(Onstage at the Helen Hayes Theater limited run ends June 11.) Read the review.įrom the Pop Catalog Girl From the North Country For Scott Ellis’s revival, Jesse Tyler Ferguson steps into the role that Denis O’Hare got a Tony for in 2003, when the show also won best play. 14.) Take Me Outīe prepared to keep your phone in a locked pouch at Richard Greenberg’s comedy about a big-name baseball player ( Jesse Williams, in his Broadway debut) who comes out as gay: Nudity is plentiful in this production. The five-time Tony Award winner Susan Stroman directs a starry cast - Lilli Cooper, Lea DeLaria, Rachel Dratch, Julianne Hough, Suzy Nakamura, Julie White and Vanessa Williams - in the Broadway newcomer Selina Fillinger’s farce about an American president in trouble and the women he counts on to make the crisis go away. POTUS: Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive Shapiro, the large ensemble includes Blair Brown, Jessie Mueller and, in his Broadway debut, Noah Reid of “Schitt’s Creek.” (Onstage at Studio 54 limited run ends July 24.) Read the review. The playwright-actor Tracy Letts plays a small-city mayor in his civic-minded satire, set at a local council meeting in fictional Big Cherry, where democracy in action is a tussle and deeply held myths are built on lies.
(Onstage at the John Golden Theater limited run ends June 18.) Read the review. Directed by Matthew Dunster, this production was a prepandemic hit downtown.
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In Martin McDonagh’s Olivier Award winner, set in the 1960s, a menacing mod from London (Alfie Allen of “Game of Thrones”) walks into a grim northern English pub run by a former hangman (David Threlfall). (Onstage at the American Airlines Theater limited run ends May 29.) Read the review. ĭebra Messing ages from 17 to 107 as an ordinary woman named Ernestine in Noah Haidle’s cake-baking, decades-spanning play, inspired by Thornton Wilder’s classic “The Long Christmas Dinner.” Enrico Colantoni and John Earl Jelks also star. Limited run ends July 1.) Read the review. Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker revel in physical comedy as they play two married couples and a pair of long-ago sweethearts in the first Broadway revival of Neil Simon’s trio of one-act farces, a smash at its premiere in 1968. (Onstage at the Winter Garden Theater.) Read the review. It’s a hot ticket, and one of Broadway’s more stratospherically priced shows. Wolverine, returns to the stage as the charlatan Harold Hill opposite Sutton Foster as Marian the librarian in Jerry Zaks’s widely anticipated revival of Meredith Willson’s classic musical comedy.