NYC | Touring

New York City Shows

(Click on show name for official website)

 
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August: Osage County (play)

When their patriarch vanishes, the Weston clan must return to their three-story home in rural Oklahoma to get to the heart of the matter. With rich insight and brilliant humor, playwright Tracy Letts paints a vivid portrait of a Midwestern family at a turning point.

Recommended for: May be inappropriate for 14 and under. Children under the age of 4 are not permitted in the theatre.

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Avenue Q (musical)

Described as "the place you live when you can't afford to live anyplace else," Avenue Q is set on a street in New York City where people and puppets live as neighbors and deal with some of life's most thorny issues: romance, money, career, rent and other matters unmentionable. Winner: 2004 Tony Award® as Best Musical.

Recommended for: Ages 12 and up.

NOTE: Avenue Q is great for teenagers because it's about real life. It may not be appropriate for younger children because Avenue Q addresses adult issues (see show website for details). It's hard to say what exact age is right to see Avenue Q - parents should use their discretion based on the maturity level of their children. But we promise you this: if you do bring your teenagers to Avenue Q, they'll think you're really cool.

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Boeing-Boeing (play)

In Boeing-Boeing, an architect living in Paris (Bradley Whitford) has been successfully juggling three flight attendant fiancées with his housekeeper (Christine Baranski) reluctantly playing romantic air-traffic controller as they fly in and out of his swank bachelor pad.  But when an old school pal (Mark Rylance) visits, things get rather turbulent.  Schedules change, flights are delayed and chaos ensues in this whirl of mayhem and matchmaking.

Recommended for:TBA

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Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (play)

Hypocrisy, greed and secret passions threaten to tear apart a wealthy but dysfunctional Mississippi family in Tennessee Williams' stunning American masterpiece. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof searingly portrays the larger-than-life characters of Maggie "the Cat"; her alcoholic husband, Brick; and the dominating family patriarch, Big Daddy.  This all African American production stars James Earl Jones, Terrence Howard, Phylicia Rashad, and Anika Noni Rose.

Recommended for: May be inappropriate for 10 and under. (Strong language.) Children under the age of 4 are not permitted in the theatre.

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A Catered Affair (play)

Faith Prince, Tom Wopat and Harvey Fierstein lead the dream cast of A Catered Affair, the heartwarming and funny new musical about a '50s Bronx mother's efforts to give her only daughter the elaborate wedding she never had -- and the bride never asked for. Written by four-time Tony Award®-winner Fierstein and acclaimed songwriter John Bucchino and directed by 2006 Tony-winner John Doyle, it's the wedding of the year and the musical of the season.

Recommended for: May be inappropriate for 10 and under. Children under the age of 4 are not permitted in the theatre.

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Chicago (musical)

There's never been a better time to experience Chicago, Broadway's razzle-dazzle smash. A sensational tale of sin, corruption and all that jazz, Chicago has everything you could want in a musical: knockout dancing, an edge-of-your-seat story and one showstopper after another. No wonder it's become a runaway success in over 250 cities worldwide, earning six Tony Awards®, two Olivier Awards®, a Grammy® and thousands of standing ovations. And here's the best part: You never know who you're going to see in Chicago. From Melanie to Brooke, from Usher to Huey, there's always someone fabulous center stage. So come on, babe! Head to the one, the only Chicago!

Recommended for: Ages 12 and up.

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A Chorus Line (musical)

Broadway gypsies bare their souls and put their lives "on the line" as they audition for an unnamed Broadway musical. The 1975 show won the Pulitzer Prize and the Tony Award® for Best Musical. The score includes "What I Did for Love," "The Music and the Mirror," "At the Ballet" and "Dance Ten, Looks Three. "

Recommended for: Ages 12 and up.

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The Country Girl (play)

The first major New York production in more than 30 years of Clifford Odets’s classic backstage story.  The title character, Georgie (played by Frances McDormand), is married to actor Frank Elgin (Morgan Freeman). He was once a great theatre star, but he is now down on his luck.  When Frank is offered a major role by hotshot director Bernie Dodd (Peter Gallagher), he has the chance to make a major comeback.

Recommended for: May be inappropriate for 12 and under. Children under the age of 4 are not permitted in the theatre.

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Cry-Baby (musical)

Baltimore, 1954.  Everyone likes Ike, nobody likes communism, and Wade “Cry-Baby” Walker is the coolest boy in town.  He's a bad boy with a good cause—truth, justice, and the pursuit of rock ‘n’ roll. When he falls for a good girl who wants to be bad, her charm school world of bobby sox and barbershop quartets will never be the same.  Wayward youth, juvenile delinquents, sexual repression, cool music, dirty lyrics, bizarre rejects...Finally, the ‘50s come to life--for real this time!

Recommended for: TBA

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Curtains (musical)

Curtains unfolds backstage at Boston’s Colonial Theatre in 1959, where a new musical could be a Broadway smash, were it not for the presence of its talent-free leading lady. When the hapless star dies on opening night during her curtain call, Lieutenant Frank Cioffi (David Hyde Pierce) arrives on the scene to conduct an investigation. But the lure of the theatre proves irresistible and after an unexpected romance blooms for the stage-struck detective, he finds himself just as drawn toward making the show a hit, as he is in solving the murder.  Written by Tony Award-winners John Kander and Fred Ebb (Chicago).

Recommended for: Ages 10 and up.

 
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“My daughter and I just had a ‘Girls Night Out’ and decided to see a Broadway show.  We had a fantastic time!

 

Afterwards, we went to the stage door to get autographs from the cast.

 

Everyone was so friendly. My daughter even has the autographed Playbill hanging on her dresser mirror!”


Jan (Scarsdale, NY)