CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
#200CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/4/26 at 12:51pm
Betty Buckley gives a full throated endorsement to The Jellicle Ball in a Guest Essay for the NY Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/04/opinion/cats-musical-ballroom-culture-broadway.html
#201CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/4/26 at 2:06pm
Here is a clickable gift article to the Buckley opinion piece:
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/04/opinion/cats-musical-ballroom-culture-broadway.html?unlocked_article_code=1.YVA.f2g0.2tMspsQ524Xu&smid=url-share
#202CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/4/26 at 5:41pm
That Buckley article was a very lovely tribute and I hope people read it. She was the original, and so she knows her character best - and to give such an endorsement may actually help the fuddy-duddy purists a chance to try something new.
I was at the show today and the judges were the House Mother of Allure and Icon and Overall Father Stan from the House of Elle. I will say that the energy of this matinee crowd was…barely there. A few of us were hype in the audience, but it almost felt like everyone was asleep.
The show is in great shape and they’ve already frozen everything for opening. ALW was in attendance today too.
bear882
Understudy Joined: 11/7/25
#203CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/4/26 at 11:01pm
bryan2 said: "Just a question? Does the POSING get repetitive and boring , Cats in itself is repetitive musically so I cant understand how this sustains interest after the first 10 or 15 minutes of being wowed by the moves. The version of MEMORY is spectacular , I was surprised how good it was sung. I am curious if this is just something people love of just feel they have to love to seem cool...thanks for any responses. I want to see this so bad to see for myself
I will try to address this, because as I posted after seeing the show, I am not an expert on ballroom or even the original version of Cats, which I never saw in person and watched once on BroadwayHD. I am a cisgender guy past 60. I usually get annoyed when I can’t follow all the lyrics or if everyone around me is getting jokes I didn’t catch. I kind of threw out my usual rule book for the evening.
I deliberately saw the show on a Friday night on my recent trip, assuming I would get a revved up audience (it was the third preview) and the full experience.
The main thing I can say is that the show features great choreography from the start. The actors aren’t just posing. It’s high-level dance from most of the company. The lyrics aren’t always clearly understood (they’re probably working on that) and the show is a bit chaotic. But it was easy for me to follow and I would recommend the mezzanine, and ideally the center, because the lighting helps guide you about what to watch. But sometimes it was fun to let my eyes wander. There is a lot to see.
I didn’t love everything about the revival (ironically, Andre de Shields was a disappointment despite a great star entrance and a funny ad libbed glare at an audience member who spoke out of turn) but the show made total sense to me. The world it evokes and pays tribute to isn’t my world, but that’s why I go to the theater. And there are moments in the show that are just spectacular and made me very glad I didn’t miss it.
Will you enjoy the show as much as I did? I make no promises. A member of my party enjoyed many elements of the show, especially the choreography, but found it a bit exhausting. But it sounds like you know Cats better than I did. Go in with an open mind, learn a bit about ballroom culture, and have fun.
#204CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/5/26 at 12:08am
Tonight's (Sat) evening show's judges were Trammell Tillman (Severance) and Jelani Alladin.
Energy was amazing... hate hearing the matinee crowd was a dud. :-(
House right Box F 1-3 seats were a blast! Might not have liked them as much with a traditionally staged show or non-musical, but for this they were epic; felt right in the middle but also kinda "peeking in." Was cool, and a bonus was they're well priced.
#205CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/5/26 at 12:14am
TRAMELL AND JELANI?!?! I would’ve fainted. That would’ve been a moment for both of them and Tugger to do battle in the Body and/or Realness category.
chrishuyen
Broadway Legend Joined: 11/12/14
#206CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/5/26 at 1:49am
I was at the matinee today as well, TDF put me in mezz row F on the left side, which was a pretty good seat as I had a good line of sight to the DJ and could see pretty much the whole runway (just missed some of the actors walking in front of it so I wouldn't say I really missed anything and never found myself leaning to try to catch anything).
I thought the crowd was better than what quizking perceived. It was definitely a bit tentative in the beginning, unsure of whether they could cheer and applaud mid-song (I think Victoria's solo was a bit of a sticking point since that music is more balletic), but it seemed to have dialed up by the time we got to Tugger and was a decent level for the rest of the show. A LOT of people came back from intermission with fans and it seems like they sold out about halfway through intermission, so it seems like people really leaned into it once they got into the swing of things. It still feels different from when it was at the PAC (or perhaps I was also sitting in a seat that was very different from where I sat before), but I though the level of crowd engagement was fairly encouraging, and I think it'll only grow as the run goes on.
Overall, I'm glad the show transferred as intact as it is. Some upgraded costumes, minor adjustments in the staging, different interactions with the audience--they all added up to a fantastic experience. I took a Cats skeptic (he had never actually seen Cats and I don't think he would've liked a traditional staging of it) who came out raving about it, and I've already seen at least one social media post where someone who hadn't been planning on seeing it started considering it after the Betty Buckley article so I'm optimistic it'll really find its audience.
For those that might be sensitive to volume, I found the overture extremely loud and wishing I had brought my earplugs. The levels came down a bit after that but I'd say it's still on the louder side of Broadway shows. I'm sure they're still fiddling with the sound design overall though, as I found the harmonies in Gumbie Cat hard to understand, and the vocals on Rum Tum Tugger seemed mixed a bit too low (though Sydney James Harcourt sounded fine by the time of his solo in Mistoffeles). Also, did the DJ ever leave the booth off Broadway? I don't know if I just wasn't paying attention but I was pleasantly surprised how much Ken Ard was involved in the proceedings and now just isolated in the box.
I have a hard time imagining anything else will beat out this show for choreography and costumes, and yes, revival as well. I know everyone's talking about Andre de Shields but I'd love to see nominations for Sydney James Harcourt, Emma Sofia, and Dudney Joseph Jr (who I think isn't really given enough credit for holding the evening together). But there are SO MANY people who don't necessarily have a showy role but still add a lot with their mere presence, and I hope they get recognized at some point for that (does anyone happen to know why the Chita Riveras didn't do performer awards for off Broadway? I went to check and the choreographers got an award but no awards were given to individuals).
#207CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/5/26 at 8:43am
Maybe the mezzanine was more engaged, and I would assume so based on the louder reaction they gave Munk during Virgin Vogue. Where I was sitting in the rear orchestra, there were a lot of deer-in-headlights older patrons.
Re: The DJ - Capital Kaos never left the booth during off-Broadway, but he was also (I believe) actively mixing and sweetening the show since the orchestra was smaller. Kaos wasn’t able to return since he had his foot amputated last year. With Ard, they were able to make use of his extensive dance background, as well as someone who understood the show since he was the original Macavity. When I saw they added and rearranged moments to have him in on the action, I was thrilled because I couldn’t imagine hiring him only to consign him to a box all night
#208CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/5/26 at 9:35am
this show doesn't appeal to the typical matinee audience(older people, school groups, etc.). I've wondered if they considered doing later times on Saturdays(3:30 & 9:30?)?
#209CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/5/26 at 9:44am
uncageg said: "Here is a clickable gift article to the Buckley opinion piece:
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/04/opinion/cats-musical-ballroom-culture-broadway.html?unlocked_article_code=1.YVA.f2g0.2tMspsQ524Xu&smid=url-share"
"Michael Riedel...The Perez Hilton of the New York Theatre scene"
- Craig Hepworth, What's On Stage
#210CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/5/26 at 10:45am
ACL2006 said: "this show doesn't appeal to the typical matinee audience(older people, school groups, etc.). I've wondered if they considered doing later times on Saturdays(3:30 & 9:30?)?"
Keep in mind, the show is 2:45. A 9:30 start would mean that the audience would get out after midnight and good luck with transportation at that hour.
I do think bucking the Wednesday matinee and pushing it to Sunday night would be the right move, but this is a bear of a show to do twice in one day. I do think at least one non traditional showtime can benefit the show greatly but the proof of the current model hasn’t yielded enough data
#211CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/5/26 at 10:56am
But doing a 5 show weekend of CATS would be brutal for these performers.
#212CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/5/26 at 11:08am
ACL2006 said: "this show doesn't appeal to the typical matinee audience(older people, school groups, etc.). I've wondered if they considered doing later times on Saturdays(3:30 & 9:30?)?"
I feel like this would be more detrimental to them overall, it's not like the show isn't selling they're just not as boisterous.
#213CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/6/26 at 10:30pm
Tonight’s guest judges were J. Harrison Ghee and Dominique Jackson. When she appeared onstage I almost dropped dead, the bitch is STUNNING and I love her so damn much.
#214CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/6/26 at 11:26pm
Jordan Catalano said: "Tonight’s guest judges were J. Harrison Ghee and Dominique Jackson. When she appeared onstage I almost dropped dead, the bitch is STUNNING and I love her so damn much."
I was there tonight, in one of the box seats right above Dominique, It was so lovely so see people react to her and give her so much love. Not knowing the show, I had no idea she and Ghee would be judges!
I also spotted Michael Musto...not judge-worthy.
The damn show still makes no sense, but I had the absolute best time and gonna buy tickets before opening night.
"Hey little girls, look at all the men in shiny shirts and no wives!" - Jackie Hoffman, Xanadu, 19 Feb 2008
nycward
Stand-by Joined: 4/7/16
#215CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 12:21pm
Last Tuesday we had Whoopie!! The whole judge bit feels kinda lame to me as they're escorted out to make way for the royal entrance of Andre and never to return again.
orlikethecolorpurple
Featured Actor Joined: 1/28/16
#216CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 12:48pm
Judges don't sit with Andre?! I loved that at PAC. When I saw it there, Peppermint was a judge and she was so gagged by a moment in the show that she got up walked out and walked back in. It was hilarious.
#217CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 12:48pm
I was at the Saturday matinee, sitting center orchestra (right in front of Andrew Lloyd Webber, fwiw) - and while it didn't have the same exact energy as PAC, I definitely didn't feel like it was a dud at all. It was of course an older crowd, as any Saturday matinee would be, and we even heard ALW say as much to the guys he was with, but I felt like everyone was enjoying themselves! It wasn't a lot of shouting out and fan-waving, more like the kind of enthusiastic cheering and clapping you'd get at any other well-received musical.
I had posted here a couple of weeks ago about bringing my 80-year-old parents (and having them watch Paris Is Burning first, which we did), and they absolutely loved it. But no, they of course weren't going to shout out yaaaaas and werk, that's just not a realistic expectation from a lot of the older Broadway-going crowd. But it didn't mean they loved it any less, and they can't stop talking about it.
I will say that there was one point when I thought I saw two cast members sort of roll their eyes at each other in a "can you believe this audience is so dead" way, and I got a little offended. We were all having a great time, you don't need to chastise us from the stage for not being what you think is a perfect ball audience. It really took me out of it for a moment, and they need to recognize - especially as the show goes on and you get a less in-the-know crowd - that at the end of the day it's a Broadway show and not an actual ball, and any other musical would be thrilled to get the kind of cheering and excitement that our audience was absolutely giving.
Looking forward to the reviews tonight - I assume they'll be great. And DAMMIT I can't believe I missed Tramell Tillman by a matter of hours!
#218CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 1:44pm
JudyDenmark said: "
I will say that there was one point when I thought I saw two cast members sort of roll their eyes ateach other in a "can you believe this audience is so dead" way, and I got a little offended. We were all having a greattime, you don't need to chastise us from the stage for not being what you think is a perfectball audience. It really took me out of it for a moment, and they need to recognize - especially as the show goes on and you get a less in-the-know crowd - that at the end of the day it's a Broadway show and not an actual ball, and any other musical would bethrilledto get the kind of cheering and excitement that our audience was absolutely giving."
Its called a character choice. You're at a Ball, competitors respond to their audience, they're catty, they're shady. This is a lot over two people rolling their eyes... there's no reason to take it personally.
#219CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 1:50pm
TheatreFan4 said: "JudyDenmark said: "
I will say that there was one point when I thought I saw two cast members sort of roll their eyes ateach other in a "can you believe this audience is so dead" way, and I got a little offended. We were all having a greattime, you don't need to chastise us from the stage for not being what you think is a perfectball audience. It really took me out of it for a moment, and they need to recognize - especially as the show goes on and you get a less in-the-know crowd - that at the end of the day it's a Broadway show and not an actual ball, and any other musical would bethrilledto get the kind of cheering and excitement that our audience was absolutely giving."
Its called a character choice. You're at a Ball, competitors respond to their audience, they're catty, they're shady. This is a lot over two people rolling their eyes... there's no reason to take it personally."
It wasn't shade directed at the audience - that would've been a totally fitting choice. It was a subtle moment between two actors.
JSquared2
Broadway Legend Joined: 3/23/17
#220CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 1:59pm
JudyDenmark said: "TheatreFan4 said: "JudyDenmark said: "
I will say that there was one point when I thought I saw two cast members sort of roll their eyes ateach other in a "can you believe this audience is so dead" way, and I got a little offended. We were all having a greattime, you don't need to chastise us from the stage for not being what you think is a perfectball audience. It really took me out of it for a moment, and they need to recognize - especially as the show goes on and you get a less in-the-know crowd - that at the end of the day it's a Broadway show and not an actual ball, and any other musical would bethrilledto get the kind of cheering and excitement that our audience was absolutely giving."
Its called a character choice. You're at a Ball, competitors respond to their audience, they're catty, they're shady. This is a lot over two people rolling their eyes... there's no reason to take it personally."
It wasn't shade directed at the audience - that would've been a totally fitting choice. It was a subtle moment between two actors."
Again, in your own words, "there was one point when I thought I saw two cast members sort of roll their eyes at each other in a "can you believe this audience is so dead" way, and I got a little offended. So you thought you might have maybe seen 2 performers possibly make some sort of eye gesture to one another --- and THAT was all it took to offend you?? Okey doke.
#221CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 2:17pm
JSquared2 said: "JudyDenmark said: "TheatreFan4 said: "JudyDenmark said: "
I will say that there was one point when I thought I saw two cast members sort of roll their eyes ateach other in a "can you believe this audience is so dead" way, and I got a little offended. We were all having a greattime, you don't need to chastise us from the stage for not being what you think is a perfectball audience. It really took me out of it for a moment, and they need to recognize - especially as the show goes on and you get a less in-the-know crowd - that at the end of the day it's a Broadway show and not an actual ball, and any other musical would bethrilledto get the kind of cheering and excitement that our audience was absolutely giving."
Its called a character choice. You're at a Ball, competitors respond to their audience, they're catty, they're shady. This is a lot over two people rolling their eyes... there's no reason to take it personally."
It wasn't shade directed at the audience - that would've been a totally fitting choice. It was a subtle moment between two actors."
Again, in your own words, "there was one point when I thought I saw two cast members sort of roll their eyes ateach other in a "can you believe this audience is so dead" way, and I got a little offended. So you thought you might havemaybe seen 2 performers possibly make some sort of eye gesture to one another --- and THAT was all it took to offend you?? Okey doke."
Ok, you're taking this way too seriously. We all enjoyed it, and it's weird to see/hear commentary about the audience being a dud when it felt to me like everyone was fully enjoying themselves.
#222CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 2:20pm
Jordan Catalano said: "Tonight’s guest judges were J. Harrison Ghee and Dominique Jackson. When she appeared onstage I almost dropped dead, the bitch is STUNNING and I love her so damn much."
I would have almost dropped dead too! LOVE her! I still pull up the "She Shed" moment in that House Hunters episode she did to brighten my day sometimes!
MezzA101
Broadway Legend Joined: 3/29/23
#223CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 2:43pm
Watch the Cats of Broadway’s ‘Jellicle Ball’ Werk
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/07/t-magazine/cats-jellicle-ball-broadway-performance.html?unlocked_article_code=1.ZFA.76uu.-qknBy1BLVZF&smid=nytcore-android-share
#224CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL Previews
Posted: 4/7/26 at 3:54pm
Heading to L5Y tonight, but if the world ends this evening, would MUCH rather be at the Jellicle Ball tonight! Toi, toi, toi, to all involved!!
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