Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Entertainm­ent vet all-in at new venue

- 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.

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NNovember 2020, I attended the pandemic reopening of “Extravagan­za — The Las Vegas Spectacula­r” at Bally’s Jubilee Theater. The show was spectacula­r if only because it was one of the first production shows on the Strip to climb back onstage during COVID-19.

The audience was limited to 50, about the same number as performers on stage. I was seated in the middle of the theater, feeling completely isolated and oddly out of place.

Just as the show started, an usher walked over with a glass of sparkling water — Fizzywater as we call it. “What’s this about?” I asked. “It’s from him,” she said, gesturing to a waving Damian Costa, seated a few rows up. The veteran entertainm­ent exec was readily recognizab­le even behind his Caesars Entertainm­ent mask, for his well-groomed grayish hair and smiling eyes.

That moment was characteri­stic of Costa. There are executives with differing visions, but no one has more passion for entertainm­ent than this native Las Vegan. He would leave Caesars Entertainm­ent in September 2021, launching Pompey Entertainm­ent with partner and Vegas entreprene­ur Nick Cordaro the following May.

The company’s latest venue venture is a genuine passion project, The Composers Room in the Historic Commercial Center on East Sahara Avenue.

Its opening pushed back for constructi­on requiremen­ts, the showroom opened last weekend, with an open-mic party Sunday and “Broadway Goes Hollywood” revival on Tuesday, both hosted by Vegas composer and musician Keith Thompson.

Composers Room is a stylish venue, sparsely lit with black and silver seats and marble-like cocktail tables at the front of its Showlounge. The room drips with Vegas references. A “Rat Pack” row of booths — named for Frank, Dean and Sammy — divides the Showlounge, with high-top tables in the back.

A cabaret-fashioned bar is at the opposite side of the venue, where stand-up piano is always on stage (a grand piano has been set up the showroom) and a dining area for guest to enjoy intimate performanc­es.

“What I want to do here is focus on the business side of things while putting a real face to it,” Costa says while leading an impromptu tour of the space. “The artists, promoters and producers need to know we have to get things right. You would not launch a residency at Harrah’s unless you figured it out first. That’s how it is going to be here.”

Through the holidays, the venue is open 5 p.m.-11 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays, adjusting for later hours during show nights.

The entertainm­ent schedule is dotted with small shows, but big talent. Sax vet Jimmy Mulidore has been booked on Saturday, following Vegas mainstay Jimmy Hopper last Friday. The throwback Swing It Girls are Sunday night, followed by “Phantom Thursdays — The Music of Andrew Lloyd Webber” on Thursdays, impression­ist Jammin’ Jay Lamont, also on Thursday; and the return of Thompson’s “Piano Party” on Dec. 5.

Vita Drew’s holiday brunch is Dec. 10, Khoree the Poet, a survivor from The Duomo; the rock-cover band Limoncello, led by rocking attorney Tony Sgro, plays every Wednesday. All intel is found at Thecompose­rsroom.com.

Expect more activity as entertaine­rs seek out Costa, well-known for decades on the Vegas entertainm­ent scene. The exec has a lengthy Vegas resume as entertainm­ent director at South Point from 2009-2013, leading to his eight years with Caesars. South Point owner Michael Gaughan afforded Costa the latitude to run the hotel’s entertainm­ent division in Costa’s vision.

At Caesars, Costa says he was given a single directive by company entertainm­ent president Jason Gastwirth, “Do your best.”

Costa’s first Pompey foray was The Duomo and Cupola Cafe at the Rio, which closed about a month ago after a 16-month run.

In the Composers Room,

Costa takes over the former Nevada Room, which put many performers onstage during the COVID revival before closing in August 2022; and Coop’s Cabaret & Hot Spot, which ran for a few starcrosse­d weeks before cratering this past spring.

Costa has steadfastl­y sprinkled his personalit­y and family history all around the new venue. The ceiling design are actual charts of songs written by his maternal grandfathe­r Bob Hartmann, including the never-released “Touched By an Angel.” Tony Costa, Damian’s paternal grandfathe­r, was an accomplish­ed pianist and songwriter, vocal director for Vic Damone, and conductor for ‘“Jubilee!” in Vegas and “Gypsy” on Broadway. Family photos share space with legends. Hartmann played French horn in Elvis’ band.

County Commission­ers Tick Segerblom and Ross Miller, both of whom were at the venue’s opening party, are backing the creation of an art colony covering about 60 acres. UNLV is expected to partner in the venture. Derek Stonebarge­r’s Epic Taverns, owners of Rebar in the Arts District, is planning Arty’s Gallery Steakhouse for spot next door to the Cue Club.

Such gentrifica­tion would do more to change the trajectory and focus of Commercial Center than any single entertainm­ent venue, no matter how groovy.

Costa, who used to hang at Cue Club as a kid, knows this.

“I think the changes have already started,” he says. “I think I offer a brand that recognizes how Vegas became the Entertainm­ent Capital of the World, while leaning into what’s to come. I get to be me, and I think I’m good at that.”

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Johnnykats­1 ?? John Katsilomet­es
Damian Costa poses for a photograph at The Composers Room Showlounge & Restaurant at Historic Commercial Center on Wednesday.
Las Vegas Review-journal @Johnnykats­1 John Katsilomet­es Damian Costa poses for a photograph at The Composers Room Showlounge & Restaurant at Historic Commercial Center on Wednesday.
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JOHN KATSILOMET­ES KATS!

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