc­es remain listed on Ticketmast­er.
Westgate Las Vegas Barry Manilow performs at Westgate Las Vegas. Tickets for Manilow’s February performanc­es remain listed on Ticketmast­er.
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