‘Shucked’, ‘Kimberly Akimbo’, ‘Fat Ham’ Could See Sales Boost With Tony Nominations – Broadway Box Office

The Broadway box office report won’t register the impact of this morning’s Tony Award nominations for a week or two, but today’s news certainly comes as welcome and promising signs for Shucked, Kimberly Akimbo, Fat Ham and other well-reviewed productions doing their best to compete against blockbusters like Sweeney Todd and Parade.

Shucked in particular stands to benefit: The comedy opened on Broadway a month ago with no brand recognition, no big-name stars and virtually no advance word beyond the ubiquitous, pun-filled subway posters that raised more questions than they answered.

The musical surprised more than a few Broadway-watchers with strong reviews and, today, nine Tony Award nominations including Best Musical. At the box office, Shucked has been doing okay business, grossing $550,546 last week with 87% of seats at the Nederlander filled, but average ticket prices still at a modest $67.52.

Kimberly Akimbo, which opened to excellent reviews last fall, was at about 89% of capacity last week, grossing $419,928 with an average ticket of $76.35. Eight Tony nominations (and solid odds of some wins) should bolster sales.

Some other recent arrivals pulled eye-popping numbers last week: Prima Facie, the solo play starring Jodie Comer, took in an astounding $986,851, filling 98.43% at the John Golden. Peter Pan Goes Wrong, the very funny British farce that was somehow shut-out from Tony noms, pulled a stellar $988,560, no doubt helped along by guest star Neil Patrick Harris (he’s on board with the show through May 7).

Some other pre-nomination numbers:

  • Good Night, Oscar, starring the nominated Sean Hayes, grossed $640,324 for seven performances last week;
  • Summer, 1976, which earned co-star Jessica Hecht a nomination and extended its run by a week, grossed $374,454 for the non-prof Manhattan Theatre Club, filling 92.37% of seats at the Friedman;
  • Bad Cinderella, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s latest, grossed just $514,980 at 65% of capacity at the Imperial. No Tony nominations today;
  • New York, New York proved more popular with audiences than with critics: The musical at the St. James grossed $943,394, at 96.34% of capacity albeit with a lukewarm $75 average ticket price;
  • The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window, which earned a couple strong nominations, began previews at the James Earl Jones, grossing $512,441 for one performance, still finding its footing with 87% of seats filled.

Grey House, the first Broadway production of the 2023-24 season, began performances at the Lyceum ahead of a May 30 opening; the thriller, starring Laurie Metcalf, sold out its first preview, grossing $96,424.

In all, Broadway’s 35 productions grossed $31,930,896 for the week ending April 30, holding steady from the previous week. Attendance was 271,062, about 88% of total capacity.

Season to date, Broadway has grossed $1,483,238,671, with total attendance of 11,482,958 at 89% of capacity.

All figures courtesy of The Broadway League. For complete box office listings, visit the League’s website.

Pop Culture

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Who Is Tony Stewart’s Wife? Leah Pruett’s Job & Relationship History
The Pains of Being Pure at Heart Announce New Rarities Album Perfect Right Now
What the Election Really Lost – and Won
Voters Rejected Harris' Left-Leaning Platform
Top Pollster Ann Selzer To Retire After Debacle 16-Point Poll Miss