REVIEW · ELVIS & TRIBUTE SHOWS
Sinatra Live! Frank Sinatra Tribute Show in Las Vegas
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Close-up Sinatra tunes in old-Strip style. Sinatra Live! brings Michael Sinatra and a cast of singers into the smaller Alexis Park showrooms, so you’re not watching from far away—you’re right in the action as the music lands hard. It runs about 1 hour 15 minutes, usually starting around 7:00 pm, and it leans into the glam feel people associate with the Strip’s heyday.
I like the song list built around the big essentials: Fly Me to the Moon, Luck Be a Lady, That’s Life, and My Way. You also get a lively evening with audience moments and the kind of casual, close setup that makes it feel more like an actual supper-club night than a distant production.
One thing to keep in mind: the venue setup can be cramped, and a few operational hiccups can happen in a room that’s being used in show mode (think sound/mic or service timing). If you’re the type who needs everything perfectly polished, plan to be a little flexible.
In This Review
- Key things I’d circle before you go
- Sinatra Live! at Alexis Park: old-Strip vibes, close enough to feel it
- Price and value: what $44.95 really buys you
- VIP seats vs. front-row expectations
- Getting there in Las Vegas: Alexis Park, taxis, and ride-share timing
- The Alexis Garden supper-club feel: what the room is like
- What happens during the show: the set you came for
- Audience interaction: fun for many, not for everyone
- Optional dinner and cocktails: plan your budget like a pro
- The performance quality: how the cast effort shows up
- Meet the performers afterward: the best part people don’t plan for
- Who should book Sinatra Live! in Las Vegas
- Should you book Sinatra Live! in Las Vegas?
- FAQ
- What time does the show start?
- How long is the Sinatra Live! tribute show?
- How much are tickets?
- Is dinner or alcohol included in the ticket price?
- Do I get a mobile ticket?
- Is there free cancellation?
Key things I’d circle before you go

- Intimate Alexis Park venue: The show happens in a smaller room, so the experience feels personal.
- Michael Sinatra as the headline voice: Expect the main tribute focus on Frank’s famous catalog.
- Big hits, familiar pacing: You’ll hear the songs most people come for, including My Way and Fly Me to the Moon.
- Optional supper-club upgrades: Table service and dinner are available, but they cost extra.
- Audience interaction: The show includes participation moments, which can be fun—or distracting—depending on your style.
- Meet-and-greet after: Many nights include time to connect with the performers once the music wraps.
Sinatra Live! at Alexis Park: old-Strip vibes, close enough to feel it

If you love Frank Sinatra’s sound, the biggest selling point here is not the name. It’s the setup. Sinatra Live! is staged at Alexis Park, in the Alexis Garden area at The Modern Showrooms (effective November 28, 2025). This matters because the room is intentionally small, so you’re not just hearing the songs—you’re watching expressions, timing, and the little performance beats that can get lost in a large theater.
The show is built around the voice and style associated with Sinatra, with Michael Sinatra doing the main tribute vocals. That’s the heart of the experience: classic songs, performed in-genre, with the right kind of showmanship for people who want a fun night out rather than a history lecture.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Las Vegas
Price and value: what $44.95 really buys you

At $44.95 per person, this is positioned as an evening entertainment ticket, not an all-inclusives package. Your ticket covers the show admission (with seating selected at booking) plus all fees and taxes. That’s a good base price for Las Vegas, especially for something you can do on a weeknight without planning an entire day around it.
The catch is simple: alcohol and dinner are not included. Drinks and a full food menu are available for purchase at the venue, including steak, seafood, and classic pasta options. So your final night cost depends on whether you treat this as:
- a quick “music first” plan (ticket only), or
- a full supper-club hangout (order cocktails and/or dinner).
If you’re trying to keep the budget tight, you’ll still have a complete show experience without spending more. If you want the full vintage vibe, the add-ons can help you lean into the theme.
VIP seats vs. front-row expectations
You can upgrade for a VIP seat or choose a front-row position. That’s not just marketing. In a small room, seat location changes what you notice:
- how clearly you catch words and phrasing,
- how much you feel the energy of audience participation,
- and how “in it” the show feels when performers move around.
If you’re a Sinatra superfan, I’d treat the upgrade like buying better audio in a concert venue—it’s about reducing distance between you and the performance. If you’re mostly there for the vibe and the big hits, standard seating can still work, since the room is designed to keep people close.
Getting there in Las Vegas: Alexis Park, taxis, and ride-share timing

The show starts around 7:00 pm, and that time slot is prime Vegas traffic and surge pricing territory. The most practical advice is to plan your ride with that in mind.
Alexis Park sits in the Strip area, and the venue is near public transportation. In real-world timing, ride-hailing apps can get slow later in the evening. If you find Uber or Lyft is taking forever at around 8:30 pm, a taxi can be faster.
One more practical tip: always double-check the venue details shown with your booking. There have been cases where the directions pointed to the wrong nearby hotel location, leading to extra taxi time and another ride after the venue corrected the show location. You don’t need to panic—just confirm you’re heading to Alexis Park / The Modern Showrooms so your evening starts with music, not detours.
The Alexis Garden supper-club feel: what the room is like

This is one of those nights where the setting shapes your expectation. Sinatra Live! takes place in an intimate show space inside Alexis Park. The vibe is described as a newer Supper Club style setup, and that’s exactly what it feels like: more hangout than massive spectacle.
Because the room is smaller, your seating is likely arranged in close quarters. That’s part of the charm, but it also means:
- sightlines and spacing can feel tight,
- and timing for food or drink service can sometimes lag if tables are close together.
If you’re going with someone you really want to talk to during quieter moments, choose your seat thoughtfully. If you’re focused on the singing and don’t care about personal space, this tight arrangement can actually make the whole night feel more like a private performance.
What happens during the show: the set you came for

The show runs about 1 hour 15 minutes, which is perfect for a Vegas evening. It’s long enough to feel like a real entertainment event, but not so long that you end up trapped in a late-night slog.
You should expect a lineup centered on Sinatra’s best-known catalog, including:
- Luck Be a Lady
- Fly Me to the Moon
- That’s Life
- My Way
The style is tribute-focused, with Michael Sinatra as the main vocalist. The cast can include additional performers, and that can slightly change the texture of the show night to night. For you, the main takeaway is consistency: the core hits are the point, and the energy stays in the Sinatra lane.
Audience interaction: fun for many, not for everyone

This is not a silent-lights-only concert. The show includes audience participation, and the tone is playful rather than strict.
For most people, that’s a win. It adds moments you can laugh about later, and in a small room, interaction feels more direct. If you’d rather avoid being pulled into the spotlight, treat this as an evening theater-style experience, not a traditional concert where everyone stays seated and quiet.
A practical move: go in with the mindset that the show is meant to involve you. That way, even if participation isn’t your favorite part, it won’t ruin the night.
Optional dinner and cocktails: plan your budget like a pro

Dining is entirely optional. You can show up, enjoy the music, and stop there.
If you want to make it a full supper-club night, the venue offers upgrades that may include:
- table service with vintage-era style cocktails, and/or
- a full dinner menu with premium steak cuts, fresh seafood, and classic pastas.
Here’s how to think about it:
- If you order dinner, you should expect service timing to matter, especially in a tight room.
- If you only want drinks, you can keep it simple and focus on the performance.
- If you’re trying to eat before the show, don’t assume the room will act like a standard restaurant schedule. The space is being used for performances, so pacing can be different than a typical dining experience.
My advice: decide what you want this to be—music-only or full dinner evening—before you arrive. That prevents last-minute spending decisions you might regret.
The performance quality: how the cast effort shows up
The strongest praise centers on the feeling that the show sounds and looks like the era—especially when Michael Sinatra is delivering the main numbers. Many people specifically call out how close the vocals feel to what they remember, and that’s the whole reason tribute shows land well: phrasing, confidence, and the emotional rhythm of the songs.
The supporting performers also add texture. On some nights, you may notice a stronger presence from additional singers (including female vocals) during parts of the set. That can be wonderful if you’re open to variety, but if you’re a purist who wants one voice the entire time, you should mentally prepare for the fact that tribute programming can include more than the headline singer.
Either way, the overall goal stays the same: you’re there for Sinatra hits, performed with showmanship and a live-room feel.
Meet the performers afterward: the best part people don’t plan for
One of the most consistently liked parts is what happens after the music stops. Many nights include an opportunity to meet the performers once the show ends.
This is valuable for two reasons:
- It turns the evening into more than a ticketed event. You leave with a personal memory.
- It helps you confirm how the performances translate face-to-face. If you love the voice, you get to see the people behind it.
Just keep your evening flexible after the show. Don’t schedule dinner reservations or a long late-night plan that assumes you’ll be out the door immediately.
Who should book Sinatra Live! in Las Vegas
This show is a strong fit if you:
- love Sinatra music and want the classics in a focused, one-night format,
- prefer intimate seating over big-audience distance,
- want a fun, slightly interactive night that feels like a throwback.
It can be a less ideal choice if you:
- require a perfectly polished, no-hiccup production every time,
- hate small, close seating where service and movement can feel constrained,
- or dislike participation-style entertainment.
If you’re traveling as a couple, it’s built for date-night energy: easy duration, a clear theme, and the kind of after-show meet moment that makes the night feel special without needing a massive production.
Should you book Sinatra Live! in Las Vegas?
Based on what this experience offers, I’d book it if your priority is a classic Sinatra-themed evening with close-up performance and a real show-room feel. The price is reasonable for Las Vegas entertainment, and the music selection hits the songs that most people actually want.
The main “don’t get surprised” points are practical: double-check the venue location details tied to your booking, expect a small-room layout, and remember that drinks and dinner are optional extras you’ll pay for on-site.
If that matches your style, Sinatra Live! is one of those nights where you can leave humming the hits and feeling like you saw something that actually belongs in Las Vegas.
FAQ
What time does the show start?
The start time is listed as 7:00 pm.
How long is the Sinatra Live! tribute show?
The show lasts about 1 hour 15 minutes (approx.).
How much are tickets?
Tickets cost $44.95 per person.
Is dinner or alcohol included in the ticket price?
No. Alcoholic beverages and dinner/cocktails are available to purchase at the venue, but they are not included in the ticket price.
Do I get a mobile ticket?
Yes. The show uses mobile tickets.
Is there free cancellation?
Yes. You can cancel for a full refund if you cancel at least 24 hours before the experience start time.




























