OriginalTickets logo
Broadway

National Geographic Live Speaker Series Returns to The Smith Center

The Smith Center for the Performing Arts will host a three-part National Geographic Live speaker series for $99, exploring Pompeii, Antarctic penguins, and nature's soundscapes.

·May 20, 2026·via BroadwayWorld
National Geographic Live Speaker Series Returns to The Smith Center

Broadway + NYC

Broadway

Off-Broadway

Off-Off Broadway

Cabaret

Dance

Opera

Classical Music

Eastern

Central

Western

West End

WEST END

UK Regional

International

Canada

Australia / New Zealand

Europe

Asia

Latin America

Africa / Middle East

Entertainment

TV/Movies

Music

The Las Vegas series will feature Caitie Barrett, Dr. Heather Lynch, and Ben Mirin in a three-show package for $99.

POPULAR

Get all the top news & discounts for LasVegas & beyond.

The Smith Center for the Performing Arts has announced the next installment in its National Geographic Live speaker series – a premium-seat, three-show package for which will go on sale for just $99 on Friday, May 22, 2026.

Get all the top news & discounts for LasVegas & beyond.

The package will be available that morning starting at 10 a.m. at TheSmithCenter.com .

November 11, 2026 at 7:30 p.m. Reynolds Hall

Even thousands of years after its demise, the Roman Empire captivates us, and the ancient city of Pompeii is the place to understand it all. Volcanic ash created an unparalleled glimpse into the lives of ancient people who lived, worked, and played in this coastal city. We go on assignment with archaeologist Caitie Barrett to the latest dig sites to uncover new stories that still lie buried in this special place.

Barrett studies everyday life and cross-cultural interactions in the ancient Mediterranean. She teaches at Cornell University as Associate Professor of Classics. She also co-directs an archaeological excavation at Pompeii: the Casa della Regina Carolina (CRC) Project, which explores the ways that Roman houses shaped their inhabitants' lived experiences. Her areas of specialization include Mediterranean and Egyptian archaeology, household archaeology, the archaeology of religion and ritual, and interactions between Egypt and the Greco-Roman world in antiquity. In addition to her current fieldwork at Pompeii, she has also excavated and surveyed a range of Bronze Age through early modern sites in Egypt, Greece, and the United States.

February 9, 2027 at 7:30 p.m. Reynolds Hall

Antarctica's name alone conjures imagery of the harshest environment on Earth, but the continent is more than its monochromatic color scheme of snow and ice. We go on assignment to the frozen continent with quantitative ecologist and National Geographic Explorer Dr. Heather Lynch. Meet the many species of penguins that waddle and swim through the freezing water, along with an abundance of other life, on a journey to the bottom of the world.

Lynch is a quantitative ecologist, dedicated to understanding the population dynamics of Antarctic wildlife, with a particular focus on Antarctic penguins. She has more than a decade of field experience on the continent. She is an Associate Professor at Stony Brook University with a joint appointment in the Department of Ecology & Evolution and the Institute for Advanced Computational Science. Lynch serves as the principal investigator for a large, multi-institution National Science Foundation award. She received an NSF Career Award for her work on the spatial dynamics of Antarctic penguins and was elected an early career fellow of the Ecological Society of America. Lynch has an A.B. in Physics from Princeton University, an M.A. in Physics from Harvard University and a Ph.D. in organismic and evolutionary biology from Harvard University.

April 21, 2027 at 7:30 p.m. Reynolds Hall

The world is alive with sound, and acoustic biologist and National Geographic Explorer Ben Mirin makes sure we never miss a beat. From the sweet songs of morning birds to the chatter of howling lemurs to the conversation of whales, we'll go on assignment on an auditory adventure. We'll tune in to wildlife symphonies, discover what those voices tell us about our planet, and transform that science into music.

Mirin is the founding director of the Creative Conservation Lab (CCL) in partnership with Cornell University and UNC Chapel Hill. By training, Mirin is an acoustic biologist, storyteller and artist who studies sound in nature and biocultural conservation. He also composes music from his sound recordings and performs live as a “wildlife DJ.” Mirin completed his Ph.D. in 2024 at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, where he studied birdsong and the wildlife trade in Indonesia. Through science, music and media, he combines his passions to engage new audiences in a more inclusive and sustainable future for all life on earth. Mirin is the creator and host of the digital and television series Wild Beats on National Geographic Kids and Nat Geo Wild. He is also a 2016 National Geographic Explorer, Certified Educator and Speaker with National Geographic Expeditions.

Videos

Las Vegas SHOWS

Recommended For You

Sign up for announcements, and exclusive discounts on tickets to your favorite shows!

© 2026 - Copyright Wisdom Digital Media , all rights reserved. Privacy Policy

_Originally reported by [BroadwayWorld](https://www.broadwayworld.com/las-vegas/article/NATIONAL-GEOGRAPHIC-LIVE-Speaker-Series-to-Return-to-The-Smith-Center-20260520)._

Source Attribution

This story is summarized from coverage by BroadwayWorld.

Read full story →

Comments

Sign in to join the conversation.

Loading comments…