Two women in pink tops pose playfully against a bright yellow geometric background, with the text 'I Love Bette Midler' at the top.

Broadway Slumps After Banner Summer

Ticket News
Broadway Slumps After Banner Summer
September 14, 2017
By Katie Gainer

2017-08-25_5-16-57

It’s that time of year again: the kids go back to school, the vacationers return home, and in turn, Broadway show sales decline. The post-Labor Day box office took a huge hit of 15% as city tourism slowed down for the season, with sales down in almost every production.

Last week’s sales for the 27 shows on Broadway were down $4.2 million from the week prior, with a cumulative gross of $23.6 million, as reported by Variety. Attendance fell by more than 17,000, totaling 220,403, or 84% of capacity. After one of its best, most record-breaking summers, this week’s stats marked a six-month low for sales on Broadway.

One of the biggest drop-off’s came from the typically chart-topping Hello, Dolly!, but star of the show Bette Midler’s planned vacation that week may have been the biggest factor. The show was still the eighth highest-grossing with alternate Donna Murphy filling in, but Midler’s absence cost the show a hefty $1.36 million in sales. This could be a telling sign as to how the show will fare once Midler leaves for good to be replaced by Bernadette Peters in January.

Other shows with sizeable losses of over $200,000 according to Forbes were tourist favorites The Lion King, Wicked, School Of Rock and Aladdin. The only shows with decent boosts were the revived Cats and A Bronx Tale. Other big earners were, of course, Hamilton, which saw an eight week streak of $3 million plus gross sales and at some points, accounted for almost 10% of the entire industry’s sales, and the critically acclaimed Dear Evan Hansen, which was the third highest grossing with $1,678,438 in sales.

The sudden end of Natasha, Pierre, and The Great Comet of 1812, which was grossing over $1 million most weeks before it’s fateful racially-charged casting controversy, didn’t help to cushion this inevitable end-of-summer slump, either.

Other shows to catch before they (likely) leave Broadway on September 17 are Groundhog Day and Bandstand.

Share A little Divinity

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.