Home • Burlington County News Ten shows of note coming to the casinos this summer

Ten shows of note coming to the casinos this summer

Summertime is prime time for the region’s gambling dens, and that is certainly reflected in the entertainment being offered. The next three months or so feature a non-stop smorgasbord of contemporary and vintage headliners as well as resident production shows.

Below is a (chronological) look at some of the most notable bookings:

Euphoria (June 18 to Nov. 19 at Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City hardrockatlanticcity.com)

AyCee-based impresario Allen Valentine has spent the past several years producing nostalgia-focused musical revues at Hard Rock, but this summer (and extending well into the fall), he’s reviving a format that’s been MIA (missing in action) for quite some time: the classic variety show. Euphoria will offer a potpourri of music, dance, comedy and magic, hand-balancing, plate-spinning and similar acts.

The Hook opens (June 30 at Caesars Atlantic City www.caesars.com/caesars-ac)

One of the things that has made Las Vegas such a must-visit destination is the collection of resident production shows, including various Cirque du Soleil extravaganzas, that can only be seen in the Nevada desert. Now, Atlantic City has its first such permanent attraction.

The Hook is both the name of the original production that will be featured as well as the facility itself. (It incorporates the existing part of the old Warner Theater, a 1920s movie palace).

Little has been revealed about the show’s content, but we know that it will showcase a troupe of international comics and circus acts. And because it’s from Spiegelworld, the company that is responsible for several long-running Vegas programs including the wonderfully wacky Absinthe at Caesars Palace, it should be incredibly creative, side splittingly hilarious and definitely for the over-21 crowd.

The Hook is also a potential game-changer: One can assume that if it succeeds, other AC casinos will follow suit and invest in their own one-of-a-kind presentations.

Besides the 400-seat state-of-the-art theater, the complex also includes Superfrico, which Spiegelworld describes as a “psychedelic Italian restaurant” and four cocktail bars.

Anthony Jeselnik (July 7 at Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa www.borgata.mgmresorts.com)

Given the current “cancel culture” it’s a near-miracle that Jeselnik still has a career: His stock-in-trade is making jokes about everything that polite society insists should never be the subject of a comedic routine (e.g. death, Alzheimer’s disease, abortion). But here’s the catch: Jeselnik’s material is unfailingly intelligent and the punch lines, which almost never land where you expect, will have you laughing in spite of yourself. Add to that a flawless, deadpan-like delivery, and you have a standup artist with few if any peers.

Ice Cube (July 7 at Ocean Casino Resort www.theoceanac.com)

The phrase “original gangsta” is thrown around freely in the hip-hop world, but it certainly applies to Ice Cube, who helped shape rap music and culture as a member of the groundbreaking, late-’80s collective N.W.A. Beyond that, he’s racked up impressive credits as a record producer and actor (Boyz ‘n the Hood, Friday, Ride Along).

Ice Cube — Ocean Casino Resort

Peter Frampton (July 16 at the Hard Rock)

One of the biggest pop-rock acts of the 1970s, Frampton will hit the Rock as part of a farewell tour. His imminent retirement is the result of a degenerative muscle condition called Inclusion-Body Myositis, so this will likely be the last chance to catch him locally.

Herman’s Hermits starring Peter Noone (July 29 at Golden Nugget Atlantic City www.goldennugget.com/atlantic-city)

During the “British Invasion” of the mid-1960s, only The Beatles were a bigger recording act than Herman’s Hermits. Today, original lead singer Peter Noone remains a marvelous entertainer armed with a trunk-load of enduring songs including I’m Henry the Eighth, Mrs. Brown You’ve Got A Lovely Daughter and There’s A Kind of Hush.

Herman’s Hermits lead singer Peter Noone will play the Golden Nugget on July 29. COURTESY OF NOONE’S FACEBOOK PAGE

John Fogerty (Aug. 18 at Caesars)

The singer-songwriter’s classic-rock resume includes writing and singing a slew of iconic classic-rock tunes while leading Creedence Clearwater Revival in the late- 1960s and early-’70s (among them Proud Mary, Down On the River and Lookin’ Out My Back Door), and a solo career that has kept him in the spotlight for decades.

Matt Rife (Aug. 18 and 19 Ocean Casino Resort)

This young comedian is without a doubt the biggest unknown star in all of show business. Although he’s yet to be discovered by the mainstream, Rife is an absolute Internet phenomenon; his two YouTube standup specials, 2021’s Only Fans and April’s Matthew Steven Rife garnered millions of views. On TikTok, his viewership is in the billions.

That he can book four shows at any casinos is impressive. That he’s booked them at Ocean’s 5,500-seat Ovation Hall is nothing less than remarkable—especially considering he was scheduled to do three sold-out shows at Bensalem Pa.’s Parx Casino and two at Wind Creek in Bethlehem, Pa last week.

Sergio Mendes (Aug. 18 at Rivers Casino Philadelphia www.riverscasino.com/philadelphia)

The legendary, 82-year-old Brazilian pianist/composer/arranger is best known for being one of the musicians who helped popularize basa nova in the U.S., primarily through his popular band, Brasil ’66.

Wayne Newton (Aug. 26 at Parx www.parxcasino.com)

Before nine-figure Cirque du Soleil extravaganzas and residencies by billion- view pop stars took over the Vegas entertainment scene, the 81-year-old Newton was the town’s star of stars. His Parx gig should provide a taste of what used to be in casino showrooms.

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