Las Vegas Review-Journal

Interview indicates return for Dion

- KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES 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.

HODA Kotb has all but confirmed Celine Dion’s return to the stage. The NBC broadcaste­r gleaned this informatio­n in a sit-down with the superstar for an hourlong special “Celine’s Story,” which aired Tuesday night.

During an appearance with “Today” co-hosts Sarah Guthrie and Craig Melvin, Kotb relayed a moment with Dion after their lengthy interview session last month in Las Vegas.

Kotb fell just short of wresting details from the superstar. But was clearly confident we will see Dion perform again.

“She’s going to be back on stage,” Kotb said during her “Today” segment. “I asked her when, and she yelled to her manager, ‘Can I tell Hoda when I can be on stage?’ And he said no.”

But Kotb continued, “So we know that there is a date upcoming.”

The next frontier is the “when” of it all.

AEG Presents executive

John Nelson has served as Dion’s manager through much of her recovery. AEG holds the exclusive booking agreement with Resorts World Theatre, where Dion would headline upon her return.

Kotb’s conversati­on with Dion marks the first confirmati­on from the superstar that she has a specific plan to be back on stage.

Messages to Nelson and

AEG Presents reps for details have not been returned. Reps have previously said only that they are optimistic for Dion to resume her residency plans.

Also disclosed during the interview, and in the upcoming “Celine Dion: I Am” documentar­y, the 56-year-old entertainm­ent icon’s battle with what would be diagnosed as Stiff Person Syndrome dates 16 years.

This period covers her first residency at Caesars Palace, with Dion first experienci­ng physical limitation­s in the summer of 2008 while in Germany during her “Taking Chances” world tour. At that time, her throat constricte­d and cut off her ability to sing the high notes.

“I said, to my assistants and my people, I’m like, ‘I don’t know if I can do the show, I don’t know what’s happening,’ and I was very, very, very scared,” Dion said. “And then you panic, and the more you panic, the more you spasm, and the more you spasm, the more you panic. I went on stage and started to sound more nasal.”

Dion said she “lowered the songs, a little bit, the keys,” and sang, “Cuz I’m your lady, and you are my maaaan,” to demonstrat­e.

While fans praised Dion’s performanc­es and appearance, she said, “I did not know what to say. Everybody said, ‘You look pristine,’ but I was not controllin­g myself anymore, and I want to be controllin­g.”

In retrospect, Dion said she should have pulled off the stage long before her June 2019 finale at the Colosseum, where she performed some 1,141 shows in her two residencie­s dating to 2003.

She was not only busy with performanc­e, but caring for her husband, René Angélil, who died of throat cancer in 2016.

“We did not know what was going on. … I should have stopped, to take the time to figure it out,” Dion said. “My husband was fighting for his own life. I had to raise my kids. I had to hide. I had to try to be a hero, while feeling my body leaving me and holding on to my own dreams.”

It was time for Dion to come forward and explain what was really happening.

“Lying for me was a burden, it was too much to bear, lying to the people who got me where I am today,” Dion said. “I could not do it anymore.”

She said that SPS, as it has become known, “Didn’t take anything away from me.”

“I’m gonna go back on stage,” she said, “even if I have to crawl, even if I have to talk with my hands, I will. I am Celine Dion.”

Shining lights

Miral Kotb’s glow-in-thedark dance show, “iluminate,” has been extended at The Strat Showroom through August 2027. The show opened just as the city was returning to full bloom during COVID, Oct. 21, 2021.

Kotb is a singular talent, at once a dancer and software engineer, who created the custom Led-trimmed stage costumes and wireless lighting programs for the wild effects (this is one that dazzles all ages).

The show holds the nightly 7 o’clock time slot, dark Tuesdays. And when this show goes dark, it is really dark.

‘Potter’ marks 5th

Break out the inflatable numbers for “Potted Potter — The Harry Potter Parody,” which on June 3 celebrated its fifth anniversar­y on the Strip at Imagine Showroom at Horseshoe Las Vegas.

This is the former Windows Showroom at Bally’s, and also the former Magic Attic at Bally’s.

Before that it was home to “Tony and Tina’s Wedding” and a “Clue” stage show. And before that, I think it was an actual attic.

Impressive­ly, “Potter” has survived multiple venue monikers and several shows at the resort, among them “Extravagan­za” and “Dita Las Vegas” in Jubilee Theater. That’s more than 1,400 performanc­es.

James Edwards and Nicholas Charles deliver rapid-fire shtick as they roll through all 17 (er, seven) Potter books 70 minutes. You don’t need to be a Potter nerd to enjoy. Regular nerds get it, too. Shows are 7 p.m. daily (dark Wednesday) with matinees Tuesdays, Saturdays and Sundays.

Cool Hang Alert

The Fab, the city’s long-running Beatles tribute band, marks its 30th anniversar­y this month. Pat Woodward’s fab crew is at Coverall Lounge at Arizona Charlie’s Decatur at 8 p.m. Saturday. The band plays “Help” in its entirety (the album and also the single). No cover, and you don’t need a ticket (to ride).

 ?? Cirque du Soleil ?? Celine Dion and her family are shown backstage with cast members of “Love” on May 31 at The Mirage.
Cirque du Soleil Celine Dion and her family are shown backstage with cast members of “Love” on May 31 at The Mirage.
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