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Posted on: September 24, 2025, 10:58h. 

Last updated on: September 24, 2025, 10:59h.

Terry Fator’s unbroken, 16 ½-year run on the Las Vegas Strip broke on Tuesday night, a little earlier than even he seemed to plan. Only that same morning, producers of the “America’s Got Talent”-winning ventriloquist’s latest show, at the Strat Theater, announced that it would be his last.

Terry Fator appears in November 2024 at the 27th Annual Family Film and TV Awards. (Image: Presley Ann/Getty Images)

“Las Vegas will always be my home, and I’ve loved every moment performing at The Strat for fans from all over the globe,” Fator said in a statement issued by a PR film at 4 a.m. “I can’t wait to bring my characters, comedy, and music to symphony stages, share some brand-new television projects, and expand my touring schedule with an all-new road show.”

The reason for the move was obviously declining revenue. Either that or a sex scandal is always the reason any show or restaurant closes in Las Vegas — as our colleague Vital Vegas often points out.

Adam Steck, who produced “Terry Fator: One Man, a Hundred Voice, a Thousand Laughs” through his SPI Entertainment, did tell the Las Vegas Review-Journal last month that 2025 tickets that attendance across most of his productions – which also include psychic Matt Fraser and “Rouge” at the Strat and “The Australian Bee Gees Show” and Mac King at the Excalibur. — were off 15–20%, owing to the Las Vegas visitation downturn. (Steck also said that “Thunder Down Under,” his long-running Australian male revue also at Excalibur, was holding its own, however.)

“The Strat Theater has always been a tough room,” Mike Weatherford, former entertainment columnist for the R-J, told Casino.org, “and he’s kind of been on a downward trajectory in terms of venue size.

“Still, I was surprised to hear it myself as Fator’s a red-state act so there certainly seems like a large market there.”

Terry Fator performs in March 2010, during the one-year anniversary of his residency at the Mirage. (Image: Denise Truscello/WireImage for Getty Images)

Fator began his long run of 3,500 Las Vegas residency performances at the Mirage in February 2009. Still hot from his “AGT” win two years earlier, he signed a five-year contract to perform in the former Danny Gans Theater. (The impressionist switched to the Encore Theater at the Wynn just three months before he died from an accidental painkiller overdose.)

In 2022, AGT” host Simon Cowell told People magazine “there’s no question” that Terry Fator was “the most successful contestant we’ve ever had.”

“He’s had three Vegas deals … worth about a hundred million.”

Not Fator Away

But what goes up must come down, as they say, and 11 years later, the Mirage was struggling from the pandemic shutdown and seeking to refresh its entertainment lineup. Fator’s contract was not renewed when it ended in December 2020.

After a temporary run at the former Zumanity Theater, Fator headlined at the upper-level Liberty Loft, a New York-New York venue with around 300 seats — less than a quarter the size of his Mirage digs! — from  2021-23.

Fator more than doubled his venue size when he came to the Strat Theater in May 2024, performing a final 200 shows with his wooden cast of characters, including Vikki the Cougar, Winston the Impersonating Turtle and  country singer Walter T. Airdale.

But the production obviously did not earn enough to weather the current economic downturn.

“Whatever happened, it’s pretty impressive that he had a continued presence on the Strip since early 2009,” Weatherford said. “That kind of longevity is usually for the shows with an interchangeable cast, not something that depends on one guy’s voice.

“That said, everything has a shelf life. Beyond the specifics of how big a challenge the room was, and how much had to be spent to advertise it, you may just reach that point where everyone has seen him … twice.”

 



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