Broadway Journal

‘HAMILTON’ SETS ANOTHER RECORD WITH $998 TICKETS

October 6, 2016 by Philip Boroff

screen-shot-2016-10-06-at-1-07-35-pmEXCLUSIVE: The producers of Hamilton are selling a new block of $998 tickets for the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays that handily sets a Broadway price record.

The $998 seats are up 18 percent over the $849 tickets Hamilton introduced in early June — the previous record holder.  When including Ticketmaster’s $18 service fee, the new ticket, at $1,016, is the first on Broadway to run four figures.

Continue Reading

CLINTON BACKER BENANTI ON TRUMP & TWITTER TROLLS

September 20, 2016 by Philip Boroff

Laura Benanti gained 8 million YouTube views and the wrath of Donald Trump’s angriest devotees when she satirized his wife on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert during the Republican National Convention. On Friday, the actress spoke to Broadway Journal about the experience. Tonight, she headlines a Hillary Clinton fundraiser at Industry bar in Hell’s Kitchen.

Q: Did you learn anything about Trump or politics from appearing on television as Melania?

Benanti: Yes sir. Almost every time I tweet I will get a barrage of terrifying tweets, that range from ‘you’re ugly and fat’ to really scary — like, ‘I want to kill you.’ IContinue Reading

BROADWAY SHRUGS AT TRUMP PRODUCING CREDIT, COALESCES BEHIND CLINTON

September 19, 2016 by Philip Boroff

Donald Trump may be the only major-party presidential candidate in history with a Broadway producing credit, but that hasn’t won him much support in theater circles.

“All he was was a big investor,” said Richard Seff, who wrote the 1970 comedy Paris is Out!, about a longtime married couple planning a European vacation that played 112 performances at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre. “He didn’t have any input,” Seff said about Trump’s role. Now an 89-year-old reviewer and columnist for the website DC Metro Theater Arts, Seff recalled the second-generation real estate developer as a pleasant, stage-struck 23-year-old.

Continue Reading

JASON ROBERT BROWN DECRIES ‘INSANE’ GUN VIOLENCE EPIDEMIC

September 9, 2016 by Philip Boroff

Jason Robert Brown said a tweet from a fan inspired the Sept. 12 benefit concert of his two-character musical The Last Five Years.

The composer, lyricist and performer has worked independently with Joshua Henry (Aaron Burr in Hamilton in Chicago) and Cynthia Erivo, a Tony Award winner for The Color Purple on Broadway. About a year ago, “Somebody tweeted, ‘Oh my god, you have to do The Last Five Years with Cynthia and Joshua,” Brown, 46, recalled in an interview. Continue Reading

SECOND STAGE BORROWED $16.5 MILLION FOR HELEN HAYES, BACKED BY PROSPECTIVE ‘FROZEN’ LANDLORD

August 19, 2016 by Philip Boroff

Screen Shot 2016-08-01 at 11.25.45 PM
Proposed Facade of Helen Hayes/Rockwell Group via Landmarks Preservation Commission

 

EXCLUSIVE: Second Stage Theatre has less than two years to repay a $16.5 million mortgage on its new Broadway home.

In April 2015, the nonprofit completed its long-awaited purchase of the Helen Hayes Theatre. The “amazing moment,” as Artistic Director Carole Rothman put it, should help raise the profile of the 37-year-old company and the contemporary American plays and musicals it produces, which have won three Pulitzer Prizes since 2010. But in buying Broadway’s smallest venue, Second Stage accepted a big burden.Continue Reading

PRESERVING CAST RECORDINGS IN THE AGE OF FREE MUSIC

August 8, 2016 by Philip Boroff

Laura Benanti recording She Loves Me at Avatar Studios. Photo: Jenny Anderson.

As ticket prices for Broadway musicals consistently rise, independent record labels like Sh-K-Boom, which preserves musical theater scores, must grapple with the proliferation of free music: specifically, web services such as YouTube and Spotify that cannibalize CD sales and iTunes downloads.

“There have to be the purchases,” Sh-K-Boom President Kurt Deutsch said Aug. 3 at the Upper East Side Barnes & Noble, before a concert promoting his new Broadway cast recording of She Loves Me. His company has put out about 100 cast recordings since 2002, beginning with Jason Robert Brown’s The Last Five Years.

Continue Reading

BROADWAY DUMPS ON TRUMP, EXTOLS CIVIL LIBERTIES

July 19, 2016 by Philip Boroff

NYCLU Executive Director Donna Lieberman

UPDATE, with responses to Melania Trump’s speech: Jayne Houdyshell said last night that she didn’t mind missing Melania Trump’s live speech at the Republican National Convention, which conflicted with the New York Civil Liberties Union’s summer fundraiser. “Theater people are my peeps, and I don’t know a single Trump supporter,” Houdyshell said at NYU minutes before the benefit. Actors’ objection to Trump: “We know acting when we see it.”

Houdyshell knows acting better than most, as she won a Tony Award last month for her role in the Stephen Karam drama The Humans. “I never heard Donald Trump say anything that rang true to me,” Houdyshell continued. “His thoughts and beliefs seem to change moment to moment, depending on who he is talking to.”

Continue Reading

‘HAMILTON,’ ‘EVAN HANSEN’ PERFORMERS EXPLORE PRISON & POLICE ABUSE AT CIVIL LIBERTIES BENEFIT

July 16, 2016 by Philip Boroff

Summer is the off-season for Manhattan fundraising. But with headlines consumed by hate crime, police conduct and race relations, the New York Civil Liberties Union says its July 18 Broadway-themed benefit is timely in the extreme.                   

“This is a very charged and heightened time in politics and civil liberties,” said Susan Blackwell, a performer and writer who will host the event, Broadway Stands Up for Freedom, at NYU’s Skirball Center. “It’s easy to get bogged down and overwhelmed.”

Continue Reading

CULTURE PROJECT, DOWNTOWN INSTITUTION, FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY

July 1, 2016 by Philip Boroff

EXCLUSIVE: The Culture Project, a 20-year-old, perennially cash-strapped East Village theater company that’s best known for the anti-death-penalty drama The Exonerated, filed for bankruptcy protection this week.

The June 29 filing was under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy code, generally referred to as “reorganization bankruptcy.” “It’s a dispute with the landlord and we hope to resolve it in the bankruptcy case,” Culture Project  lawyer Joel Shafferman said in a brief phone interview. He declined to elaborate, but said the filing won’t affect Simon Says, a commercial production about a psychic starring Brian Murray that’s renting the Culture Project’s 199-seat Lynn Redgrave theater. It’s scheduled to begin previews on Wednesday.

Continue Reading

BISHOP EARNED $912,000 IN 2014 ATOP LINCOLN CENTER THEATER

June 29, 2016 by Philip Boroff

DSC_0084
Andre Bishop and Katherine Farley, chairwoman of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. Photo: Amanda Gordon/Bloomberg

EXCLUSIVE: Andre Bishop, Lincoln Center Theater’s longtime leader, earned pay and benefits of $911,670 in 2014, one of the richest compensation packages at a U.S. nonprofit theater.

Among the components listed in the organization’s latest tax return, Bishop’s salary increased by $99,000, or 16 percent, from a year earlier to $719,621. The return valued his benefits, including retirement and other deferred pay, at $192,049. His compensation more than doubled in nine years as the budget was little changed.

Continue Reading

« Previous Page
Next Page »
ABOUT/CONTACT US

Journal Categories

  • Broadway
  • Grosses
  • Hamilton
  • In Development
  • Interviews
  • Lawsuit
  • Nonprofits
  • Pay
  • Producers
  • Real Estate
  • Review

Search

Subscribe to our newsletter

Copyright © 2019 Broadway Journal.

Copyright © 2025 · Beautiful Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

  • Hamilton
  • In Development
  • Nonprofits
  • Producers
  • Real Estate