My daughter Angie was 5 years old when I took her to see Disneyâs âThe Lion Kingâ at Tucson Music Hall (now Linda Ronstadt Music Hall).
We spent a few extra bucks for seats that were near the aisle where the phalanx of elephants, birds, giraffes and antelopes paraded to the stage. I remember Angieâs eyes getting wide with wonder when she heard that clarion call from the stage opening the glorious Elton John/Tim Rice anthem âCircle of Lifeâ and seeing those characters so close she could almost touch them.
Eighteen years later, Angie can still recall that scene. Live entertainment and art has that affect on people. You will likely forget the movie you saw last week, but if your friends ask you about the band you saw a month ago, you will gush about the songs they sang, the audienceâs reaction and the way it made you feel days and weeks later.
When it comes to gift-giving, giving the gift of live entertainment will create memories that will far outlast any toy, digital device or sweater on your wish list.
âLive entertainment is a memory that will last a lifetime, better than anything material that youâll use or even give away,â said Broadway In Tucson General Manager Mario Di Vetta, who has been involved in Tucsonâs performing arts scene since he joined the former UAPresents as a stagehand when he was a University of Arizona freshman in 2001.
Di Vetta first got interested in live theater when his parents took him to see âPhantom of the Operaâ when he was 9 or 10.
âI just remember being enthralled with the stagecraft,â recalled Di Vetta, who has been Broadway In Tucsonâs general manager since late 2021 after long-term marketing stints with the Broadway presenter and UAPresents, which is now Arizona Arts Live.
Di Vetta is now passing his love of live theater and live entertainment down to his and wife Gabrielaâs son Mario and daughter Madison. The couple take the kids to many of the Broadway In Tucson shows, including Disneyâs âAladdinâ in September, the annual Disney On Ice show at Tucson Arena, pop and country concerts, as well as Arizona Arts Live performances like the Parsons Dance Company show they saw in November.
âMy 9-year-old and 5-year-old were captivated the entire time,â said Di Vetta, 40. âMadison was actually mimicking the choreography from her seat.â
Mario and Gabriela Di Vetta took their kids Mario, 9, and Madison, 5, to see Broadway In Tucsonâs run of âBlueyâs Big Playâ at Centennial Hall last January. Mario Di Vetta is general manager of the Broadway presenter and takes his kids to a lot of musicals and concerts.
âGoing to live theater as a family means dressing up, going out to dinner, getting excited about something that no one else will get to experience for that one singular live performance ... because every live performance is unique and different, and then sharing the memory together forever,â he said.
The Di Vettas are heading to Las Vegas later this month to see country singer Carrie Underwood and will be in Centennial Hall next spring for âShrek, the Musical,â which Broadway In Tucson is bringing in for one night only on March 7. Tickets go on sale Dec. 8, through broadwayintucson.com.
Here are some other performances coming up that weâve added to our holiday wish list.
Just for kids
Nickelodeonâs âPaw Patrol Live: Heroes Uniteâ is at the Linda Ronstadt Music Hall, 260 S. Church Ave., Jan. 26-28; tickets start at $25 through ticketmaster.com.
Cirque du Soleilâs âCrystalâ will combine skating and acrobatic feats on the ice and in the air at Tucson Arena, 260 S. Church Ave., from Feb. 29-March 3. Tickets start at $45 through ticketmaster.com.
Broadway In Tucson is bringing âShrek: The Musicalâ to Centennial Hall, 1020 E. University Blvd. on the University of Arizona campus, for one show only on March 7; tickets go on sale Friday, Dec. 8, through broadwayintucson.com.
Young audiences get to sing and dance along with âBlippi: The Wonderful World Tour,â which comes to Tucson May 8.
âBlippi: The Wonderful World Tourâ pulls into Fox Tucson Theatre, 17 W. Congress St., on May 8 with Blippi and Meekah dancing, singing and learning their way around every city they visit. This is a kiddosâ dance party, where the audience is encouraged to sing and dance along. Tickets are $20-$60 through foxtucson.com.
Tucson Symphony Orchestra performs the live soundtrack to âHarry Potter and the Sorcererâs Stoneâ in its second cineconcert of the season. This one is at Centennial Hall on May 17; tickets are $54-$125 through tucsonsymphony.org.
The musical comedy âMrs. Doubtfireâ is at Centennial Hall May 28-June 2; tickets are $30-$140 through broadwayintucson.com.
For those who want to rock
There are several concerts weâd love to see, including:
Black Violin, from left, Will B and Kev Marcus, return to the Rialto Theatre on Jan. 26. We are their first show of 2024.
If you havenât seen Black Violin in its previous Tucson shows over the past several years, you should plan to see them when they return to Rialto Theatre, 318 E. Congress St., on Jan. 26; tickets are $40.50-$69 through rialtotheatre.com.
Country legend Clint Black will be at the Linda Ronstadt Music Hall with his wife, Lisa Hartman Black, and daughter Lily Pearl Black on Feb. 8. Tickets start at $33 through ticketmaster.com.
Bass-driven electronica DJ Excision brings âNexus,â his most ambitious stage show to date, to Tucson Arena on Feb. 18; tickets are $47-$87 through ticketmaster.com.
Multi-instrumentalist Brian Culbertsonâs âThe Trilogy Tourâ stops at Rialto Theatre on Feb. 23; tickets are $39.50-$54.50 through rialtotheatre.com.
Willie Nelson's son Lukas Nelson, center, is bringing his Promise of the Real (aka POTR) band to Rialto Theatre on March 11.Â
If you love Willie Nelson, youâre going to really love his son Lukas Nelson and his band Promise of the Real when they play the Rialto on March 11; tickets are $29.50-$49.50 through rialtotheatre.com.
The 1970s-â80s pop band Toto (âAfrica,â âHold the Lineâ) will take some of us back to high school and/or college when they take the Rialto Theatre stage on March 19; there are only a few tickets left starting at $57 through rialtotheatre.com.
Country superstar Lainey Wilson headlines Country Thunder 2024 in Florence on April 11, the first of the four-day festival that runs through April 14. Other headliners include Eric Church, Jelly Roll and Texas outlaw country singer Koe Wetzel. Four-day passes start at $300 through countrythunder.com/az.
For the jazz lover
The 10th annual HSL Properties Tucson Jazz Festival Jan. 12-20 is bringing in 10-time Grammy-winning trumpeter Arturo Sandoval to kick things off at the Rialto Theatre on Jan. 12. The Havana, Cuba-born Sandoval, whose mentor and greatest influence was the American jazz legend Dizzy Gillespie, is largely regarded as one of the worldâs greatest jazz trumpet and flugelhorn players. Tickets are $42-$85 through tucsonjazzfestival.org.
Calexicoâs John Convertino, left, and Joey Burns will join the Tucson Symphony Orchestra for a Tucson Jazz Festival concert on Jan. 13.Â
Tucsonâs own Calexico makes its debut with the Tucson Symphony Orchestra on Jan. 13 â the 95th anniversary of the orchestraâs very first concert. This is a makeup concert from the show in 2012 that Joey Burns and John Convertino were supposed to do with the orchestra but had to cancel. There are not a whole lot of tickets left for their show at Linda Ronstadt Music Hall, so donât delay; $29-$89 through tucsonsymphony.org.
Arizona Arts Live and the Tucson Desert Song Festival are presenting CÊcile McLorin Salvant in concert as part of the 2023 HSL Properties Tucson Jazz Festival on Jan. 19.
Other jazz fest gift ideas include a concert with award-winning jazz vocalist CÊcile McLorin Salvant on Jan. 19 at Centennial Hall thatâs presented by Arizona Arts Live and the Tucson Desert Song Festival; the Blue Note Quintet celebrating Blue Note Recordsâ 85th anniversary on Jan. 20 at Fox Tucson Theatre; and Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue at the Fox on Jan. 20. Get more info at tucsonjazzfestival.org.
For the classical music lover
The 12th annual Tucson Desert Song Festival Jan. 14-Feb. 15 and March 2-April 9 is bringing to Tucson stages eight vocalists that weâve never heard before and reuniting us with several who have become familiar faces and voices. Check out the festivalâs website at tucsondesertsongfestival.org for a complete lineup and schedule, but we think weâd love to see True Concord Voices & Orchestraâs âMozart & Hagen: Two Important Encoresâ Jan. 26-28; the Feb. 15 world premiere of âQuiet Poems,â which the song festival commissioned from Peruvian composer Jimmy LÃŗpez Bellido for renowned tenor Michael Fabiano; and Tucson Symphony Orchestraâs Verdiâs Requiem with the TSO Chorus and soloists including the return of bass Morris Robinson and soprano Katie Van Kooten.
Soprano Nicole Cabell returns for the 2024 Tucson Desert Song Festival with True Concord Voices & Orchestra.
True Concord also is hosting the return of soprano Nicole Cabell in her third consecutive song festival. She will join the professional choir and orchestra for Poulencâs âGloriaâ April 5-7. The program also includes Bernsteinâs âChichester Psalmsâ and selections from Bernsteinâs âCandide.â
Links to ticketing sites are available through tucsondesertsongfestival.org.
Tucson Symphony Orchestra conductor JosÊ Luis Gomez will lead the orchestra in several concerts that are on our holiday wish list.Â
If you waited to get tickets to see cello great Yo-Yo Ma with the Tucson Symphony Orchestra on May 9, youâre too late. TSO officials said the concert sold out within an hour of tickets going on sale months ago. But thereâs a few TSO concerts on our wish list, including â100 Years of Gershwinâs âRhapsody In Blueââ ($14-$90) with Tucson vocalist Crystal Stark and pianist Stewart Goodyear on Feb. 24-25 and âSheâs Got Soulâ on March 16-17 ($12-$65) with blues/R&B vocalist Capathia Jenkins performing some of the biggest hits from Anita Baker, Toni Braxton, Chaka Khan & Rufus, Earth, Wind & Fire and Adele. Tickets are available through tucsonsymphony.org.
For a good laugh
We have a few comedy shows that are solidly on our radar, including:
Comedian/podcast host Anthony Jeselnikâs âBones and Allâ tour stops at Desert Diamond Casino, 1100 W. Pima Mine Road, on Feb. 3; tickets are $40-$65 through ddcaz.com.
Fortune Feimsterâs âLive Laugh Love!â tour pulls into Rialto Theatre on Feb. 29; tickets are $35-$165 through rialtotheatre.com.
Brad Upton is at the Rialto on March 10; tickets are $27.50-$44 through rialtotheatre.com.
New Orleans comedian and podcast host Steve Hofstetter is at 191 Toole, 191 E. Toole Ave., on April 2; tickets are $20-$145 through rialtotheatre.com.
Ali Wong returns for a March 2 show at Linda Ronstadt Music Hall; tickets are $47-$97 through ticketmaster.com.
Emmy-nominated âSNLâ writer Nimesh Patel brings his âFast & Looseâ tour to the Fox.
Nimesh Patel brings his âFast & Looseâ tour to Fox Tucson Theatre on Jan. 12; tickets are $39.50 through foxtucson.com.
Brad Williams with J.B. Ball is doing two shows on Feb. 4 at the Fox; tickets are $29.50-$39.50 through foxtucson.com.
Comedian Kathy Griffin hasn't been to Tucson for several years.Â
Itâs been years since Kathy Griffin has stood on a Tucson stage. She brings âMy Life on the PTSD-Listâ to Fox Tucson Theatre April 3; tickets are $37.50-$97.50 through foxtucson.com.
Comedian Wanda Sykes brings her "Please & Thank You" tour to Fox Tucson Theatre on June 2.
Funnywoman Wanda Sykes brings her âPlease & Thank Youâ tour to the Fox on June 2; tickets are $65-$85 through foxtucson.com.
For the theater lover
Invisible Theatre is hosting Ingrid Griffith's one-woman show "Unbossed & Unbowed" that retraces trailblazer Shirley Anita Chisholm's life and times.
Arizona Theatre Company from Jan. 20-Feb. 10 is mounting Lynn Nottageâs 2003 play âIntimate Apparel,â which found new life in 2022 after Nottage teamed up with composer Ricky Ian Gordon to create a chamber opera version. Gordon and the operaâs star Justin Austin were part of the 2023 Tucson Desert Song Festival last February. Tickets are $25-$75 through atc.org.
Invisible Theatre does a lot of innovative things on its stage and on Jan. 20-21, itâs hosting the Tucson run of Ingrid Griffithâs one-woman show âUnbossed & Unbowed,â inspired by the life of trailblazer Shirley Anita Chisholm, the first African-American woman to be elected to Congress. The performance will be at the Berger Center for the Performing Arts, 1200 W. Speedway; tickets are $45 through invisibletheatre.com.
The University of Arizonaâs Arizona Repertory Theatre will reopen the Marroney Theatre on Feb. 25 with its winter musical âSweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.â The Stephen Sondheim/Hugh Wheeler musical thriller runs Feb. 25-March 17; tickets are $24, $15 for students with ID through theatre.arizona.edu. The Marroney has been closed since last November when work began on an $8.5 million renovation and expansion project that was part of the Arizona Arts Master Plan approved in March 2020.
Arizona Opera is bringing one of the greatest love stories of all time to Linda Ronstadt Music Hall on March 9 and 10. Gounodâs âRomÊo & Julietteâ sets Shakespeareâs tale of star-crossed lovers to Gounodâs romantic and rapturous soundscape that has made this a perennial audience favorite. tickets are $30-$125 through tickets.azopera.org.
Arizona Arts Live brings innovative programs to interesting spaces on the UA campus. From April 17-21, itâs hosting the Dutch collective Urlandâs one-person play âBedtime Storiesâ under the stars of Flandrau Science Center and Planetarium. Tickets are $35, $10 for students with ID through arizonaartslive.com.
Tucson Landmarks: Hotel Congress, 311 E. Congress St., opened in 1919 as a luxurious mainstay for visitors arriving in the Old Pueblo.
The downtown landmark has kept much of its history alive in the past century, while also bringing modern amenities to Tucson natives and tourists.
Video by Riley Brown / For the Arizona Daily Star



