Nightlife in Las Vegas

 
Nightlife is Las Vegas' best-known pastime. The casinos and hotels may be open by day but only under the cover of night does the city's burst of lights set the atmosphere buzzing. Casinos, restaurants and bars are packed with tourists from all over the world, most in a friendly and genial spirit. Casino hotels tend to house not only the best-known stage shows but also all the late-night bars, nightclubs and live music. Once again, the city is split between the Strip and Downtown, both of which offer an overwhelming assortment of evening activities. Downtown offers smaller, sometimes more charismatic, venues, while the enormous hotel complexes of the Strip offer a wide variety of entertainment options at each individual complex. Las Vegas is a 24-hour city. Alcohol can be bought at any time of day or night, in restaurants, bars and shops. The legal drinking age is 21 years. Dress at most casinos is casual, however, more and more lounges do impose a dress code; for example most clubs deny entry to individuals wearing running shoes (trainers) or flip-flops (thongs). Unsurprisingly maybe, the rules are applied more strictly to men than to women.

Bars: All night-time entertainment happens within the hotel-casino complexes. Most bars in Las Vegas feature such extravagant entertainment that they rival the largest nightclubs of other cities. Nevertheless, in Las Vegas, they are simply bars when compared to the lavish shows put on in the theatres and clubs there. The Bellagio's Baccarat Bar serves luxurious cocktails against a backdrop of live piano music. Serving over 100 varieties of vodka, Mandalay Bay's Red Square creates an opulent mix of pre-/post-Revolutionary Russia with its giant decapitated statue of Lenin and blood red velvet curtains, a 25ft long ice bar and vodka tastings in their walk-in freezer. The Bar at Times Square, New York-New York Hotel and Casino, aims to recreate the feel of an old New York city pub with polished wood floors and nightly entertainment. The Mix Lounge is proving to be one of Las Vegas' newest and hottest watering holes. Settled high-atop THEHotel at Mandalay Bay, expectant tourists and locals alike queue up in their street-chic attire for a chance to 'be seen' in what is being touted as the 'highest and hottest nightlife destination' in the city.

Casinos: To gamble, visitors must be at least 21 years old and have proof of age and identity in the form of a driver's licence, passport or other photo identification. Most casinos in Las Vegas do not impose a dress code, although shoes and shirts are required. Some casinos worth visiting include the Arabian themed Aladdin Resort and Casino and The Palms Hotel and Casino voted 'Best in Vegas - 2005' and the newest playground for the young and moneyed party crowd. The slightly dingy but intimate Gold Spike, 400 Ogden Avenue East, offers low table limit and penny slots, giving a taste of what the city was like in the 1970s. The Golden Nugget has been a fixture of Downtown since 1946, and features the largest gold nugget in the world, weighing in at 23 kilograms (61 pounds). New York-New York, 3790 Las Vegas Boulevard South, is a recreation of New York, while Paris Las Vegas aims to import a touch of European class and sophistication.

Clubs: A number of state-of-the-art clubs are offered by the major hotel-casinos. The minimum age for entry is usually 21 years and a dress code is also often in place. One of the best-known clubs is yet another Las Vegas recreation of somewhere else - Studio 54, MGM Grand. Modelled on the legendary New York nightclub of the 1970s, Studio 54 features live dancers, dance music and a collection of photographs taken at the original club. Pure , inside Caesars Palace is one of the newest clubs to open on The Strip. The 3,400-sq-metre (36,000-sq-ft) venue offers clubbers the choice of three environments, themes and sounds, with all rooms interconnected by intimate passageways and an elevated glass-enclosed VIP room at the heart of the action. It also tends to have long queues, so visitors are encouraged to arrive early. The Palms Hotel and Casino houses one of Vegas' most popular nightclubs, Rain, 4321 West Flamingo Road. This 2,600-sq-metre (28,000-sq-ft) adult-only playground features an elevated dance floor lit by a 14ft fireball and dancing fountains of water throb in time with the DJ.

Live Music: Live music is another one of Las Vegas' legendary forms of entertainment - the city is the former home to superstars like Sammy Davis Junior, Frank Sinatra and Liberace. The Aladdin Theatre for the Performing Arts, Aladdin Casino headlines major touring rock and popular acts, while the Blue Note Jazz Club, also at the Aladdin Casino, features jazz acts. The Orleans Showroom, The Orleans Hotel and Casino has hosted touring pop acts such as Willie Nelson, Neil Sedaka and Jerry Lewis. The Mandalay Bay Events Center is a 12,000 seat sport and entertainment complex, the setting for superstar concerts, major sporting events and television specials. It has featured everyone from Steely Dan to Stevie Wonder to Paul McCartney and Wings.

 
 
 

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