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MIKE WEATHERFORD: Drag star bringing magic to Strip

Scott Weston was as surprised as anyone when "An Evening at La Cage" abruptly closed on Monday night.

As "La Cage" star Frank Marino cleaned out his Riviera dressing room while pondering the option of reopening the show as producer, Weston faced the short-term likelihood that his alter-ego, Cashetta, the "Queen of Magic," will become the Strip's only drag star when his one-(wo)man "Magic's a Drag" opens Feb. 21 at the Harmon Theater.


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"My demographic certainly includes them, but we're so different," Weston says of the potential "La Cage" audience. "I never started out in the bars like a lot of drag performers. My audiences were very mixed. I've never done the lip-syncing or been a celebrity impersonator," he says.

Instead, Cashetta is better known on cruise ships and in comedy clubs. The Dolly Parton-type character does comedy magic with audience participation in the vein of Mac King, where "the magic kind of ties it in at the end. It's not me getting up there with the all-powerful sorcerer thing."

"Magic's a Drag" replaces Lucky Cheng's Drag Cabaret, which closes Saturday in the smaller room of the two-sided venue. Weston says he is not on his own as a rent-the-room performer and that the theater staff is marketing it. Though his timing isn't ideal, he says the content is up for the challenge.

"I've always wanted to have a show in Las Vegas, but I wanted to make sure I had a good show to bring to town," he says of 10 years refining the magic act. ...

As for "La Cage," its future remained unsettled at this writing. Producer Norbert Aleman characterizes the closing as "a break." He struck a deal with reality-TV producers for a backstage look at the show, and hopes to be back in business once the cameras are ready to roll.

But the show's star, Marino, also was negotiating with Riviera officials to reopen in the same room with much of the same cast, but with a different title. ...

Cashetta isn't the only optimistic magician defying a bad economy. A new magic show also opened recently downtown at the Las Vegas Club. "Steven & Cassandra Best: Superstars of Magic!" creates a new show space in a former Hawaiian restaurant off the casino floor. ...

You know what they say about good intentions and all that. Indeed, it was a fine idea for MGM Mirage to coordinate all their locals discounts into one well-organized Web page (www.mgmmirage.com/ locals/). Check it out, and you'll see offers for everything from "Love" to Carrot Top.

What might not have been such a great idea was putting a hyperlink to the new site on the company's main home page (www.mgmmirage.com). Early this week, a show producer reported an out-of-state friend calling to ask what was meant by "locals." Upon being told it meant "Nevada resident," the next question was, "Can you book the room for me?"

And now everyone knows the truth: The Criss Angel show isn't really selling out, if locals can get in for a 40 percent discount.

It's a tricky dance, trying to reach out to residents without burning the tourists. There is always the mailbox, old-fashioned but discreet. ...

If the sports books had taken futures bets on which of this year's "America's Got Talent" finalists would be the first to headline in Las Vegas, someone would clean up big.

The person playing the Las Vegas Hilton on Sunday isn't the winner, Neal E. Boyd. Or the runner-up, Nuttin' But Stringz, or even third-place winner Eli Mattson.

That leaves fourth-placer Donald Braswell, the Josh Groban-style singer who twice escaped elimination on the show. Why him? Turns out he has fans in Hilton management and is represented by Terry Fator's manager, John McEntee.

"He's got a little cult following of his own," McEntee says of the singer. It was Braswell's dream to headline in Las Vegas, and the Hilton was willing to take a chance if the guarantee was low, he says. What McEntee terms "a reasonable gamble" looks to have paid off; he says presales had reached the break-even point early this week.

But your futures bet might hinge on the definition of terms. Another "Talent" contestant from last summer, Queen Emily, edges into the Hilton two days ahead of Braswell, but she's not a solo headliner. Instead, she is joining the cast of "Menopause The Musical" on Friday. The revue departs the Hilton April 5; it wasn't clear if Emily would stay the duration. ...

Finally, a performer can't be too versatile these days. On Valentine's Day, Kevin Burke, star of the one-man show "Defending the Caveman," will officiate the wedding of a couple of Las Vegas fans, 72-year-old Mickie Hollander and 80-year-old Gene Adler.

When he first signed on for the show, Burke let producer John Bentham know that he was an ordained minister in case something like this ever came up. That leaves just one question: Does the showroom have a drive-up window?

Contact reporter Mike Weatherford at mweatherford@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0288.

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Dellton Collins wrote on February 13, 2009 07:17 AM: A correction: Donald Braswell did not escape elimination twich on AGT. He was eliminated by one judge. He was voted back on by the majority of viewers. When he performed with the AGT group at the MGM he was the biggest hit of any of the AGT group, by the majority of workers at MGM, most of us followed the AGT show in the summer. He has a majestic voice in this day and time when most singers either scream or whisper. This guy can carry a tune like a tune should be carried, no screaming just pure beautiful sound coming out of his mouth. So, I'm not surprised he is the only AGT contestant that is doing a solo in a major hotel. I'm sure as heck not a member of a small cult but enjoy pure talent when I hear it and so are thousands of others that enjoys pure talent rather than screaming and calling it carrying a tune.

Dan and the gang at the MGM who appreciates a true artist


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Mary wrote on February 13, 2009 06:21 AM: Cashetta does NOT claim to be the "only female impersonator magician", although having seen some of the others, she is by far the most entertaining.


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Serious wrote on February 12, 2009 08:22 PM: Eli Mattson finished in 2nd place on "America's Got Talent" not 3rd as your article wrongfully states.


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Mike wrote on February 12, 2009 07:10 PM: I've seen Cashetta's show and it is one of the most original and entertaining magic shows I have ever seen. She is a true talent. I totally understand Mike Weatherford's comparison of Cashetta to the brilliant Mac King. Both shows are very funny and are much more about the personalty of the performer than 'cabinetry'. I do know that Cashetta does NOT bill herself as the only drag magician. In fact, she speaks highly of Tiny Bubbles on her web site Cashetta.com. I always knew Cashetta would eventually end up headlining in Las Vegas. This is one act you have to see!


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David wrote on February 12, 2009 04:13 PM: A drag magic show that compares itself to MAC KING? Oh come on now... Mac King has entertained for YEARS in front of families like my own (We have seen him MANY times) and to compare such a talent to a large man in a dress is stupid. I saw this Scott guy's photos and how he is called "The Worlds Only Female Impersonator Magician" - he is not. Like I said, we have seen ALL the shows in town over the years - there used to be a BIG guy in a dress doing very funny magic on the strip, his name was little bubbles or something like that. Even he I wold not compare to Mac King, but he WAS funny! La Cage was a very good show - I was sorry to see it close. I wonder if this new guy coming to town had anything to do with the closing of La Cage? I am an amateur magician myself - I keep my eye on things that are magical in Vegas, I have asked around about this Scott guy - he has spent many years working in Gay Bars in Florida, Massachusetts, and New York. So he is lying in your article about not working in the bars. He is also lying when he calls himself the worlds only female impersonator magician - I have seen two others, Little Bubbles and a Merlina in Indiana. I don't think much of new magicians that come to Vegas and trash the stars we have (Like Mac King, La Cage, and Little Bubbles) Lets see how long this Scott guy lasts...


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J. Hatton wrote on February 12, 2009 02:19 PM: just wondered why you would write such a negative and inaccurate piece about Donald Braswell in your article in the paper today. It was inaccurate because he was not eliminated TWICE, only once by the three stooges on the AGT panel, and not by America who promptly voted him back to show that the Judges had been wrong. He then went on to come in 4th because of his talent and likeability, and because he was better than those he finished ahead of, not for any other reason. Why would you, who don’t even know the man, try to paint such a negative picture of him in your article?

For the record, he’s a very decent, spiritual, loving family man, and 2 weeks ago he put on a show in San Antonio (his home town) for the SAMMinistries which is a Church organization that feeds the homeless. All of the proceeds went to the charity, Donald kept nothing. He was very sick with a fever of a 102 degrees at the time but still went on and performed beautifully and then hung around for about 2 hours afterwards signing autographs for the audience/congregation, and the next day he had to be taken to the Emergency Room he was still so sick.
We who admire him (his “cult” apparently!), know what a really terrific person he is (many of us have had the pleasure of meeting him several time) and were saddened to see you paint him as a sort of unworthy, string-pulling imposter who didn’t deserve to get a gig at the Hilton. That might hurt his ticket sales and I wish so much you hadn’t done that just to put some sort of spin on your article.


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Julie wrote on February 12, 2009 10:52 AM: Enough with drag shows. Don't need them.
I hardly doubt any deal for a television show has been inked if the stage show is long gone. Who is this producer kidding? This is just like Clint Holmes continuing to tell the press his auto-biographical play that bombed is about to open on Broadway....then the West End...where next? Anyone's guess. It's all hype without an spat of truth.