Here's a semi-historical entry to put your ticket prices in some context.
Back in 1981, I gritted my teeth and shelled out $100 for the privilege of spending 8 magnificent hours at "The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby". In my lifetime, only "Angels in America" has ever come close to equaling that theater experience.
Six years earlier in 1975, I paid $15 for Orchestra row M at the Shubert Theater to a Saturday matinee of the OBC of "A Chorus Line". Best $15 I ever spent.
I know many of us have been comped to various events/shows, but the OP mentioned what was most/least expensive without considering comps. Just a little clarification.
Most expensive: $300 or something like that for IN THE HEIGHTS for the last performance, 2nd row center. I wasn't going to miss it and wanted a good seat but was kind of grumbling about the price.
Least expensive: HipTix tickets which have been further discounted to $10 including THE UNDERSTUDY, ANYTHING GOES and SONS OF THE PROPHET.
If you count the money I put into a a community theatre production to sponsor a spotlight and operator for the performances ....then, let's just say, more than $500. Otherwise, I didn't see BOM, but I purchased tix for my wife, daughter and niece to see it just the other Saturday night. And paid more than anyone on this thread has stated. Not a lot more...but more..But, they were coming in from out of town - there was only one show they could get to..and it was a birthday present. Report: absolutely worth it. Whew. Don't get to Broadway often, but least would probably have been 42d Street on TKTS back in 83. Don't recall the actual dollars - although with inflation, who knows.
I don't remember the exact amount I paid, but I paid what seemed like an arm and a leg for A Little Night with Zeta and Lansbury, and seriously, it HAD to have been the very worst seat in the house.
As far as the cheapest, I don't know. I've seen so many shows in my life. I remember the most surprising deal I got was for Phantom in like 2003. I got a second row center seat for like $25 on line. I was really shocked.
Too embarrassed to say what I paid for the most so I'll stick with the least expensive ones: "OKLAHOMA!," "Drowsy Chaperone," "Assassins" and "Young Frankenstein" - saw them all for free through work.
Aside from loads of shows I've seen for free or from papering companies:
Broadway: Most Expensive: Promises, Promises and Hair (Both $85)
Cheapest: Spring Awakening, Gypsy, A Tale of Two Cities - £15 a ticket with rush (think it was $25 or $27 a ticket) but the exchange rate was very good that year :)
West End: Most Expensive: Legally Blonde - First preview, £40 Les Miserables - £35
Cheapest: Sunset Boulevard - £5 balcony ticket during previews War Horse - £5 through Entry Pass Million Dollar Quartet - £5 balcony ticket during previews Betrayal/The Children's Hour - £5 Pilar Seats
Tour: Most Expensive: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang - £21
I couldn't tell you how much I paid, but I know I got rock bottom pricing for Brooklyn about twenty minutes to curtain through TKTS. Most expensive is around $100 for a few different shows. I really try not to spend more than $50 with service fees if I can help it.
uncageg - did you see Chinglish for $26.50 through a rush/lotto? I was searching for info about a rush/lotto for this show but could not find any information. Thanks for any help.
A lot of the shows I saw others paid for me to go, whether it be friends, my mom, or my boyfriend. I also had this "job" where I took my mom's friend's daughter to see American Idiot and Rent. Her mom not only paid for orchestra seats, but also gave me transportation and food money: Once even $80 for myself. Must be nice to have all that $, but anyway...I even obtained 2 free tickets to Sister Act recently. Most expensive: American Idiot- $63 Orch tix tickets through TKTS Least expensive: The Spelling Bee- $25 student rush way back when
"And that was that or so it seemed.
Is this the end or the beginning?
All I know is, she was right.
I am an idiot.
It’s even on my birth certificate in so many words.
This is my rage.
This is my love.
This is my town.
This is my city.
This is my life."
$250-- BEAUTY & THE BEAST $25-- PHANTOM OF THE OPERA
My average price is $111-ish.
"TO LOVE ANOTHER PERSON IS TO SEE THE FACE OF GOD"- LES MISERABLES---
"THERE'S A SPECIAL KIND OF PEOPLE KNOWN AS SHOW PEOPLE... WE'RE BORN EVERY NIGHT AT HALF HOUR CALL!"--- CURTAINS
Least expensive - MANY free shows. We see a lot of tours that come through Providence because my dad's radio station is a sponsor at PPAC - last one I saw was In the Heights and my parents saw West Side Story.
Most expensive - Wicked on Broadway back in 2004. I think my mom paid $110 each. Most expensive out of my own pocket? Either Sister Act to see a friend perform at $79, South Pacific in previews ($65) or Hairspray to see Harvey and Marissa a month before closing ($55) - All completely worth it.
Here's some irony. Most expensive was the Actor's Fund Concert of Hair at the New Amsterdam. I can't remember how much I paid, but it was well over a hundred dollars. And the least expensive was a comp ticket to Hair on Broadway.
"What a mystery this world. One day you love them and the next day you want to kill them a thousand times over." The Masked Bandit in THE FALL
Most: West Side Story-$120 for 3rd row center Least: Master Class-$30 Front Row, Night Music-$28 Front Row center, comps to a few shows Updated On: 10/24/11 at 10:55 PM
Most: $125 for Wicked. Least: $10 for Damn Yankees way back in the day thanks to a very nice discount from my mom's work. (most recently though, would have been $26 for A Chorus Line SRO).
A Chorus Line revival played its final Broadway performance on August 17, 2008. The tour played its final performance on August 21, 2011. A new non-equity tour started in October 2012 played its final performance on March 23, 2013. Another non-equity tour launched on January 20, 2018. The tour ended its US run in Kansas City and then toured throughout Japan August & September 2018.