Motown hits in a small Vegas showroom. All Motown – Motown Magic in Vegas brings classic singers and crowd energy together in the Pegasus Showroom at Alexis Park, led by Ms. Tonja Jones with the Duchesses of Motown. I love the high-precision vocals that feel true to the originals, and I also love the way the show pulls you in for sing-alongs and dancing. One watch-out: it’s off the main Strip, so plan extra time to get there, especially at show start.
I also like the value for the price—at about $44.95 per person, you’re getting a full night’s worth of Motown in roughly an hour and a quarter. You’ll avoid the slow part (ticket lines) by prebooking with a mobile ticket, and you can choose the seating style that fits how you like to watch.
This is a family-friendly night out that works for kids and adults, and the vibe is more “you’ll be singing” than “dressing for a gala.” If you’re expecting big-casino pageantry and nonstop glitz, you might feel the difference in a smaller venue setting.
In This Review
- Key things I’d plan around
- All Motown in Las Vegas: What the Show Really Delivers
- Pegasus Showroom at Alexis Park: Getting There Without Stress
- Price and Seating Value at About $44.95
- The Motown Set: From Supremes to Jackson 5
- Meet the Duchesses of Motown: Ms. Tonja Jones and the Cast
- A Family-Friendly Vegas Night That Doesn’t Feel Kids-Only
- Drinks, Restrooms, and the House Rules
- Should You Book All Motown? My Take
Key things I’d plan around
- Ms. Tonja Jones and the Duchesses of Motown lead the show with serious stage presence
- 75 minutes of classic Motown spanning Martha and the Vandellas, The Supremes, Jackson 5, and more
- Prebook for faster entry with a mobile ticket
- Choose your view with table seating in the center section or general admission along the sides
- A show built for interaction—expect audience participation and easy sing-alongs
- Small, off-Strip location at the Alexis Park Pegasus Showroom, so give yourself travel time
All Motown in Las Vegas: What the Show Really Delivers

All Motown is built around one job: get you hearing the songs you know, performed live with real personality. Instead of a long lecture or a slideshow, you’re getting a focused tribute that moves quickly and keeps the energy up. The cast is made to sell the Motown sound—tight harmonies, strong lead lines, and the kind of rhythm that makes sitting still feel optional.
The biggest win is how the performances feel like an event, not a background attraction. You’ll get live renditions of classic Motown tunes tied to artists like Martha and the Vandellas, The Supremes, the Jackson 5, and more. The show also includes male-group material (think Temptations-style vibes and Jackson 5 hits), which helps if you don’t just want the female-artist era.
I also like that the show aims for participation. The performances are lively enough that the audience usually ends up involved—dancing in the aisle and singing along when the chorus hits. If you want a Vegas night that’s fun without being complicated, this style fits well.
One more practical point: the venue is a showroom, not a giant arena. That can be a positive. Close seating makes the show feel personal, but it also means there’s less “wow” from sheer scale.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Las Vegas.
Pegasus Showroom at Alexis Park: Getting There Without Stress

The show happens in the Pegasus Showroom inside the Alexis Park Resort Hotel, which is just minutes from many Las Vegas Strip hotels. Still, a key detail: the venue sits back from the Strip, so it won’t feel like it’s right outside your front door. I’d treat it like an easy local outing, not a “walk over between meals” plan.
Start time is 8:00 pm, and this matters because late arrival can mean missing the opening momentum. Plan to arrive with buffer time to claim your mobile tickets and get settled. If you’re taking a taxi or rideshare, factor in traffic near the Strip; if you’re using public transportation, give yourself extra time to connect and walk the final stretch.
A nice tip you should know up front: bring a photo ID to claim your tickets upon arrival at Alexis Park. Restrooms are located just outside the showroom, so you don’t have to guess where to go once you’re inside. Also, there’s no hotel pick-up or drop-off included, so you’ll be responsible for getting there on your own.
There’s also an easy baseline for getting in: service animals are allowed, and the experience is stated as suitable for most travelers. The rules are straightforward, so the main “logistics burden” is just making it to the right hotel and getting seated by showtime.
Price and Seating Value at About $44.95

At $44.95 per person, All Motown is priced for people who want a real show without blowing the budget. The ticket price includes the show tickets plus all fees and taxes, which makes it simpler than experiences where fees quietly add up. What’s not included is beverages, which are available for purchase at the bar during the show.
The other part of value is choice. You can select different seating categories during booking, and the difference matters for comfort and view. The show uses two main approaches:
- Table seating in the center section
- General admission seating along either side of the venue
If you like a stable “we’re here to watch” setup, table seating is usually the better match. It puts you in the middle where the action likely feels evenly distributed. If you’re more flexible and don’t mind being on the side, general admission can work well—especially if you’re okay with the room being more social and active.
One thing to keep in mind: because the venue is smaller, your view is more dependent on where you sit. So it’s worth thinking about how you like to watch. If you plan to sing along and dance, side seating can still be fun. If you want the cleanest line to the main performers, central table seating is the safer bet.
The Motown Set: From Supremes to Jackson 5

This show is built around classic hits from multiple Motown eras. You can expect a mix that covers big female-fronted groups and also includes male-group songs. The show specifically highlights tunes connected to artists such as:
- Martha and the Vandellas
- The Supremes
- Mary Wells
- Gladys Knight
- The Marvelettes
- The Temptations
- The Jackson 5
The practical takeaway for you: you’re not choosing between “female Motown only” and “male Motown only.” It’s meant to satisfy the full Motown playlist crowd, including people who grew up on both kinds of songs.
You should also know that tribute shows sometimes share a few common standards. In this case, it’s possible you’ll hear a few of the same big-name numbers across similar Motown performances, but the arrangements are designed to be different. So if you love one specific style of presentation, don’t assume you’ll hear an identical version—treat it like a distinct show rather than a copy.
What makes the set work is momentum. The cast doesn’t stall. When the choruses land, you’ll feel the audience respond, and that’s where the night turns from listening into participating. If your idea of a good show is hearing the songs you know, fast and well performed, this set fits that goal.
Meet the Duchesses of Motown: Ms. Tonja Jones and the Cast
The heart of All Motown is the cast. The Duchesses of Motown have been performing on the Las Vegas Strip for many years, and this show puts them center stage. Led by Ms. Tonja Jones, the performance leans hard into polished vocal harmonies and confident staging.
I’m a big believer in lead performers who can carry both the emotion and the rhythm of Motown. Here, the leads are clearly comfortable with live show dynamics—keeping energy up, hitting harmonies cleanly, and moving the show forward without losing the connection to the music. The costumes help, too. They’re part of the “time travel” vibe people come for: a visual reminder of the Motown era while you’re hearing those same melodies come back to life.
You’ll also hear an intro from the host figure associated with the production—Jordan is specifically called out as part of the onstage energy in the show experience. That matters more than you might think. A good host keeps the pacing smooth, sets expectations, and helps the room feel like one group instead of strangers sitting apart.
And the audience interaction is a real feature, not just a side note. When the cast invites participation, it tends to be the kind you can join without feeling awkward—singing along, clapping on cue, and getting up if you want. It’s the right level of interactive for a fun family outing.
A Family-Friendly Vegas Night That Doesn’t Feel Kids-Only
All Motown is marketed as perfect for all ages, and it shows. This isn’t a dark, late-night club style show. It’s a classic music tribute with a high-energy performance style that works for kids who recognize songs and for adults who want to relive the Motown era.
If you’re bringing children, the biggest practical advantage is that the show’s structure is easy to follow. It moves through recognizable hits, and the energy stays up. You won’t need a lot of cultural context to enjoy it—once the chorus hits, even first-time listeners can join in.
The one caution I’d give families is simple: arrive on time and plan for comfort. Small venues mean you may feel closer to the crowd. If your kids get restless, pick seating that gives you the most stable experience. Table seating can be helpful if you want to keep things contained and comfortable.
The dress guidance is also part of making it smooth for families. You need appropriate attire—no swimwear and no cut-off shorts. This keeps the room comfortable for everyone and helps the show stay in that “night out” category instead of anything too casual.
Drinks, Restrooms, and the House Rules

Yes, drinks are available during the show for purchase at the bar. If you want a beer or a cocktail, plan on grabbing it before you settle, or at least be ready for the pause of bar lines. The drinks aren’t included, so budget for it if you like to have something in hand during performances.
Restrooms are located just outside the showroom. That’s helpful because it means you can step out without crossing the whole venue and searching around. Still, do yourself a favor: go before the show starts if you can. Motown doesn’t slow down, and you don’t want to miss big songs because you timed a bathroom break poorly.
The dress rule is straightforward, and I’d follow it even if you’re just wearing a comfortable casual outfit. The show requests no swimwear and no cut-off shorts. That’s it—no complicated theme costume requirements.
Finally, have your photo ID ready. You don’t need to overthink it, but it’s a real step at Alexis Park when you claim tickets.
Should You Book All Motown? My Take
Book this if you want a fun, classic Vegas night with live Motown hits, strong vocal performances, and an interactive crowd vibe. The combination of reasonable pricing, a focused 75-minute show length, and flexible seating options makes it a good choice for couples and families. If you love the music of Martha and the Vandellas, The Supremes, and the Jackson 5, you’ll likely feel at home fast.
You might skip if you’re chasing high-budget casino production value—big screens, huge spectacle, and flashy stage sets in the arena sense. This is a showroom experience, so the payoff is in the voices, the songs, and the closeness, not in massive production scale. Also, because it’s off the main Strip, plan your transport so you’re not rushing in mid-show.
If you want a Motown fix that’s straightforward, affordable, and genuinely energetic, I’d put All Motown at Alexis Park high on your Vegas list.
























