There’s no shortage of what to see, hear, and do at any time in Nevada. Here are some highlighted cultural events for the week starting January 14.
January 16
Bilingual jazz guitarist and singer-songwriter Alex Cuba brings his Afro-Cuban jazz fusion pop to Myron's at the Smith Center. Cuba is the recipient of a Grammy and four Latin Grammys, garnered over a nine-album career.
January 16
A reading with the Nevada-based author of Into the Midnight Wood, in conversation with The Writer's Block Queer as Book club host Justin Ross.
A whimsical queer romance about two mismatched roommates whose fragile — and definitely not romantic at all — balance is upended by an impending family wedding and an otherworldly danger in the nearby enchanted wood.
A whimsical queer romance about two mismatched roommates whose fragile — and definitely not romantic at all — balance is upended by an impending family wedding and an otherworldly danger in the nearby enchanted wood.
January 19
The 44th edition of the birthday parade will be held in Downtown Las Vegas at Fourth Street, where the community will gather to celebrate the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. This year's parade theme is "Living the Dream: Justice in the Journey. Hope in the Hardship."
The parade is one of many local King Week events, which include the Martin Luther King Jr. Technology Summit, two church services, the Young Dreamers Awards Program, and the MLK Scholarship Awards Banquet. More info can be found here.
The parade is one of many local King Week events, which include the Martin Luther King Jr. Technology Summit, two church services, the Young Dreamers Awards Program, and the MLK Scholarship Awards Banquet. More info can be found here.
January 20
One part deranged sip 'n paint, one part karaoke night, and one part Sotheby's.
In The Van Gogh Shogh, solo performer and clown Donna Oblongata uses the lens of Vincent Van Gogh's life and legacy to ask urgent questions about the nature of art, success, reproduction, and the potential meaning(lessness) of a creative life.
In The Van Gogh Shogh, solo performer and clown Donna Oblongata uses the lens of Vincent Van Gogh's life and legacy to ask urgent questions about the nature of art, success, reproduction, and the potential meaning(lessness) of a creative life.