Click below to access all the grosses from all the shows for the week ending 7/27/2014 in BroadwayWorld.com's grosses section.
Also, you will find information on each show's historical grosses, cumulative grosses and other statistics on how each show stacked up this week and in the past.
Once put a lot of money in that new ad campaign but it doesn't seem to be helping. They had that bad 400k week in June and haven't seemed to have recovered much.
I'm pretty sure that I've read in several different places that the nut is closer to $650,000, but who knows? And sometimes it's hard to calculate because theater owners give rent concessions, royalties might fluctuate a bit, etc. But Cinderella is certainly nowhere close to doing $1 million a week as it did most of last summer, with the original cast. I'm actually not sure why it isn't, it's not like Laura Osnes and Santino Fontana were ticket selling stars. Actually, it's pretty puzzling, and they added a Thursday matinee this summer also, which they didn't have last summer.
CZJ at opening night party for A Little Night Music, Dec 13, 2009.
^ I don't think it's puzzling. The novelty has worn off, and Aladdin is getting a lot of family crowds. Last summer's sales had nothing to do with Laura and Santino.
Nice little bump for "Chicago". The grosses for "Lion King" are unreal! (It's kind of strange that my original post seemed to have disappeared.) I guess we do have Broadway gremlins from time to time.
"Noel [Coward] and I were in Paris once. Adjoining rooms, of course. One night, I felt mischievous, so I knocked on Noel's door, and he asked, 'Who is it?' I lowered my voice and said 'Hotel detective. Have you got a gentleman in your room?' He answered, 'Just a minute, I'll ask him.'" (Beatrice Lillie)
They really are and I will never understand why. It had the most amazing opening 10 minutes ... and the rest was boring as hell. I could not wait for the show to be over. The visuals were nice but endless and the score is so bad.
^ I'm glad I'm not the only one that thinks that...
I thought the first 10 minutes were breathtaking... and there were some interesting set pieces after that, some inventive costumes, and a couple of good songs - but outside of that? Piss-poor choreography, jokey characters that fit in the movie, but not on stage, and a slow second act.... (and this is coming from a huge Disney Theatrical fan).
My wife and I saw Ragtime and Lion King on the same weekend (tickets were purchased way in advance for Lion King, and we picked up tickets day of for Ragtime) and Ragtime pretty much blew it out of the water.
As for ONCE, I still wonder if they have a name lined-up for the Fall. Otherwise I'm not sure why the producers plan to keep it going come September.
A Chorus Line revival played its final Broadway performance on August 17, 2008. The tour played its final performance on August 21, 2011. A new non-equity tour started in October 2012 played its final performance on March 23, 2013. Another non-equity tour launched on January 20, 2018. The tour ended its US run in Kansas City and then toured throughout Japan August & September 2018.
I keep hoping that Steve Kazee will return to Once. A long shot I know, but I never imagined that Constantine would return to Rock of Ages so I'm keeping hope alive!
Neonlights, last summer Cinderella was competing with Annie. It's not as if there are a finite number of little girls who come to NY to see a show with Mom or Grandma. What exactly do you mean by "the novelty"?
CZJ at opening night party for A Little Night Music, Dec 13, 2009.
Steve Kazee has stated numerous times that the vocal injury he sustained makes it impossible for him to do a Broadway schedule. Ya gotta move on, he will never be in a Broadway musical again.
Neonlights, last summer Cinderella was competing with Annie. It's not as if there are a finite number of little girls who come to NY to see a show with Mom or Grandma. What exactly do you mean by "the novelty"?
Cinderella was a hot new show last summer. It's not anymore, it's fallen off the radar. I would argue that there IS a finite number of little girls.
I think the target audiences for Newsies, Cinderella, Aladdin, and Matilda are similar. I wonder if Newsies' closing will boost the other's attendance.
Well, there is clearly a segment of little girls (finite or not) that "age in" each year relative to seeing a show. Four or five year olds who were too young last summer might well be old enough this summer, etc. Though I do agree with you that there was more buzz around Cinderella last summer, I still find it a bit puzzling that its numbers are so poor compared to last summer.
CZJ at opening night party for A Little Night Music, Dec 13, 2009.
CINDERELLA certainly hasn't held up as strong as MATILDA has, in terms of the family shows, and ALADDIN seems primed to have a long healthy run. We'll see when (or maybe if, though I doubt ALADDIN has a LION KING-like run in its future) the dust settles how long ALADDIN lasts when tickets are readily available. NEWSIES has done quite well at staying popular once it stopped selling out. CINDERELLA doesn't seem likely to hold on to see another summer, but I was saying that last fall and they rebounded with Fran Drescher so who knows?
Words don't deserve that kind of malarkey. They're innocent, neutral, precise, standing for this, describing that, meaning the other, so if you look after them you can build bridges across incomprehension and chaos. But when they get their corners knocked off, they're no good anymore…I don't think writers are sacred, but words are. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.
Does Cinderella and Matilda really have the same audience? Yes, they're both family shows but my audience at Cinderella was filled with very young children, whereas Matilda seems to bring in older kids.
A little swash, a bit of buckle - you'll love it more than bread.
MATILDA definitely plays better with the teenaged and college-aged types (who loved the book as kids) whereas CINDERELLA is playing (I'd imagine) almost entirely to the Princess-charmed ages. But that also goes to my point: MATILDA both has better word-of-mouth and a wider age-range of fans, where CINDERELLA seems to tapering off and has a smaller age-range window it seems to appeal to.
Words don't deserve that kind of malarkey. They're innocent, neutral, precise, standing for this, describing that, meaning the other, so if you look after them you can build bridges across incomprehension and chaos. But when they get their corners knocked off, they're no good anymore…I don't think writers are sacred, but words are. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.