Siegfried & Roy Musical Staged by Ex-Attorney Who Sued Roy and Lost

  • Former attorney Mike Meier has transformed his failed 2013 sexual harassment lawsuit against Roy Horn (of Siegfried & Roy) into a satirical musical comedy
  • Shangri-La-La serves as a “revenge musical” detailing Meier’s allegation of Las Vegas judicial bias while exploring themes of celebrity power, immigrant ambition, and showbiz delusion
  • An abbreviated version of the show is scheduled to tour multiple theater festivals this summer and fall

He lost in a Las Vegas courtroom, but former attorney Mike Meier is taking his case against Siegfried & Roy’s Roy Horn—and the Las Vegas justice system—to the stage.

In 2013, Meier sued Horn on behalf of a client and suffered a crushing defeat. But living that legal drama gave him the raw material for one of the most bizarre left turns in theatrical (and legal) history: a musical comedy he’s written and directed called Shangri-La-La.

Siegfried & Roy pose in front of the Mirage in 1993. In addition to Wild Things, the upcoming Apple TV miniseries starring Jude Law and Andrew Garfield, there’s another new show about the famous magic duo. (Image: Alain Benainous/Gamma-Rapho via Getty) (Image: Alain Benainous/Gamma-Rapho via Getty)

Lawsuit: the Musical

Meier represented Oliver Preiss, Roy Horn’s former personal assistant, in 2013’s Preiss v. Horn. Preiss alleged that he was fired after rebuffing Horn’s sexual advances. Several other former employees also became involved in the litigation.

Mike Meier says he has rededicated his career to the stage. (Image: Mike Meier)

Preiss claimed there was video evidence supporting his allegations. The footage was captured by surveillance cameras that Horn had allegedly ordered Preiss to install because cash hidden around Horn’s Las Vegas mansion was being stolen.

“The videos did capture the thief, one of the caretakers, but more importantly, they showed what we believed was sexual misconduct involving the caretakers — groping, grabbing, demands for sexual favors, things like that,” Meier told onlineslot.cc. “A fellow attorney told me at the time, ‘Mike, a trained monkey could win this case.’ That’s what I thought, too, but not for long.”

Meier says he came to believe the system was biased to protect Las Vegas’ brightest stars. For instance, the judge presiding over the state court proceedings — which addressed the alleged torts of assault, battery, and negligent infliction of emotional distress — collected the video evidence and, according to Meier, turned it over to Horn.

“It was a little curious why the judge should collect the evidence and then turn it over to the defendants,” he told us, indicating that he didn’t think to make his own copies.

That judge was Carolyn Ellsworth of the Eighth Judicial District Court, who had previously served as chief in-house litigation counsel for Mirage Resorts and had appeared in at least one prior matter connected to Siegfried & Roy: Taube v. Mirage Casino-Hotel.

“I didn’t know that at the time,” Meier said. “I had to laugh at everything — most of all, myself. What a babe in the woods. I had no idea what I was getting into.”

In a related case in federal court, U.S. District Judge Roger Hunt imposed $37,415 in attorneys’ fees against Meier and his co-counsel under 28 U.S.C. § 1927, which permits sanctions when attorneys are found to have unreasonably and vexatiously multiplied proceedings. The judge also referenced contact with the National Enquirer after a $500,000 settlement demand was rejected.

In late 2016, Meier’s law license was suspended for 30 days in Virginia, and New York disciplinary authorities issued a public censure.

‘Hometown Justice’

Complaints about “hometown justice” in Las Vegas are nothing new. A snapshot of the system’s alleged improprieties was famously presented in a three-part 2006 L.A. Times investigation by reporter William Rempel titled “In Las Vegas, They’re Playing with a Stacked Judicial Deck.”

But none of those complaints had ever been set to music — until now.

Actors playing Siegfried, Roy, and their beloved tigers star in a new musical written by Roy’s former opposing counsel. (Image: Mike Meier)

“I’ve been playing music all my life,” Meier said. “I’m largely self-taught because my mother didn’t have money to pay for music lessons. But I’ve always performed. I played in rock bands when I was young, and to this day I still play flamenco and Latin guitar music in Spanish restaurants.”

For Meier, Shangri-La-La became an act of defiance, a comic exorcism, and a way of transforming a legal defeat into something theatrical.

“I had spent years practicing law, and I thought I could trust the legal system,” Meier said. “So, it was time to reconsider. I started piano lessons, and that’s what ultimately led to this musical. I composed the music on the piano.”

Shangri-La-La follows Joshua, a wide-eyed German idealist who arrives in Las Vegas expecting sequins and the good life, only to end up assisting two retired illusionists and stumbling into a funhouse maze of showbiz delusion, power games, and judicial sleight of hand.

And in the most deliciously meta twist, Meier plays Joshua’s lawyer in the full-length version of the show — meaning he gets to finally win the case.

“One of the singers for the studio recording said, ‘Mike, you invented a new genre — the revenge musical,’ so maybe that’s what it is,” Meier said. “But the lawsuit is really just the doorway into something bigger: Vegas, immigrant ambition, magic, celebrity, tigers, reinvention, and the American dream going slightly off the rails.”

The abbreviated one-hour festival version of Shangri-La-La focuses on the rise of Siegfried & Roy. It can be seen at the following upcoming theater festivals:

Harrisburg Fringe Festival: July 19, 2026
Midtown International Theatre Festival, NYC: July 25-26, 2026
Rogue Theater Festival, Digital/Online: July 2026
Philadelphia Fringe Festival: Sept. 27, 2026

Corey Levitan
Corey Levitan

Corey Levitan joined onlineslot.cc in 2022 after a long career covering Las Vegas. He currently covers entertainment, dining and gaming news in Las Vegas.

Corey spent six years covering the Vegas Strip for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, where he also wrote the most popular humor column in the city’s history. (For “Fear and Loafing,” he tried out 176 Vegas jobs, including poker player, blackjack dealer and Follie Bergere dancer.)

Corey has won more than 100 local, state and national awards for his journalism, which has also appeared in Rolling Stone, New York Magazine and the New York Post.

Corey is a New York native whose hobbies include playing guitar, trying to be a better husband, and arguing with strangers on Facebook.

Contact Corey at [email protected].


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Conversation (13 comments)


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  • K
    Kenneth
    July 1, 2026
    Attorney who sued Roy and Lost. Mike Meier makes exploitative cash-grab targeting deceased icons. Did anyone tell him low budget theater isn’t exactly going to…
    Attorney who sued Roy and Lost. Mike Meier makes exploitative cash-grab targeting deceased icons. Did anyone tell him low budget theater isn’t exactly going to help him fix his financial situation?

    Reply

  • MF
    Marlon F.
    July 1, 2026
    This isn’t an organic discussion, it’s a transparent, embarrassing attempt by Mike Meier to control the narrative before anyone has even seen a single scene.…
    This isn’t an organic discussion, it’s a transparent, embarrassing attempt by Mike Meier to control the narrative before anyone has even seen a single scene. Imagine throwing a temper tantrum so massive after a crushing court defeat that you spend over a decade writing a “revenge musical” about it just so you can play your own lawyer and finally win a fake version of the case. Desperate people do desperate things. “We are living in a democracy and many different voices make our world better.” Let me make your world better Mike, move on. Running fake profiles to praise your own unreleased show is incredibly sad. Mike Meier, you are a loser.

    Reply

  • M
    Marlon
    July 1, 2026
    Loser tries to lose again

    Reply

  • J
    John
    July 1, 2026
    Are you

    Reply

  • RO
    Randy O.
    July 1, 2026
    Troll Mike Meier

    Reply

  • S
    Steve
    July 1, 2026
    Mike Meier, running matching profiles to praise your own unreleased show is highly visible. It’s a musical highlighting your own courtroom embarrassments. Don’t quit your…
    Mike Meier, running matching profiles to praise your own unreleased show is highly visible. It’s a musical highlighting your own courtroom embarrassments. Don’t quit your day job.

    Reply

  • KO
    Kenny O.
    July 1, 2026
    Running anonymous profiles to applaud your own unreleased production is deeply humiliating. Accept reality and move on.

    Reply

  • JM
    John M.
    July 1, 2026
    The PR team trying to spin this as “art’ in these comments must have skipped the middle of the article. This isn’t a quirky artistic…
    The PR team trying to spin this as “art’ in these comments must have skipped the middle of the article. This isn’t a quirky artistic misunderstanding; the federal judge literally hit Mike Meier with over $37,000 in sanctions for “vexatiously multiplying proceedings’ and trying to weaponize the National Enquirer. His law license was literally suspended right after. Turning a court-punished extortion attempt into a “satirical musical comedy” isn’t high art, it’s a temper tantrum by a sanctioned ex-lawyer who can’t accept that he lost. No amount of fake accounts calling it a ‘spectacle’ changes his actual disciplinary record.

    Read up on Mike Meier: https://www.techdirt.com/2014/08/26/copyright-trolling-lawyer-abusing-dmca-to-try-to-silence-critics/


    Reply

  • BG
    Bernard G.
    July 1, 2026
    https://i.imgur.com/nzI5ZXp.jpeg

    Reply

  • PF
    Paul A. F.
    July 1, 2026
    People still have strong feelings about S&R, one way or another and someone gets to tell their story. Great stuff for a theatre stage. I…
    People still have strong feelings about S&R, one way or another and someone gets to tell their story. Great stuff for a theatre stage. I see it as art and judge the spectacle by it’s artistic merits.

    Reply

  • KS
    Kyoko S
    July 1, 2026
    We are living in a democracy and many different voices make our world better. Whatever one thinks of the old court case, ShangriLaLa sounds like…
    We are living in a democracy and many different voices make our world better. Whatever one thinks of the old court case, ShangriLaLa sounds like a creative, satirical and entertaining way of revisiting a strange piece of Las Vegas show business history.
    Theater often turns conflict, disappointment, ego, and mythology into comedy. That is what makes art. I’m glad the show is getting attention and hope audiences judge it for themselves.


    Reply

  • H
    Harvey
    June 30, 2026
    Mike Meier built his career career on attempted extortion. He started as a defense lawyer helping everyday people who were targeted by pornography scams.…
    Mike Meier built his career career on attempted extortion. He started as a defense lawyer helping everyday people who were targeted by pornography scams. These scammers secretly uploaded pornography to trap people and then extorted them for cash. Then, noticing a more lucrative opportunity, he joined the extortion. He realized how profitable the business was. He started his own company, the Copyright Law Group, and switched to tracking down internet users who downloaded pornography. He then used the threat of public embarrassment to extort thousands of dollars from them through automated legal threats. He went on to team up with Oliver Preiss. Oliver is so proud to be a plaintiff he wrote the first comment here! Fake physical therapist, who preyed upon 2 well respected older gentlemen. He then secretly recorded them, threatened to exploit, attempted to blackmail, tried to extort, stole, sought financial gain…and then tried to sue for money. What kind of grown man can be harassed by a paralyzed 80 year old in a wheelchair. Traumatized people do not write musical comedies about their “abuse”.

    Reply

  • O
    Oliver
    June 30, 2026
    I am one of the plaintiffs, and believe me, the musical is only the beginning. I truly hope it will finally bring the real story…
    I am one of the plaintiffs, and believe me, the musical is only the beginning. I truly hope it will finally bring the real story to light and reveal the truth about the unjust ruling that was made by the judge in Las Vegas. Sadly, Siegfried and Roy have both passed away and are no longer here to witness it.

    Reply

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