‘Dear Evan Hansen’ Waves Goodbye To Broadway With Sell-Out Week; Broadway’s 24 Productions Gross $25M

A slate of four new productions and renewed interest in a couple of old ones pushed Broadway box office up by 20% last week, with total receipts for the 24 shows reaching $24,954,517 and attendance climbing 14% to 201,321 for the week ending September 18.

Among the newcomers: Death of a Salesman, 1776, Cost of Living and Tom Stoppard’s Leopoldstadt. Waving goodbye was Dear Evan Hansen and announcing its upcoming departure was The Phantom of the Opera.

First, Hansen. The musical closed Sept. 18, selling out for its final week and grossing a big $1,251,593. A run that began Nov. 14, 2016, ended after having played 1,678 performances.

And while it was too soon to see much of the Phantom hubbub on the week’s chart – the musical announced its Feb. 18 closing just last Friday, bringing an imminent end to 35 years of music of the night – the production saw a noticeable uptick in receipts: $964,172, up $96,175 from the previous week. Nearly 90% of the Majestic’s seats were filled, a figure that will no doubt increase as the end nears (the production reportedly sold about $2 million in advance sales in the 24 hours after the closing was announced).

Also likely to see some upward momentum in coming weeks is Funny Girl, which dropped by about half-a-million dollars with star Lea Michele out with Covid last week. Still, the newly buzzy revival grossed $1,136,518 notwithstanding the star’s absence, and filled 84% of seats.

The quartet of new shows weren’t yet up to their full eight-performance schedules last week, but attendance figures might be telling. The Roundabout’s revolutionary revival of the musical 1776 – the entire cast identifies as as female, transgender and/or nonbinary – filled an impressive 91% of seats at the subscription-heavy venue, grossing $182,231 for three previews. Opening night at the American Airlines Theatre is Oct. 6.

Death of a Salesman, the heralded London production starring Wendell Pierce and Sharon D Clarke, had one preview at the Hudson, filling 98% of seats and grossing $93,114. Opening night is Oct. 9.

Leopoldstadt had five previews at the Longacre, selling 76% of its tickets for a $556,493 gross (opening night is Oct. 2).

Cost of Living, Martyna Majok’s 2018 Pulitzer Prize winner playing at the Friedman in a Manhattan Theatre Club production, had six previews, grossed $120,787 and filled nearly 80% of seats. Opening night is Oct. 3.

Season to date, Broadway has grossed $474,777,678, with total attendance of 3,702,991 at about 87% of capacity.

The 24 productions reporting figures on Broadway last week were 1776, Aladdin, Beetlejuice, The Book of Mormon, Chicago, Come From Away, Cost of Living, Dear Evan Hansen, Death of a Salesman, Funny Girl, Hadestown, Hamilton, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, Into the Woods, The Kite Runner, Leopoldstadt, The Lion King, The Music Man, MJ, Moulin Rouge!, The Phantom of the Opera, Six, A Strange Loop and Wicked.

All figures courtesy of the Broadway League.

Pop Culture

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

‘DDWTD’ Deon Derrico Confirms Filming For New Season
US v. Google redux: all the news from the ad tech trial
Pop News Grab Bag: Sabrina Carpenter, Beyoncé, and Gracie Abrams
Watch TV on the Radio Perform “Staring at the Sun” on Fallon
Kendrick Lamar Releases New Album GNX: Listen and Read the Full Credits