‘The Lost Boys’, ‘Dog Day Afternoon’ Pull Broadway Audiences

‘The Lost Boys’, ‘Dog Day Afternoon’ Pull Broadway Audiences
Entertainment

Broadway‘s busy season was packed with recent arrivals last week, most pulling in decent-sized audiences (more than decent in many cases), with shows like Dog Day Afternoon, Proof, Schmigadoon! and The Rocky Horror Show selling out or nearly so.

Other newcomers filling 90% of their seats or more were Becky Shaw, Cats: The Jellicle Ball, Death of a Salesman, Titanique, Fallen Angels and The Lost Boys.

Dog Day Afternoon opened at the August Wilson on March 30, so while all seats were filled the week’s gross was down $2470,766 to $1,041,983, the result of four heavily comped press performances and a fully comped opening night.

Some other notable recent arrivals:

  • Becky Shaw, which opened at non-prof Second Stage’s Hayes to strong reviews last night, pulled in $243,674 for seven previews, attendance at 93% of capacity;
  • Cats: The Jellicle Ball, opening tonight at the Broadhurst, filled 98% of seats during its last full week of previews, grossing $861,807;
  • Death of a Salesman, with Nathan Lane and Laurie Metcalf headlining, was at 96% of capacity at the Winter Garden, taking in $928,565 for seven previews. Opening night is April 9;
  • Titaníque, in previews at the St. James, grossed $664,021 for seven previews, 96% of capacity. Opening night is April 12;
  • The Fear of 13, the wrongful conviction drama starring Adrien Brody, played eight previews at the James Earl Jones, grossing $781,272, 89%. Opens April 15;
  • Proof began previews at the Booth, selling out and grossing $726,603. Opening night is April 16;
  • Fallen Angels, the Noël Coward revival starring Rose Byrne, Kelli O’Hara, Mark Consuelos and Christopher Fitzgerald, among others, is in previews at the non-prof Roundabout’s Todd Haimes and last week grossed $452,017 for seven performances; 93%. Opening is on April 19;
  • Schmigadoon! did one preview at the Nederlander, selling out and grossing $169,191. Opening night is April 20;
  • The Balusters,  David Lindsay-Abaire’s comedy at non-prof Manhattan Theatre Club’s Friedman, took in $158,188 for six previews, 74%. Opens April 21;
  • Beaches, the stage musical adaptation of the 1988 film, was at 74% of capacity at the Majestic, grossing $516,929. Opening night is April 22;
  • The Rocky Horror Show, with six previews at Studio 54, grossed $642,866, with attendance less than a percentage point short of sell-out. Opening night is April 23;
  • Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, directed by Debbie Allen and starring Taraji P. Henson and Cedric “The Entertainer,” began previews at the Barrymore, grossing $992,574 with attendance at 84% of capacity. Opening April 25;
  • The Lost Boys took in $831,513 for six previews at the Palace, attendance at 98%. Opening April 26.

Just In Time, with a planned seven-performance week, was off more than $1M from the previous week’s full eight performances that included original star Jonathan Groff’s final shows. Matthew Morrison’s first week as Bobby Darin grossed $745,152, filling 99% of seats but with an average ticket price of $156 down significantly from the whopping $362 people shelled out to say goodbye to Groff.

Chess, with Lea Michele out from Wednesday to Sunday for a scheduled absence, was down $564,516 to $585,803, with 66% of seats filled at the Imperial, a drop from the previous week’s 82%.

Giant had a pre-schedule seven-performance week, filling 99% of seats at the Music Box for $1,175,161.

Three productions – Aladdin, The Lion King and Wicked – added a ninth performance to the week, securing their places in roster’s Top Five Earners: The Lion King, $2,823,250; Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, $2,804,264; Hamilton, $2,587,414; Wicked, $2,120,438; and Aladdin, $1,828,049. Stranger Things: The First Shadow came close with $1,694,023.

In all, the 40 Broadway productions – six more than the previous week – grossed $43,241,429 for the week ending April 5, up about 12% from the previous week. Attendance was 334,631, up about 14%.

In the 45th week of the 2025-26 season, Broadway had grossed $1,631,266,217 up about 7% over last year at this time, with total attendance of 12,274,398 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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