This week’s 5 best bets for arts & culture in Las Vegas
Corea and Fleck
One and one adds up to more than two when the two are master musicians Chick Corea (on piano) and Bela Fleck (on banjo). Fresh from “Two,” their most recent recorded collaboration, Corea (a 22-time Grammy winner) and Fleck (only 15 Grammys — so far) return to The Smith Center’s Reynolds Hall for a collaborative concert combining jazz, bluegrass, rock, flamenco and more. They’ll perform at 7:30 p.m. Saturday; for tickets ($29-$59), call 702-749-2000 or visit www.thesmithcenter.com.
‘History 101’
From the oracles of ancient Greece to the crucifixion of Jesus, “History 101” puts an irreverent twist on past times. The winner of Las Vegas Little Theatre’s eighth annual New Works Competition, James Ferguson’s comedy — which opens Friday — serves up a series of sketches, monologues and songs in LVLT’s Fischer Black Box, 3920 Schiff Drive. Performances are at 8 p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays through May 8; for tickets ($14-$15) call 702-362-7996 or visit www.LVLT.org.
Arturo Sandoval
Trumpeter Arturo Sandoval has been a Smith Center star from the start, performing in Reynolds Hall for the 2012 gala opening. Since then, however, the 10-time Grammy-winner has been more at home in the intimate Cabaret Jazz, where he returns at 7 p.m. Friday and 6 and 9 p.m. Saturday to play original compositions and a tribute to his mentor, the late jazz great Dizzy Gillespie. For tickets ($42-$65), visit www.thesmithcenter.com.
GREENfest
Good — and green — vibes are in store this weekend at the seventh annual GREENfest. The free Earth Day event runs from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday on the lawn at Downtown Summerlin, with more than 150 exhibitors offering information on eco-friendly vehicles, construction and energy, along with arts and crafts displays, conservation exhibits, live entertainment and a kids’ zone. For details, visit www.downtownsummerlin.com.
‘Talk Radio’
“Talk Radio” made its off-Broadway debut in 1987, but Eric Bogosian’s Pulitzer Prize-nominated drama remains as timely as ever, as radio shock jock Barry Champlain interacts with racists, addicts and other assorted “nut jobs” calling into his show. Poor Richard’s Players stages “Talk Radio” at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday at the Fern Adair Conservatory, 3265 E. Patrick Lane; additional performances are 8 p.m. April 29-30 and 2 p.m. May 1. For tickets ($20), visit www.poorrichardsplayers.com.

