Stand-by Joined: 2/14/17
Austin 2017-2018
The Kig and I
An American in Paris
Finding Neverland
School of Rock
A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder
Rent (20th Anniversary tour)
Book of Mormon (for the third time in four years, I believe)
And Hamilton has been announced for the 2018-2019 series.
Chorus Member Joined: 5/23/16
Detroit announced this morning:
Love Never Dies (Fisher Theater) October 17-29
An American in Paris (Detroit Opera House) November 28-December 10
The Bodyguard (Fisher Theater) January 16-28
Finding Neverland (Fisher Theater) February 6-18
School of Rock (Fisher Theater) April 10-22
On Your Feet! (Fisher Theater) May 1-13
Hamilton confirmed for 2018-2019 season, and current subscribers will get first access to tickets.
Additional non-subscription shows:
Gobsmacked, The Color Purple, Les Miserables, Cinderella, and Wicked
Stand-by Joined: 8/18/12
Broadway in Detroit:
Love Never Dies
An American in Paris
The Bodyguard
Fidning Neverland
School of Rock
On Your Feet
A disappointment for me. I might try to catch Finding Neverland with cheap seats because I loved the film but that's it. The Broadway in Detroit series used to get the better shows in Michigan, now it gets the same stuff that the Wharton Center and other venues get. What happened? Here's hoping the Opera House season makes up for this.
Detroit (Nederlander) announced:
Love Never Dies
An American in Paris
The Bodyguard
Finding Neverland
School of Rock
On Your Feet
Have seen the filmed stage production of Love Never Dies. Saw The Bodyguard in London and On Your Feet in Chicago. Excited for An American in Paris and Finding Neverland and to see On Your Feet again. I guess School of Rock will be new, so can check that off. So, will probably get season tickets.
Dayton Ohio
8/8 - 8/13 The Little Mermaid
10/3 - 10/8 In the Heights
11/7 - 11/12 An American In Paris
2/13 - 2/18 The Sound of Music
3/20 - 3/25 Something Rotten
4/11 - 4/22 The Phantom of the Opera
5/22 - 5/27 Beautiful
Chorus Member Joined: 11/8/06
Cleveland
2017-18 KeyBank Broadway Series
10/17 - 11/05 Waitress (National Tour Launch)
12/5 - 12/23 On Your Feet
01/09 - 01/28 Love Never Dies
03/06 - 03/25 Rent 20th Anniversary Tour
04/10 - 04/29 The Humans
05/02 - 05/27 Aladdin
07/17 - 08/26 Hamilton
Smith Center-- Las Vegas
Something Rotten 8/8-8/13
Curious Incident 9/19-9/24
The Little Mermaid 10/3-10/8
The King and I 10/25-10/29
The Bodyguard 11/21-11/26
Rent--20th anniversary tour 1/31-2/4
Love Never Dies 3/20-25
The Color Purple 4/24-4/29
Hamilton 5/29--6/24
When do the theatres in DC usually announce? I can't find when they'll be announcing anywhere on the Kennedy Center and National Theatre sites.
Kennedy Center should be within the next week or so!
The National I believe usually comes out in April-ish.
Hoping waitress makes its way to Chicago
Leading Actor Joined: 5/9/15
The Denver Center announced its 2017-2018 season, along with the Pre-Broadway tryout of Frozen I believe we are getting every major tour next year, except Bright Star.
Something Rotten
Rent Nov.
Chicago
Elf
Waitress
The King and I
Stomp
Hamilton
Aladdin
School of Rock
The Book of Mormon
Les Misérables
On Your Feet!
Call_me_jorge said: "Hoping waitress makes its way to Chicago
"
Oh, you know it will! My predictions for Chicago are:
Waitress
The Color Purple
Love Never Dies (after all, Phantom was just here)
The Humans or School of Rock
And a new musical.
Broadway Star Joined: 10/9/16
Kennedy Center is announcing their theater season in April.
http://www.kennedy-center.org/pages/specialevents/seasonannouncement
Featured Actor Joined: 9/14/16
Wilmington, Delaware announced today (Playhouse on Rodney Square). Remember, Wilmington only has about 72,000 residents, AND we are a half-hour south of Philly, so we rarely get the "A" list tours. We DO get some equity tours- had Gents Guide and Kinky Boots this season. (The stage can fit most productions, the original version of Les Mis came here and the turntable fit).
That said, the subscription series is (all have 8 performances)
Wizard of Oz
Cabaret
Dirty Dancing
Motown
The following are add-ons (three performances each)
The Illisionists
Dance to the Movies
The announcement is proof you can't please everyone. For years the series was 6 shows with some add-ons. A few years ago, they had to go to 5 main shows because of what was available- and people complained it was too few. Last year it was 5 shows plus 3 add-ons- and people complained it was too many!
I'd had hoped something like Waitress, Bright Star, Love Never Dies or School of Rock was coming, but I understand we are not high on touring producers priority list.
My apologies if this was already asked, and I scanned back several pages, but does anyone know when the Blumenthal Center for the Performing Arts in Charlotte, NC will announce the new 2017-2018 season? The representative on the phone said "sometime this Spring" but my guess it's nearer the end of this month? I've already seen what DPAC has to offer. After having such wonderful shows in Pittsburgh I'm hoping Charlotte gets some great shows.
dmwnc1959 said: "My apologies if this was already asked, and I scanned back several pages, but does anyone know when the Blumenthal Center for the Performing Arts in Charlotte, NC will announce the new 2017-2018 season? The representative on the phone said "sometime this Spring" but my guess it's nearer the end of this month? I've already seen what DPAC has to offer. After having such wonderful shows in Pittsburgh I'm hoping Charlotte gets some great shows.
Blumenthal Performing Arts 2017-18 Broadway Lights Season:
On Your Feet: Oct 31st - Nov 5, 2017
Les Miserables: Dec 13 - 17th, 2017
School of Rock: Jan 9th - 14th, 2018
The Phantom of the Opera: Jan 17th - 28th, 2018
Waitress: March 13th - 18th, 2018
Beautiful: April 17th - 22nd, 2018
The Humans: May 1st - 6th, 2018
Something Rotten: May 8th - 13th, 2018
Bright Star: June 26th - July 1st, 2018
The Color Purple: July 10th - 15th, 2018
The Book of Mormon: July 24th - 29th, 2018
The Lion King: Aug 22nd - Sept 9th
Love Never Dies: Sept 11th - 16th, 2018
Hamilton: Oct 10th - Nov 4th, 2018
I'm very excited for this season.
THANK YOU and Wow! Very nice indeed!!! I can see me buying season tickets, and despite having already seen Something Rotten and The Book of Mormon I'd gladly seen them again. The rest of the shows will be 'first timers' for me. :)
Understudy Joined: 11/27/11
FWIW Love Never Dies has posted an idea of their tour schedule on their site:
http://www.loveneverdies.com/ustour/tour-dates/
Taking a look at the gaps, it wouldn't surprise me if there are stops in DC (after Baltimore) either Philadelphia or Boston (after Providence), and Chicago ( before or after Minneapolis).
Chorus Member Joined: 11/8/06
RockStarNYC said: "FWIW Love Never Dies has posted an idea of their tour schedule on their site:
http://www.loveneverdies.com/ustour/tour-dates/
Taking a look at the gaps, it wouldn't surprise me if there are stops in DC (after Baltimore) either Philadelphia or Boston (after Providence), and Chicago ( before or after Minneapolis).
Cleveland is 01/09 - 01/28 2017 which is yet to be listed on Love Never Dies website
Looks like the performing arts centers that announced their seasons in the past week are not reflected on there website
Las Vegas is 03/20 - 03/25 2017
Charlotte is 09/11 - 09/16 2018
Featured Actor Joined: 3/2/11
Taking a look at the gaps, it wouldn't surprise me if there are stops in DC (after Baltimore) either Philadelphia or Boston (after Providence), and Chicago ( before or after Minneapolis).
"
There's usually at least a few months between when something plays in Providence and when it's in Boston so they don't seem to use geographic proximity logic when booking.
Broadway Legend Joined: 2/25/05
The process of planning a tour route almost always involves a drunk chimpanzee throwing darts at a map.
trpguyy said: "The process of planning a tour route almost always involves a drunk chimpanzee throwing darts at a map."
Not really. Think of the amount of individual shows there on tour, plus the amount of cities/presenters who each choose a different selection of shows, and then have to fit them into their schedule. It's all one big interconnected puzzle.
Featured Actor Joined: 12/13/06
And factoring in that producers would much rather spend less $$ on travel for cast/crew between cities, making it more lucrative to pay for bus fare than air fare. City distance definitely plays into things.
Broadway Star Joined: 8/5/14
Ignoring the fact that people seemed to miss the joke, it really is a puzzle that doesn't always make sense. Take OYF for example. They are in Houston in November, but don't hit Dallas and San Antonio until Feb/March. They are far enough away from each other that you aren't going to cannibalize your audience, but close enough that it would be a fairly cheap drive (I used to do it in a bus all the time).
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