15 Best Performing Arts Venues in Las Vegas, Nevada

Background Illustration for Performing Arts

The very name "Las Vegas" has been synonymous with a certain style of showbiz ever since Jimmy Durante first headlined at Bugsy Siegel's Flamingo Hotel in 1946. Through the years this entertainment mecca has redefined itself a number of times, but one thing has remained consistent: doing things big, and with as much ballyhoo as possible.

The star power that made the old "supper club" days glitter with names like Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin is echoed in this decade's return of big names to the Strip, but this time primarily in large theaters devoted to recurring concert engagements, or "residencies," by everyone from Lady Gaga to Usher. Star magicians such as David Copperfield, Criss Angel, and Penn & Teller call Las Vegas home, and drive to work each day as commuters. Cirque du Soleil still dominates the Strip with spectacle and jaw-dropping acrobatics that present little or no language barrier to the city's large numbers of international tourists. Perennial pop stars such as Bruno Mars and younger-skewing production shows (such as the break-dancing Jabbawockeez) fight an ongoing battle to lure younger audiences that nightclubs have skimmed from the ticketed shows.

Shows are no longer treated as loss leaders for the gaming tables. Granted, a high credit line or enough points on a player's card can still work miracles for a hard-to-score ticket. But those who aren't big players are fully aware it will almost surely cost more than $100 for middle-of-the-house seats for the Cirque shows or star residencies. Meanwhile, the less-in-demand names and production shows that run year-round have become a confusing, "never pay face value" circus of discount outlets and offers.

The new generation of resident headliners is as likely to come from America's Got Talent as a recording studio, as evidenced by magicians Mat Franco or Piff the Magic Dragon. The names change, but there's something for everyone and still no other place in the world to find such a concentration of acrobats, singers, "dirty" dancers, magicians, and comedians—all continuing the razzle-dazzle tradition Las Vegas has popularized for the world.

Mac King

South Strip Fodor's Choice

The reigning king of Las Vegas afternoons has been on the Strip so long (more than 20 years) that he now greets the children of those who remember seeing his show when they were kids themselves. Ensconced at medieval-themed Excalibur, King remains ageless in his plaid suit and folksy daily greeting of "Howdy!" The actual magic takes a backseat to the comedy, which is adjusted to whomever he pulls up onstage on a given day. The one-man hour of low-key, self-deprecating humor features the kind of close-up magic—punctuated by a few more elaborate illusions—that's more baffling than you might first realize amid the running banter and audience participation.

3580 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-597–7600
Performing Art Details
From $45
Dark Sun. and Mon. (all shows 3 pm)

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The Beverly Theater

Las Vegas welcomed its first independent film house and performance venue in 2023. "The Bev" devotes most of its programming to "art-house" and classic films, augmented by the occasional live performance or literary event. Craft beers are sold to take inside the screenings. There's also an open-air (but covered, thankfully) balcony, where guests can sip wine and listen to live music. The theater is the brainchild of The Rogers Foundation, which supports several different arts initiatives Downtown. Take note: the facility is not set up to accept cash.

516 S. 6th St., Las Vegas, NV, 89101, USA
Performing Art Details
Films from $10

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Donny Osmond

Center Strip

No one should question Donny Osmond's work ethic, showmanship or even his self-awareness about the highs and lows of a long career. How long? The "self aware" part made news in early 2025 when, thanks to what he calls "some mind-blowing AI and CGI technology," the 67-year-old promised a stage duet with his 14-year-old teen-idol self from 1972. No matter what year it is, Osmond exemplifies the "down front" entertainer who covers everything from his child star days in the 1960s to his credible attempts to keep up with current musical trends. This old-school Vegas showcase also includes dancers and production visuals, but it's really all about the charisma of a perennial who grew up in front of America and wears his variety training with pride.

3475 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
855-234–7469
Performing Art Details
From $65

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Jabbawockeez TIMELESS

South Strip

The only Las Vegas performers who don't show their faces speak with their feet. The masked hip-hop dance collective has steadily improved its showmanship since it settled on the Strip in 2010. There's plenty of break dancing but also some mime and a contagious sense of fun, as comedy and warm-hearted themes of brotherhood and inclusiveness emerge from those blank masks. The troupe's latest home in a 300-seat theater allows only four to six of the dancers onstage at the same time, but video projections expand the sense of space.

3799 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
866-740–7711
Performing Art Details
From $57
Dark Tues. (shows at 5:30 and 8 pm most other days)

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Mat Franco—Magic Reinvented Nightly

Center Strip

A winning smile (and winning America's Got Talent) turned out to be a formidable combination for a magician who settled on the Strip after the TV talent show fast-tracked his fame in 2014. Franco's charm and likable attitude compensates for a streamlined production, on a mostly bare stage augmented by video screens. But he gives the classics a youthful attitude, and the show builds to a big finale in two bits of trickery that both involve the wider audience.

3535 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
855-234–7469
Performing Art Details
From $50
Dark Sun. (most shows 7 pm)

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Michael Jackson ONE

South Strip

His signature glove and boots magically come to life. And so does Michael Jackson—at least in the video bombardment that comes at you from the stage, side walls, and even the ceiling of Cirque du Soleil's salute to the late superstar. Since 2013, this partnership with Jackson's estate has been blending the music-video imagery every child of the 1980s knows with Cirque's own creativity, this time leaning as much into dance as acrobatics. ONE has outlasted Cirque's Beatles tribute Love (which closed with the Mirage) and was "reimagined" (as Cirque puts it) in 2024 with new content, costumes, and impressive technical upgrades, including drones in the opening number. As in the Beatles show, Jackson's songs are given startling clarity by some 7,000 speakers and are sliced, diced, and cross-pollinated. Given the controversies over Jackson's personal life, the show is smart to steer away from biography and instead externalize the music and its messages, including hard-hitting imagery of racism and famine during They Don't Care About Us. The original through-line of four fans out to save Jackson's reputation from robotic tabloid paparazzi (Remember them? How quaint) is still floating around in there—the glove, boots, etc. spring to life for them—but is now buried deep within the sensory overload. While it helps to go in as a fan, even the less devout can emerge with a fresh appreciation of Jackson songs, both the familiar and forgotten.

3950 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89119, USA
877-632--7400
Performing Art Details
From $102
Dark Tues. and Wed.

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Murray the Magician

North Strip

A knack for self-promotion—and an unimaginable outlay for hair products—made this comedy-magician instantly identifiable by his black-framed glasses and an exploding shock of vertical blonde hair. Murray (Sawchuck) has become a Las Vegas mainstay with a relaxed, slow-burn stage presence and a solid showcase of classic magic heavy on audience banter. When his longtime home at the Tropicana was demolished, Murray moved north for weekend shows inside the L.A. Comedy Club at the Strat.

2000 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89104, USA
800-829–9034
Performing Art Details
From $42
Dark Mon.--Fri. (all shows at 4 pm)

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Mystère

North Strip

The Strip's first permanent Cirque du Soleil show celebrated its 30th anniversary in late 2023, evidence enough that it's still the town's most consistent family show, and the Las Vegas Cirque show that most purely preserves the Montreal company's innovative reinvention of the circus. It has changed every now and then over the years as the producers try to keep it fresh, but not in fundamental ways most people would notice. Mystère has held up to the increased spectacle of its sister shows by keeping the spectators close to the action and the human acrobatics in the spotlight. You're intimately involved with this surreal wonderland and the comic characters who interact with the audience. 

3300 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
800-392–1999
Performing Art Details
From $59
Dark Wed. and Thurs.

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Nathan Burton Comedy Magic

Center Strip

The likable magician had the good fortune to be on the very first, highly watched season of America's Got Talent in 2006, parlaying that national exposure into a durable career on the Strip. Having relocated from Planet Hollywood, Burton puts a fun spin on familiar illusions and is family-friendly for those with older children. Mom and Dad will smile because the tickets are one of the few show bargains left on the Strip.

3771 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
Performing Art Details
From $22
Dark Thurs. (shows at 4 pm)

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Nevada Ballet Theatre

Downtown

The city's longest-running fine-arts organization (this being Las Vegas, it only dates from 1973) stages four or five productions each year, anchored by an annual December presentation of The Nutcracker (and making an October tradition of its Dracula every other year). Performing at The Smith Center for the Performing Arts Downtown, the dance company also runs classes from its studio in Summerlin.

361 Symphony Park Ave., Las Vegas, NV, 89134, USA
702-243–2623-offices and group sales

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Piff the Magic Dragon

Center Strip

Billing himself as "The Loser of America's Got Talent" fits the droll humor of the British comedy-magician, whose goal of competing on the TV show was to get a berth in Las Vegas. It worked. The magician who stands out for his satin dragon suit, bad attitude, and stoic chihuahua sidekick, Mr. Piffles, keeps the jokes coming as fast as the card tricks, and pulls plenty of recruits from the audience. It's a testament to Piff's popularity that he's moved from the Flamingo's smaller cabaret to its main showroom.

3555 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
855-234–7469
Performing Art Details
From $37
Dark Fri.

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Shin Lim

North Strip

Call it destiny that this Canadian-American magician ended up in Las Vegas. His first big break was on Penn & Teller's TV show Fool Us, which frequently films at the Rio. A viral performance there led to winning America's Got Talent, which has created a home on the Strip for at least five other resident headliners. Not only that, he followed his 2018 victory on AGT by winning an all-star edition, The Champions, the very next year. Shin Lim has since become a steady presence on the Strip, moving across the street to the Palazzo Theatre after The Mirage closed. In some ways he is the most unlikely of the Las Vegas magic stars, since much of his act depends on "close-up" magic and card manipulation tracked by video cameras rather than comedy or big, showy illusions. But he got to where he is by being different and theatrical, not by following some other magician's lead.

3325 S. Las Vegas Blvd., Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
Performing Art Details
from $50
Dark Mon.

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Tape Face

Center Strip

Tape Face is one of several America's Got Talent variety performers to take up a residency on the Strip—near fellow contestants Shin Lim, Mat Franco, and Piff the Magic Dragon—after mainstream exposure from the TV competition. Tape Face hearkens back to a simpler era of show business, with his silent mime and prop comedy based on the signature gimmick of gaffer's tape plastered over his mouth. He uses his eyes, gestures, and quite a few recruits from the audience to propel the charmingly low-fi shenanigans. (Sam Wills, the creator of Tape Face, generated some controversy when he decided to treat his character more like a Blue Man and less like a Piff. In other words, when Wills is out on tour, another performer he trained to do the act steps in at the MGM.)

3799 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
855-234–7469
Performing Art Details
From $62
Dark Wed. (shows at 7:30 pm)

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Tournament of Kings

South Strip

A rare survivor of Las Vegas's mostly forgotten "family" phase is this Arthurian stunt show, which has lasted more than 25 years in a dirt-floor arena in the basement of Excalibur. The audience dines on a Cornish hen dinner (warning: no utensils) and cheers on fast horses, jousting, and swordplay. Those familiar with Medieval Times around the country will know the drill. The show remains a great family gathering—especially for pre-adolescents, who get to make a lot of noise—and the realistic stunts speak to the commitment of the cast.

3850 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-597–7600
Performing Art Details
From $64
Dark Tues.--Wed.

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V—The Ultimate Variety Show

Center Strip

This mid-price (and frequently discounted) variety show has held its own against the splashier Cirque-type productions for more than 20 years. The lineup varies, but it usually has magic, juggling, and acrobatics such as hand balancing. Perhaps the real secret is the “front of curtain” atmosphere with likable performers making direct contact with the audience in an intimate setting.

3667 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
866-260–7200
Performing Art Details
From $60

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