Tonys Boost Box Office For ‘Kimberly Akimbo’, ‘Leopoldstadt’, ‘Shucked’; ‘Here Lies Love’ Sells Out First Preview

Breaking News, Broadway, Broadway Box Office, Here Lies Love, Kimberly Akimbo, Movies

Strong showings at the June 11 Tony Awards – both in terms of trophies and on-air performances – seem to have made an equally sturdy impact at the box office, with best musical Kimberly Akimbo and nominated & Juliet – posting their best numbers yet, and best play Leopoldstadt making significant gains over the previous week.

In fact, the argument for Tony’s value as a national Broadway marketing tool found some support in the overall box office figures: Grosses for the week ending June 18 were up 6% (to $32,939,618) over the previous week, and that’s with one fewer show on the boards (32, compared with the previous 33). Attendance was up 2% to 260,027.

The total numbers also compare favorably to the same period last year, with both grosses and attendance up nearly 12% year over year.

Among the newer shows selling out, or coming close, were Kimberly Akimbo (grossing $695,405); Parade ($1,168,463); Prima Face ($1,107,830); & Juliet ($1,339,854); and Sweeney Todd ($1,935,912). Leopoldstadt was up by more than $270,000 to $924,033. Shucked, Some Like It Hot and New York, New York all posted gains well in excess of $100,000 ($862,188, $1,143,488 and $995,844, respectively).

Among the post-Tony arrivals, Once Upon a One More Time, the new fairy tale musical featuring songs made popular by Britney Spears, showed some improvement over the previous week, grossing $645,628 but still filling only about 71% of seats. The musical opens this week – June 22 – and reviews could show their impact.

Here Lies Love, the David Byrne-Fatboy Slim immersive dance club musical about Imelda Marcos, sold out its first preview, filling all seats at the revamped Broadway Theatre and grossing $126,461. Opening night is July 20.

In its final week, Summer, 1976 filled 89% of seats at the Friedman, grossing $446,296. Life of Pi, which just today announced a July 23 closing notice, took in $494,001, with attendance at the Schoenfeld at just 75% of capacity.

Season to date, Broadway has grossed $128,133,731 with total attendance of 1,055,336 at 86% of capacity.

All figures courtesy of The Broadway League. For complete box office listings, visit the League’s website.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Neil Young and Crazy Horse to Release Long-in-the-Works Archival Album Early Daze
Watch Sabrina Carpenter Perform “Espresso,” “Feather,” and “Nonsense” on SNL
Tabletop RPG ‘Paint the Town Red’ Aims to for a Deeper Vampiric Story
Liam Payne’s Ex Maya Henry Says She Once Felt Pressured Into Abortion
Shania Twain Reveals the Story Behind Pink Hair Transformation

Leave a Reply

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