7 Best Performing Arts in Las Vegas, Nevada

The Smith Center for the Performing Arts

Downtown Fodor's choice

Las Vegas got its very own ($150 million) world-class performing arts center in 2012, and what a spot it is. The multibuilding complex (complete with a bell tower) was designed to invoke 1930s-era art deco construction, the same motif you'll find at Hoover Dam. Here, this elegance graces the main concert hall, which anchors its calendar around a season of touring Broadway musicals and Las Vegas Philharmonic concerts, filling the in-between dates with touring concert acts and other attractions. The venue rivals that in any other city.

Gordie Brown—Lasting Impressions

Downtown

The Canadian impressionist has been a Las Vegas presence for years, specializing in song parodies delivered with a manic silliness. Women will warm up to a guy good-looking enough to be a retro crooner, and men will recognize the kid from their middle school who memorized MAD magazine. (Of late Brown has a reduced schedule of two nights per week, sharing the theater with veteran musical acts.)

129 E. Fremont St., Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
702-385–7111
Arts/Entertainment Details
Rate Includes: From $15, Dark Sun.--Wed. and Fri.

Las Vegas Philharmonic

Downtown

Formed in 1998, the Philharmonic performs a nine-show season (September through May) under the baton of Donato Cabrera, mixing the classics with more commercial fare such as tributes to John Williams. The orchestra performs at The Smith Center for the Performing Arts downtown. A series of intimate "Spotlight" concerts in a small studio theater augments the main series in the big hall. 

361 Symphony Park, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89106, USA
702-258–5438-schedule information

Recommended Fodor's Video

Majestic Repertory Theatre

Inventive artistic director Troy Heard maximizes a bare-bones storefront space in the heart of a revitalized Main Street to present challenging, consistently interesting titles, often reflecting his interest in immersive theater. Majestic's past triumphs include the world premieres of The Sandman and Clown Bar 2, and the Las Vegas debuts of Carrie: The Musical and Spring Awakening.

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.

The Beverly Theater

Las Vegas welcomed its first independent film house and performance venue when this state-of-the-art facility opened in the spring of 2023. Today "The Bev" hosts everything from art-house movies to live performances and literary events in association with The Writer's Block next door. 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.

The Showroom at the Golden Nugget

Downtown

The Golden Nugget's upstairs cabaret room is a comfortable movie theater–style layout with 600 roomy seats. Of late it's home (for two nights each week) to impressionist Gordie Brown, who is used to sharing the venue with one-night concert acts, which typically play tribal casinos around the country: anyone from Foghat to Tommy James and the Shondells.