BECKY SHAW Previews
#1BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/17/26 at 12:00am
The Broadway premiere of Becky Shaw starts up at the Helen Hayes Theatre tomorrow night (March 18). A dark comedy, Gina Gionfriddo’s Pulitzer Prize finalist features Patrick Ball, Alden Ehrenreich, Madeline Brewer, Linda Emond, and Lauren Patten; Trip Cullman directs. An opening night is slated for April 6, and the play will run through June 14.
“A newlywed couple fixes up two romantically challenged friends: wife’s best friend meets husband’s sexy and strange new co-worker. When an evening calculated to bring happiness takes a dark turn, crisis and comedy ensue in this wickedly funny play that asks what we owe the people we love and the strangers who land on our doorstep.”
Who’s going?
#2BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/18/26 at 2:42pm
TodayTix says 2:30 runtime, including intermission.
Anyone here going tonight? Understandable if CATS is stealing the thunder.
#3BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/18/26 at 11:01pm
We got any initial reports?
#4BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/19/26 at 12:38am
EDSOSLO858 said: "TodayTix says 2:30 runtime, including intermission.
Anyone here going tonight? Understandable if CATS is stealing the thunder."
I was there tonight and 2h30m is pretty accurate; curtain call was around 10:35.
And you could definitely hear the cats being let out of the bag across the street during the last few scenes. I was front row mezz though so it wasn't overly distracting; I can only assume it was louder if you were orchestra level.
Really curious what everyone else says about this one. I've never seen any previous production of it so I have nothing to compare it to. And being very first preview, I hate judging too harshly... but I found most of the characters too unlikeable for the play to even be enjoyable. Thoughts?
#5BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/19/26 at 7:29am
I have not seen it, but I first read the play a decade ago and found it laugh out loud funny on the page. It's a wickedly dark frame on a generation whose self-importance - what might be called emotional entitlement - defines their social interactions. The story is narrow in scope - a handful of people inhabiting what used to be called "the dating scene" - wrestling with intimacy and rigidly defined expectations. I suspect that its focus might feel more like a romantic ecosystem of 10-15 years ago, since the rituals and patterns of connection are mostly old school. People meet through friends and acquaintances, and the play explores forms of rejection with a brutal prism. So I'm wondering how well it fits into 2026. It doesn't surprise me that some will find the characters unworthy of 2.5 hours of their time, if decidedly - hilariously - recognizable. .To those who've seen it, let me know how my take on the script fits with what you witness.
#6BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/22/26 at 2:33am
It's a true breath of fresh air this season. It's funny and the audience slowly eats it up.
Alden Ehrenreich's Max steals the show & absolutely deserves a Tony nomination (and even the win) this season (his first stage role ever). Linda Emond is a close second. Lauren Patten is the weak link here - she seems like she acting and not as natural. She's serviceable but the rest of the cast makes it work better. Perhaps she's better suited for musicals. The direction is quick, smart and fun.
The show is totally worth seeing amongst this season's dramatic offerings. It's a great time that passes quickly - and deeper than it appears on its surface. Not surprised this was a Pulitzer finalist. (don't let the bad, and confusing, 2nd Stage Playbill artwork dissuade you). This will be in the running for the Best Revival of a Play this season (and I loved Oedipus).
iluvtheatertrash
Broadway Legend Joined: 11/9/04
#7BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/22/26 at 5:21am
Not surprised to hear that about Patten as I have always felt she is Acting with a capital A, as I put it sometimes. She's never done much for me, I'm afraid.
kevinr
Featured Actor Joined: 2/21/05
#8BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/22/26 at 10:24am
How was the stage door afterwards? Planning to see this in June.
Updated On: 3/22/26 at 10:24 AM
TheOtherOne2
Stand-by Joined: 4/22/23
#9BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/22/26 at 12:22pm
CoffeeBreak said: "It's a true breath of fresh air this season. It's funnyand the audience slowly eats it up.
Alden Ehrenreich's Max steals the show & absolutely deserves a Tony nomination this season (his first stage role ever -he usually does film). Linda Emond is a close second. Lauren Patten isthe weak link here - she feels to be acting and not natural.(the show couldn't secure their original choices for this role) She's serviceable but the rest of the cast makes bit work better. Perhaps she's better suited for musicals.Scene transitions still seem in progress during previews.
The show is totally worth seeing amongst this season's dramatic offerings. It's longer but a great time that passes quickly - and deeper than it appears on itssurface. Not surprised this was a Pulitzer finalist. (don't let the bad, and confusing,2nd Stage Playbill artwork dissuade you)."
Can't comment on the rest, but I'm not at all suprised about Alden Ehrenreich, who's been as good as the actors who've won Oscars in the movies he's been in in the past few years. I'd see this for him.
#10BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/22/26 at 3:45pm
Ehrenreich could give Levey (Giant) some real competition if the Tony committee can recognize his ease in this tricky role.
ViniFromBrazil
Stand-by Joined: 1/26/16
#11BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/22/26 at 4:40pm
I was at the performance that ended just now. The house was packed and the audience was eating up absolutely everything that Alden Ehrenreich was doing. If someone told me he had brought his fan club to the theater I would've believed it! He's quite good, though. The text is sharp and the performances were good, I just wish the direction was more creative.
After watching The Pitt I wonder what Patrick Ball would've done with the Max role. He was also great but I found his character a little dull.
#12BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/23/26 at 11:12am
That's interesting, when the cast was announced, I had presumed Ball was playing Max. I also thought Brewer was a natural for the other female role, a woman with a decided edge and very much in Brewer's wheelhouse.
#13BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/23/26 at 11:21am
ViniFromBrazil said: "After watching The Pitt I wonder whatPatrick Ball would've done with the Max role. He was also great but I found his charactera little dull."
Alden Ehrenreich is perfectly cast here as Max. Ball is fine enough actor, but he's in the right role for him here. Brewer could have played either role well I think.
pinktonyclub
Swing Joined: 6/11/25
chrishuyen
Broadway Legend Joined: 11/12/14
#15BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 3/25/26 at 11:48pm
I saw this tonight and enjoyed it a ton, and it was nice to hear the audience laughing it up as well. Linda Emond was absolutely the MVP for me and I was disppointed she wasn't on stage more, but I was also quite impressed at Madeline Brewer's portrayal of Becky (I hadn't seen her in anything else before), as I think that's a tough needle to thread. She reminded me a bit of Amy from Company but with a bit more steel in her backbone. I do think Alden Ehrenreich is quite good as Max, but I'm not quite as taken with him as others are. I think maybe him and Lauren Patten are still navigating their scenes and their relationship together, as the scenes between the two of them were where I was least convinced about both of them, though I found them to be quite good in their other scenes.
The play is a lot of fun in a series of "he's out of line but he's right" moments, and I find it interesting in a way where I could find myself agreeing with all the characters' perspectives at any given moment. But it still feels breezy in a way where I feel like I'd forget most of it in a few months, so I was a bit surprised to see that it was a Pulitzer finalist. But either way, I do recommend this play because I found it a fun time to just relax and revel in some other people being terrible enough to laugh at but not so terrible you feel uncomfortable watching them.
BoringBoredBoard40
Broadway Legend Joined: 9/27/21
#16BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 4/3/26 at 1:02am
People are really sleeping on this production.
I thought it was EXCELLENT and easily one of the best productions of the season. Everyone is firing on all cylinders, and it is just ENDLESSLY FUNNY, the direction is lovely, as are the design choices.
I will also echo everyone else, Alden Enrenreich is phenominal as a really terrible character and I would not be surprise if he gets a TONY nomination. Linda Emond is such fantastic as are Lauren Patten, Madeline Brewer and Patrick Ball.
I can not recommend this more highly, grab a ticket before the sure to be rave reviews come out next week!
#17BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 4/3/26 at 2:18am
Yes.
Can easily see it being nominated for Best Revival of a Play, Best Direction of a Play, Alden Ehrenreich, Linda Edmond ( & maybe Madeline Brewer).
#18BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 4/3/26 at 12:08pm
I'd only read the play, but several times, my DPS copy much enjoyed over the last 12 years. And so I had high expectations for this (arguably overdue) Broadway iteration. It delivers, in every way. The company is just perfection. With a star-making performance by Alden Ehrenreich. The cynically seething Max is deservedly one of the more coveted young male roles in regionals in the last 15 years, and this Broadway debut feels like a damn near definitive take. But everyone is on fire here with one of the true treasures of NY Theater, Linda Emond, delivering big time in the stealth assignment of the season. Even knowing the character from the page, I found Emond's masterful erudition startling, a Jane Austen figure for a postmillennial world, her bon mots executed with either detachment or laser-like focus, knocking out targets with every pointed utterance. I haven't been in an audience that laughed en masse as this one did in years. Comedy, oh so welcome, is a balm; and this comedy, with real teeth, gives you as much to chew on as howl about. Go, get tix before the reviews.
TheOtherOne2
Stand-by Joined: 4/22/23
#19BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 4/3/26 at 12:31pm
^ I was part of last night's exhilarated audience as well and I second this. ^
I hadn't read it, it was completely new to me, and it just crackles. Yes, go.
TheOtherOne2
Stand-by Joined: 4/22/23
#21BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 4/3/26 at 4:45pm
Melissa25 said: "Can anyone share where the TDF seats are?"
We were mid Orchestra, the furthest two seats in Row L house right. We may have missed some elements of some entrances and exits, but there was certainly nothing going on that we heard but did not see.
(Leg room is not to be found in that theatre no matter what you pay, so an aisle seat would have been nice.)
#22BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 4/3/26 at 5:49pm
TheOtherOne2: Melissa25 said: "Can anyone share where the TDF seats are?"
We were mid Orchestra, the furthest two seats in Row L house right. We may have missed some elements of some entrances and exits, but there was certainly nothing going on that we heard but did not see.
(Leg room is not to be found in that theatre no matter what you pay, so an aisle seat would have been nice.)
Thank you!
bear882
Understudy Joined: 11/7/25
#23BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 4/3/26 at 7:15pm
This feels like the one that got away. We seriously considered seeing this on our trip in its first week of previews but didn’t. At least I can recommend it to a family member who lives in New York City.
MidWestTheater
Understudy Joined: 9/26/22
#24BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 4/3/26 at 8:26pm
We saw this on our trip last weekend, going in completely cold and was enthralled. We found it so funny, almost like Neil LaBute but lite. Alden Ehrenreich completely blew me away. He was so perfect for a very tricky character, that has to be charming but also a dick. If him or Linda Edmond do not get tony nominations, what are we even doing. I even thought Madeline Brewer was fantastic. When we saw it and she made her entrance one person clapped, which was kind of strange, then I realized that person was tony winner Miriam Silverman. Most people don't seem to even know about this play, but I think when the reviews start coming they definitely will. Plus, this play will now be part of my history because I proposed to my boyfriend before we went to see it.
#25BECKY SHAW Previews
Posted: 4/3/26 at 9:02pm
I was in G6 and G8 of the orchestra. Right side, but not next to the wall. I missed only an up left corner of the last set, where no action takes place. It's a down center staging, much of it hugging the downstage line, and I was delighted to be so close. In a packed house.
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