Click below to access all the grosses from all the shows for the week ending 2/1/2009 in BroadwayWorld.com's grosses section.
Also, you will find information on each show's historical grosses, cumulative grosses and other statistics on how each show stacked up this week and in the past.
****
not good... but I guess this is expected
ill donate my 82 cents i have in my pocket, see! the economy picks up with just a pocket full of change
At least a few of the straight plays are doing better than last week.
With these numbers, how much longer can Shrek and Avenue Q hold on?
Broadway Legend Joined: 10/10/08
Oof.
Broadway Legend Joined: 5/19/03
I'd worry more about Shrek than Avenue Q. I didn't like Shrek much, but that number still burns.
At least I'll be doing my little part for the war effort this week...Kids Night and "In The Heights" tomorrow.
If Shrek stays at 50%-60%, it won't be around much. Avenue Q recouped years ago and it's weekly running costs are low, unlike Shrek.
Broadway Legend Joined: 7/23/06
Do we expect closing notices this week?
I mean honestly how much longer can Shrek, Avenue Q & August hang out.
Would STP close early? b/c I see they haven't been doing amazingly well
Chorus Member Joined: 2/1/09
probably not on stp. they just re-couped, and are skimming by. the producer is doing so many other shows, he can probably bank roll it.
Coolkid, I don't know but you better buy the tickets fast!
I sure hope August: Osage County can stay on. That and In The Heights are the two shows I care about most.
Updated On: 2/2/09 at 03:58 PM
Don't forget Shrek has a big studio producing it, so I'd imagine they'll at least hold on until the Tony nominations to see what they get and if that will help business. I wouldn't be incredibly worried about it at this point, I think they can wait a few weeks for more family buzz to build.
At least, I hope so. I really want to go back and hear "Who I'd Be" live again.
Dreamworks will definitely keep Shrek afloat until Tony time, no doubt about it in my mind.
Featured Actor Joined: 10/15/03
Broadway Star Joined: 3/5/04
It is only gonna get worse ....the economy is in a depression....how long did it take the gov't to finally admit we are in a recession.....this is the season to lower prices so that New Yorkers can attend...there are NO tourists in town...and we will not see an upturn until the middle of March...but even so,not in the numbers that we are used to. If the producers of Shrek wanna hang in there, good luck...sad for the cast to look out into that vast auditorium and see 1,000 empty seats-they all probably wanna fart and belch. Admit it is a floperoo and give the millions getting flushed down the toilet to a charity- one of which was a victim of Madoff perhaps. Tony nominations do not make for box office- winning the best musical does. And this drek will not win.
Yes the economy is hurting but the movie industry just reported their first ever one billion dollar January. People need an escape more than ever. Broadway may fare much better than many industries.
there are NO tourists in town
Really? So all those people clogging the sidewalks in and around Times Square taking pictures and being lost this past weekend were locals?
Wow.
Broadway Star Joined: 3/5/04
I didn't have the pleasure of walking through TS this weekend....but if there were tourists, they certainly weren't attending shows....they were too busy taking pictures of the theater marquees and saving their money
Billy Elliot will win best musical so the best Shrek can hope for is some nods to the stars & technical ones. Not much & probably will not stave off the inevitable but take it where you can get it.
When Shrek folds, producers will think twice about brining in what should be a sure thing.
After Billy wins, how long before it jacks up prices. Even in this economy, Greed will always rise to the top & trump common sense.The concessions are equally ridiculously priced.
Leading Actor Joined: 1/10/09
Bad box office news indeed. Hope they're better next week.
Leading Actor Joined: 12/6/07
movie prices are up because people are opting for a $12 evening over an expensive $40 dinner, or quick getaway vacations.
the comparison between a movie ticket and a broadway show ticket is ludicrous, not to mention that broadway survives on tourism which is taking a big hit, no matter how crowded you think times square is...
evic, it's highly possible that the weekends were relatively full but during the week rather empty. The percentage is over the whole week. Not per show.
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