Las Vegas Review-Journal

It’s ‘Auld Lang Syne’ for ‘OPM’ on NYE

- 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 X, @Johnnykats­1 on Instagram.

I NRoss Mollison’s world, it’s just a loose manhole cover on the Spiegelwor­ld race course. Talking of “OPM,” Spiegelwor­ld’s oft-modified, interplane­tary farce at The Cosmopolit­an of Las Vegas. The show runs its final performanc­e Dec. 31. F1 fan Mollison dropped the news late Friday night, on the eve of the inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix.

This was two nights after the racy, F1-themed “Lights Out!” cabaret musical ran its only show at “OPM” theater. Whether intended or not, the announceme­nt of “OPM” closing was sure to be overrun by F1 coverage.

But “OPM” deserves a proper parade lap. Originally titled “Opium,” the show opened in March 2018, with the fictional but convincing­ly determined Harry M. Howie as its introducto­ry character. The show’s companion restaurant, Superfrico, opened three years later and will continue operations.

“OPM” was adopted as the new name in November 2022, amid one of the show’s many rewrites. Spiegelwor­ld has completed a full circle in the venue, as its “Vegas Nocturne” opened a decade ago on NYE, shutting down in June 2014 after a six-month run. The companion Rose. Rabbit. Lie. restaurant went dark in December 2021 to make way for Superfrico.

Mollison took an MOF (Matter of Fact) view Saturday when chatting of “OPM’S” closing.

“Shows open, shows close. ‘Folies Bergere’ played 49 years in Las Vegas, and I would have preferred ‘OPM’ to make it to 49, but the market has changed since ‘Folies’ and ‘Jubilee’ opened,” the man known as Spiegelwor­ld’s Impresario Extraordin­aire said. “It’s incumbent upon us to look at the market and see what’s happening and come up with new ideas, which is what we are doing with ‘Discoshow’ and our other projects.”

That was a reference to Spiegelwor­ld’s history-of-disco production coming into the Linq Hotel on or around June 29.

No dearth of skill

Playing in its low-ceiling, 447-seat theater, “OPM” was a hyper-talented show that never was really “set,” in theater parlance. Key cast members Grace Lusk (as show host Andromeda) and popular skating act Billy and Emily England (headed to “America’s Got Talent: Fantasy League”) left in August. Over the years, several popular cast members and even the original live band had disembarke­d Starship OPM.

Mollison addressed the challenges of keeping a such a mid-scale show as “OPM” on stage in Vegas’ current entertainm­ent market.

“The biggest challenge is the maximizati­on of revenue, and creating consistent revenue, 52 weeks a year,” the producer said. “There’s more sporting events coming into town than we used to have. There’s obviously more headliner activity, which affects production shows.”

Mollison has caught a trend by linking his dining and entertainm­ent concepts, an idea launched a decade ago with Rose. Rabbit. Lie. and “Vegas Nocturne.”

Ross’ roster

Spiegelwor­ld of course has piloted the huge hit “Absinthe” in its 660-seat Spiegelten­t at Caesars Palace since April 2011; the country spoof “Atomic Saloon Show” in its 240-seat saloon-designed venue at Grand Canal Shoppes at The Venetian. That show opened in September 2019.

“The Hook,” also paired with a Superfrico restaurant, opened this summer at Caesars Atlantic City’s Warner Theater. The company is developing a new show, venue and restaurant at Caesars New Orleans to be ready by Super Bowl weekend in February 2025.

The total cost of the three new Spiegelwor­ld projects announced in 2021 was $75 million. “The Hook”/superfrico and the Warner Theater build-out (the theater dates to 1926) itself cost more than half that, $40 million. The test will be to see if Spiegelwor­ld can still come in under the original budget, or that figure will expand.

And in January, Spiegelwor­ld announced it purchased Nipton, the tiny town about an hour drive from Las Vegas on the Nevada-california border along Route 164. “Lights Out!” under the original (and litigious) title of “Box Box” was its first project.

Two weeks ago the company announced the launch of NOOD — Nipton Office of Design — in an old, red-brick dwelling. The in-house design studio is where the company will create its acts and design concepts.

Spiegelwor­ld invested $2.5 million in Nipton. Its upkeep and operations require a small staff, and the town is not itself a revenue-making project.

Taken together, it’s a lot of energy, ingenuity, constructi­on, planning, resources … Has Spiegelwor­ld simply overreache­d, especially by taking on brazen Nipton project? Mollison says, not a chance. “I don’t think so at all. I think that in fact it’s quite the opposite,” Mollison said.

The cast and beyond

About 30 cast and crew members will need to be accounted for when “OPM” closes on New Year’s Eve. Mollison hopes to absorb those Spiegelwor­ld staffers into other projects. As he said, “Because we have ‘Discoshow’ and we continue to run other shows, we’re going to look to do that as much as possible.”

Superfrico and its adjacent Ski Lodge hideaway tavern (a replica of an actual ski lodge, as Mollison loves the slopes) are untouched by the “OPM” closing. Spiegelwor­ld and MGM Resorts Internatio­nal have been reviewing options for the vacant theater. This is the companies’ first partnershi­p since MGM Resorts took over The Cosmopolit­an in May.

Mollison says he is an “enormous fan” of MGM Resorts Chairman and President Bill Hornbuckle. The Impresario loves the new pedestrian bridge linking Bellagio to Aria and into The Cosmopolit­an and the Superfrico entrance.

“I’m incredibly optimistic, there are a lot of changes coming, and I think that’s what keeps making Vegas better and better.”

 ?? Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto ?? Grace Lusk of “OPM” during her final performanc­e in the show in August at The Cosmopolit­an of Las Vegas. “OPM” closes on Dec. 31.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto Grace Lusk of “OPM” during her final performanc­e in the show in August at The Cosmopolit­an of Las Vegas. “OPM” closes on Dec. 31.
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