Daniel Radcliffe Conjures Broadway Audiences For ‘Every Brilliant Thing’

Daniel Radcliffe Conjures Broadway Audiences For ‘Every Brilliant Thing’
Entertainment

New York City’s winter weather took another bite out of Broadway business last week, with canceled performances and blizzard-averse potential audiences sending receipts for the 27 productions plummeting 17% from the previous week.

With Monday evening performances canceled and piles of snow keeping pedestrians and drivers at bay, total grosses fell to $26,036,589 for the week ending March 1, down from $32M the previous week. Attendance dropped 8% to 221,567.

Broadway’s average ticket price also took a cold shot to the chin, dropping to $117.51 from the previous week’s $130.38.

Especially hard hit were productions that have Monday evening performances on their schedules, with the February 23 shows canceled due to the February 22 blizzard. With seven performances – as opposed to the usual eight – the still-strong Harry Potter and the Cursed Child was down $411,508 to $2,159,398; Six: The Musical was down $256,190 to $440,849; and The Great Gatsby, down $473,715 to $673,576.

In all, 24 of the 27 productions reported significant box office drops for the week. The three shows that bucked the trend were Chess, which saw the return of star Lea Michele after a weeklong vacation, the grosses climbing $381,595 to $1,166,962; Hadestown, which saw the final week of principal cast members including Jack Wolfe as Orpheus, up $160,566 to $1,303,532; and Every Brilliant Thing starring Daniel Radcliffe, which despite losing the Monday performance was up to $980,815, a jump of $676,388 over the previous week when the just-starting play had two previews.

Every Brilliant Thing, which opens March 12 at the Hudson, sold 98% of seats during the snowy week.

Chicago, with Whitney Leavitt of Hulu’s The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives in the role of Roxie Hart still pulling ’em in, dropped a relatively modest $59,706 to $1,181,277. About 98% of seats at the Ambassador Theatre were filled for the seven performances.

Sell-outs for the week were Hadestown, Hamilton, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child and Just in Time. Like Chicago and Every Brilliant Thing, the musical revival of Ragtime sold 98% of available seats. Moulin Rouge!, Stranger Things: The First Shadow, The Lion King, The Outsiders and Wicked all sold at least 90% of seats.

Other shows weren’t quite so weather-proof: & Juliet went from the previous week’s 95% of capacity to 85%, Aladdin from 97% to 87%, and Buena Vista Social Club from 96% to 85%. Similar drops were reported by Death Becomes Her, Maybe Happy Ending, MJ, Oh, Mary!, Operation Mincemeat, Six, The Book of Mormon, The Great Gatsby and Two Strangers (Carry A Cake Across New York).

Top five earners for the week were Harry Potter and the Cursed Child ($2,159,398); Hamilton ($1,756,444); Just in Time ($1,484,852); The Lion King ($1,326,036); and Wicked ($1,307,242).

Season to date, Broadway, in the 40th week of the 2025-26 season, has grossed $1,451,715,100, up about 7% over last year at this time, with total attendance of 10,879,802 up 3%.

All figures courtesy of The Broadway League. For more box office information visit the League’s website.

Read original article here.

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