Which show has lost the most money--Broadway or otherwise? In My Life comes to mind, but I'm unsure, whether it is converted into today's standards or not--what show has lost the most money ever? Updated On: 8/21/06 at 03:15 AM
"Big: The Musical" was the biggest loser at one point, it has since been surpassed, but I forget by what show. I think "The Capeman" and "Sunset Blvd." (as musicman 89 mentioned) are also up there.
In actuality, the majority of Broadway musicals lose money or barely break even, the rare exceptions being long-running shows like "The Lion King," "Phantom," "Les Mis," etc.
One of the biggest money losers was "Via Galactica"...
"Directed by Sir Peter Hall and starring Raul Julia and Irene Cara, the musical opened the new Uris Theater (now renamed the Gershwin Theater) on Broadway. Filled with wild special effects, the play was pummeled by reviewers and closed after 4 performances, becoming at that time the biggest money loser in Broadway history."
"I've lost everything! Luis, Marty, my baby with Chris, Chris himself, James. All I ever wanted was love." --Sheridan Crane "Passions"
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"Housework is like bad sex. Every time I do it, I swear I'll never do it again til the next time company comes."--"Lulu"
from "Can't Stop The Music"
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"When the right doors didn't open for him, he went through the wrong ones" - "Sweet Bird of Youth"
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"Passions" is uncancelled! See NBC.com for more info.
I believe the most recent giant loser was CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG, which supposedly lost its entire $15 million investment. DANCE OF THE VAMPIRES lost $12 million, CARRIE was the biggest loser at its time with $8 million, and may still be up there if you adjust for inflation.
It's really getting ridiculous to mount a musical these days...why does it cost two to three times what it used to, even a few years ago?
Sunset was the biggest flop. But this season, Lestat lost almost its entire investment.
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To Kill A Mockingbird
As they sang in Forbidden Broadway... "Glenn Close left. Another star took over, and I lost all my money!!!!"
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I remember when I was in New York (in the '80s) that "Into the Light" was the most expensive musical to date, at that point, costing $8 million.
It closed after 6 performances, losing its entire investment.
(Yes, I know it's been dethroned as The World's Biggest Flopper since then.)
I saw it in previews and thought it was fascinating. Not a total turkey by any means. And Dean Jones was great!
Dean played a scientist working on proving the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin. It challenged his character's basic principles and religious beliefs, as he got more involved and obsessed with it. I thought it was pretty daring and much better than most shows back then. The high production cost was due to the (then state-of-the-art) special laser effects that shot out into the audience and all around the theatre. Nothing that you haven't seen in the latest Cher concert, but it was "brand spankin' new" back then.
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"big - the musical" actually LOST more than it originaly COST. They kept it open for nine months, most weeks not even earning their weekly running costs. The producers kept pouring more money into it, believing that sales would improve. "So we got zero Tony awards and business sucks - summer is coming and business will pick up!... So business didn't really improve - the holidays are coming and business will pick up!"
If they had closed in May they only would have lost their original $10 million investment. By running through December, they ended up losing $12 million.
When it closes Sept 3, LORD OF THE RINGS will have lost its entire $27 million investement, though by selling the set to the London producers they will offeset that a little and there is the (very small) chance the London production will be a success and send money back.
SUNSET BLVD is the title most often cited for cumulative loss when you add the losses from the London, Broadway, Toronto and touring productions. $30 million at least.
Cast albums are NOT "soundtracks." Live theatre does not use a "soundtrack." If it did, it wouldn't be live theatre!
I host a weekly one-hour radio program featuring cast album selections as well as songs by cabaret, jazz and theatre artists. The program, FRONT ROW CENTRE is heard Sundays 9 to 10 am and also Saturdays from 8 to 9 am (eastern times) on www.proudfm.com
I feel that no thread about flops would be complete without a mention of Frank Wildhorn. His Jekyll & Hyde, Scarlett Pimpernel (all three or four versions), The Civil War and Dracula all were massive flops on Broadway (though some later recouped on the road and internationally) and collectively lost more than $30 million. That must be some sort of record for one composer.
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"The Devil Be Hittin' Me" -- Whitney
Hasn't it been the case that though Sondheim may be popular now, his shows were flops when they opened? They didn't necessarily lose a lot of money, however.
I wasn't aware what a huge flop Sunset Blvd was. Hm.
All of Sondheim's shows have lost money, except Forum and the current Sweeney. However, they have rarely had HUGE budgets. Passion was done for $4 mil instead of the normal $10 mil at the time.
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As Tom Monster said, with the exception of Follies, none of Sondheim's shows had particularly large budgets to begin with and most of his shows that flopped, managed to repay a decent percentage of the capitalization. Forum, Company, A Little Night Music, Side By Side By Sondheim, the original Sweeney (though it took 11 years), the original Into the Woods and the 90s Forum revival all recouped eventually. Anyone Can Whistle and Merrily both lost their entire investments, but neither cost much to begin with.
"What a story........ everything but the bloodhounds snappin' at her rear end." -- Birdie
[http://margochanning.broadwayworld.com/]
"The Devil Be Hittin' Me" -- Whitney