Broadway Journal

FROM ‘OSLO’ TO ‘COME FROM AWAY,’ TONYS PROVIDE BOUNCE

June 19, 2017 by Philip Boroff

The Tony Awards delivered at the box office.

Many winners at Radio City Music Hall on June 11 had their bestselling weeks to-date after being recognized for achievement and, in the case of musicals, making the most of the international platform to present songs from their shows.

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MINDICH’S HISTORY-MAKING WIN & OTHER TONY TAKEAWAYS

June 12, 2017 by Philip Boroff

ANALYSIS: The 71st annual Tony Awards opened with Kevin Spacey as Evan Hansen in a goofy polo shirt and cast around his left arm. The ceremony ended moments after an acceptance speech by Dear Evan Hansen‘s producer.

In between there was suspense aplenty at Radio City Music Hall. While Dear Evan Hansen, about a socially anxious teenager caught up in web of lies, was methodically collecting awards, including for score and book, Come From Away  won for director, Christopher Ashley. That win raised the tantalizing possibility of an upset by the feel-good musical set in a remote Canadian province after 9/11. Ultimately, Evan Hansen prevailed in a historic night.

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PRODUCERS SET TO REVOLT AGAINST TONY STAGE SNUB

June 10, 2017 by Philip Boroff

EXCLUSIVE: The 71st annual Tony Awards may be the site of a Broadway rebellion.

On Sunday, the Tonys — a joint venture of the American Theatre Wing and Broadway League — is seeking to end the practice of dozens of producers rushing the stage at Radio City Music Hall when their show wins. Just six producers will be permitted onstage to accept each major award — for play, musical and play and musical revival — according to an email from League President Charlotte St. Martin and Tony Award Productions that was obtained by Broadway Journal.

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‘DOLLY’ SALES DELECTABLE IN BUSIEST WEEK OF 2017: BOX OFFICE

March 20, 2017 by Philip Boroff

‘Dolly’ production photo/Julieta Cervantes

One of the season’s most anticipated musical revivals, the Scott Rudin-produced Hello, Dolly!, got off to a fast start in Broadway’s top-selling and best-attended week of the year.

The show grossed $1.4 million in five previews, according to the Broadway League. Both its $750 top seat and $196 average ticket were second only to Hamilton: An American Musical, which has an $849 top ticket and $267 average last week.  The numbers confirm that Dolly!, with Midler singing on Broadway for the first time since Bette! Divine Madness in 1979, is on track to be the top-grossing new production of the spring. The classic last appeared on Broadway two decades ago, with Carol Channing reprising a role she played repeatedly on Broadway and on tour.

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HELLO MIDLER! ‘DOLLY’ INTRODUCES $525 TICKET

November 29, 2016 by Philip Boroff

screen-shot-2016-11-28-at-5-58-41-pmThe producer of Hello, Dolly! starring Bette Midler recently raised its top ticket to $525, the most expensive seat on Broadway that isn’t for Hamilton.

Introduced after runaway advance sales, it’s the biggest price ever for a musical revival. As of a few weeks ago, Dolly’s costliest ticket on Telecharge or at the box office was $425. But like Hamilton, it’s exploding on the resale market. Prime Dolly tickets on StubHub exceed $2,000, with seventh row center offered for over $5,000, with fees.

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RUDIN SEEKS TO SILENCE ANGELS

November 3, 2016 by Philip Boroff

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 17: Scott Rudin during the 2016 New York Drama Critics' Circle Awards at 54 Below on May 17, 2016 in New York City. (Photo by Walter McBride/Getty Images)
Scott Rudin at the 2016 Drama Critics’ Circle Awards. Walter McBride/Getty

EXCLUSIVE: While expanding Broadway’s boundaries, Scott Rudin is reining in his investors.

The daring and powerful producer is requiring backers to sign away their right to criticize him and the plays and musicals that they’re capitalizing. The unusual provision appears in recent prospectuses obtained by Broadway Journal. It prohibits investors from making “negative remarks orally or in writing in any medium,” including social media, about him, his show or his business practices.

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RUDIN PAPERS DEFINE NON-DISPARAGEMENT, NEGATIVE ACT

November 3, 2016 by Philip Boroff

EXCLUSIVE: The first investor non-disparagement clause we found was for the  Scott Rudin-produced revival of Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. (Click on the text for easier reading.)

screen-shot-2016-10-31-at-2-12-43-am

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‘HAMILTON’ RECOUPS, SETS $549 TICKET RECORD, EXCLUDES GROUP SALES AS SECONDARY MARKET EXPLODES

March 18, 2016 by Philip Boroff

Outside 'Hamilton" during a September lottery
The ‘Hamilton’ lottery last Fall. Photo: Broadway Journal

EXCLUSIVE: Hamilton, the Broadway blockbuster endorsed by the president and first lady, has repaid its investors.

Two people with direct knowledge of the musical’s finances confirmed that it recouped its $12.5 million capitalization. Normally, producers announce when a show breaks even, but Hamilton, “the hardest ticket to get on the planet,” as Michelle Obama put it, has little to prove. Since recouping it’s already begun distributing profits, according to one production source. Reached by phone Friday morning, Sam Rudy, a spokesman for the show said: “I’m not aware that we’ve recouped,” adding that he would check with the producers.

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