Kylie Minogue Announces Las Vegas Residency

November 3 is the official opening date of Kylie Minogue’s first Las Vegas residency. As previously reported, it will inaugurate the Voltaire, a new performance venue at the Venetian Resort. Tickets go on sale August 9 at voltairelv.com.

Kylie Minogue
Kylie Minogue is the most successful female artist of all-time in Australia. (Image: Edward Cooke)

“I’ve performed a couple of times at Vegas, but as part of a tour, and particularly when I did the ‘Showgirl’ tour in 2004,” Minogue said Thursday at a press conference at the Pendry Hotel in West Hollywood. “At that time, we said, ‘Oh, this feels like a Vegas show.’ Then, when I did ‘Aphrodite,’ which was a tour with so many waterworks in, like precision fountains, my team at the time kept saying, ‘Why isn’t this in Vegas? We’ve got to do it at some point.’”

Minogue, 55, had been considering a Vegas residency since last fall, when the Daily Mail reported that she was in talks with Caesars Entertainment for a 12-week run, possibly at Caesars Palace or Planet Hollywood. She hasn’t toured in the U.S. since 2011.

“I was thinking years ago I want to do it when I’m younger, like, I don’t want to do it when I’m at the sunset of my career,” Minogue continued. “So, I think I’ve got it right somewhere in the middle where I feel like I’ve earned the right to and have the experience to really enjoy being there.”

With only 1,000 seats, the Voltaire is only a quarter the size of Adele’s venue, The Colosseum at Caesars Palace. So Minogue, who came to fame with 1988’s “The Loco-Motion,” won’t give the reigning queen of the Strip any competition, sales-wise.

However, with more than 80 million worldwide album sales, Minogue is the most successful female artist of all time in Australia, so her appearances should stir quite a buzz.

Come into Her World

“I want it to be the kind of essence of what a Kylie show has become, enough glamour and abandon,” Minogue explained. “I’ve got some versions of songs that have not been heard, like reinterpretations of songs, which is exciting. Live bed dances, amazing costumes. That’s the base and then we’ll see what surprises we can come up with.”

The announcement comes on the heels of the success of her song “Padam Padam,” which broke into the Top 10 on Billboard’s Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart and became a summer TikTok phenomenon, and ahead of the September 22 release of her 16th studio, album, “Tension,” which will feature a song called “Vegas High.”

We were talking about going to Vegas, the possibilities,” Minogue said. “It’s a shimmering thing in the distance. If you’re flying in, or if you’re driving, the roads get drier, and the mood changes, and as the saying says, ‘What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.’ It’s just its own little kind of Wonderland.”

The Studio 54-inspired Voltaire, located in the former Opaline Theater space across from the Summit Showroom, was created by Venetian chief content officer Michael Gruber, a former Caesars exec, and designed by Emmy- and Tony Award-winning production designer Derek McLane. It’s expected to play host to concerts, DJs, and burlesque performers.

To receive ticket on-sale information as soon as it’s released, subscribe to voltairelv.com.

Corey Levitan joined Casino.org in 2022 after a long career covering Las Vegas. He currently covers entertainment, dining and gaming news in Las Vegas.

Corey spent six years covering the Vegas Strip for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, where he also wrote the most popular humor column in the city’s history. (For “Fear and Loafing,” he tried out 176 Vegas jobs, including poker player, blackjack dealer and Follie Bergere dancer.)

Corey has won more than 100 local, state and national awards for his journalism, which has also appeared in Rolling Stone, New York Magazine and the New York Post.

Corey is a New York native whose hobbies include playing guitar, trying to be a better husband, and arguing with strangers on Facebook.

Contact Corey at corey@casino.org.

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