Broadway-Bound 'Groundhog Day' Will Cast Shadow on Tonys
A musical version of the hit film will open on Broadway in April, just before the deadline to qualify for the Tony Awards. It's now playing in London.
A musical version of the hit film will open on Broadway in April, just before the deadline to qualify for the Tony Awards. It's now playing in London.
Roundabout Theater Company will present this revival of an Arthur Miller play, co-starring John Turturro, Tony Shalhoub and Jessica Hecht.
The owners of the club have canceled a concert, citing a platform of groups affiliated with Black Lives Matter that calls Israel "an apartheid state."
The jukebox musical about Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons opened in 2005 and won four Tony Awards in 2006. It is the 12th-longest-running show in Broadway history.
Roundabout Theater Company said it would bring the play to the American Airlines Theater in June; Anne Kauffman will direct.
The financial services giant apologizes after an uproar on Twitter in response to "teen financial education day" ads.
As the centennial of Mr. Dahl's birth approaches, the estate of the "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" author is developing at least 23 projects based on his works.
"We loved the play so much and feel compelled to make it happen so more people can see it," a producer, Daryl Roth, said of the play, by Paula Vogel.
She will play Shug Avery, a role initially played by Jennifer Hudson.
In the shoes his father wore as Tevye on Broadway, Mr. Bernardi plays the innkeeper in a Broadway revival. But on Wednesday, as an understudy, he will step into his father's old role.
Roland Scahill was arraigned on charges of a fraudulent investment scheme, promoting a supposed production about Kathleen Battle starring Lupita Nyong'o.
The show, based on the movie with Bill Murray, will transfer from London, where it opened on Tuesday.
The musical's producer, Cameron Mackintosh, said it would come to the Broadway Theater, where the show began its original, decade-long run in 1991.
"The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" is closing its Broadway run, but there is life after acting for the 21 puppies who have appeared in the show.
As Disney develops "Frozen" as a musical for Broadway, it decides to replace the highly regarded director Alex Timbers.
When it reopens in the 1,031-seat Gerald Schoenfeld Theater on Tuesday, the Tony-winning play will have resided in three Midtown theaters since October.
Two high-profile adaptations of Buñuel films may be in New York at the same time.
The play opened to great reviews in Britain. Now its lead producers are weighing what comes next.
A pop-up booth, opening Aug. 2, is an experiment by the Theater Development Fund to see if more locals would buy tickets there, far from Times Square.
Some artists and fans had expressed concern on social media about how the musical was being cast, although no long-term casting commitments were made.
The play by J.T. Rogers, about the unusual back story to the 1993 peace accords, will keep the same cast.
The Broadway musical had announced that it would close on Jan. 1, but on Tuesday the producers told the cast that it would instead close on Oct. 9.
The Bay Street Theater announced plans to hold a concert performance of the developing show in a Sag Harbor park next month; concerns have come up about the composition of the cast.
The show is abruptly ending its return engagement on Broadway, just 19 days after it began.
The show, based on the events in Gander, Newfoundland, when flights were grounded because of the terrorist attacks, is to begin performances in February.