Machinal
Photograph: Courtesy Margaret Ellen Hall | Machinal
Photograph: Courtesy Margaret Ellen Hall

Off Broadway shows, reviews, tickets and listings

Here is where to find reviews, details, schedules, prices and ticket information about Off Broadway shows in New York

Adam Feldman
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New York theater ranges far beyond the 41 large midtown houses that we call Broadway. Many of the city's most innovative and engaging new plays and musicals can be found Off Broadway, in venues that seat between 100 and 499 people. These more intimate spaces present work in a wide range of styles, from new pieces by major artists at the Public Theater or Playwrights Horizons to crowd-pleasing commercial fare at New World Stages. And even the top Off Broadway shows usually cost less than the best Broadway shows (even if you score cheap tickets to them). Use our comprehensive listings to find reviews, prices, ticket links, curtain times and more for current and upcoming Off Broadway shows.

RECOMMENDED: Off-Off Broadway shows in NYC

Off Broadway shows to see in New York right now: reviews, tickets and listings

  • Musicals
  • Greenwich Village

Michael Vegas and Payton Millet's pop-operatic fantasia on queer themes weaves elements of Mozart's The Magic Flute into the story of Alan Turing, the British computer-science pioneer and gay martyr. Andrew Coopman directs and choreographs; the cast includes Spencer Petro as a defiant Turing and Sara Lucille Law as the wicked coloratura diva of his dreams.

  • Circuses & magic
  • Hell's Kitchen

The British conjurer Jamie Allan (iMagician), a Houdini aficionado who has made his reputation by infusing newfangled technology and emotionally charged storyelling into old-school tricks, appears at New World Stages for a limited run. This latest showcase is directed by Jonathan Goodwin and co-created with Allan's longtime partner in illusions, Tommy Bond.

 

 



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  • Musicals
  • Hell's Kitchen

Angel Kaba directs and choreographs this survey of hip-hop dance, from the mean streets of the Bronx to the world's most prestigious platforms. A cast of ten guides the audience through dance styles including breaking, house, lite feet, popping, locking, krump and body percussion. After a popular engagement last winter, the production returns to Theater 555 for an encore. 

  • Comedy
  • West Village

Writer-comedian Morgan Bassichis unearths the oeuvre of the openly gay queer comic Frank Maya, who broke ground in his industry but died of AIDS before he could fully break out. Bassichis's tribute at the Maya temple includes archival material as well as new meditations on queer culture, loss and survival. Directed by recent Tony winner Sam Pinkleton (Oh, Mary!), the show had a successful trial run at La MaMa, and now decamps to SoHo Playhouse for a longer go. 

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  • Musicals
  • Midtown East

Rock me, Amadeus! The suave Ryan Silverman—familiar to Broadway audiences for his stint of Raoul in The Phantom of the Opera and his many, many tours of duty as Billy Flynn in Chicago —plays Mozart's infamous seducer, murderer and all-around bad boy in a reinvention of the classic opera, featuring a new English translation and rock orchestrations by director Adam B. Levowitz. The principal cast also includes Rachel Zatcoff as Donna Elvira, Anchal Dhir as Donna Anna, Felipe Bombonato as Don Ottavio, Richard Coleman as Leporello and Edwin Jhamaal Davis as the Commander.

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  • Comedy
  • Upper East Side

Jonathan Randell Silver plays Gene Wilder and Jordan Kai Burnett plays Gilda Radner in Cary Gitter's biographical two-hander about the love affair between two of America's most beloved comic actors. Joe Brancato directs the Off Broadway premiere for his Hudson Valley–based company, Penguin Rep Theatre. 

  • Comedy
  • East Village

The extremely funny Kevin Zak—who has contributed jokes to Death Becomes Her, had a Kenneth Starr–ing role in Clinton: The Musical and created an Instagram industry of memes about Nicole Kidman and Amy Klobuchar—is the writer and director of this campily irreverent send-up of The Parent Trap. Russell Daniels and Aneesa Folds star as identical twins bent on reuniting their estranged parents, played by Lakisha May and Matthew Wilkas, and thwarting the plots of a gold digger played by Phillip Taratula. Tha cast is fleshed out by Jimmy Ray Bennett, Grace Reiter and Mitch Wood.  

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  • Circuses & magic
  • Hell's Kitchen

Looking for a little escapism? The Italian escape artist Lord Nil keeps you on the edge of your seat as he narrowly survives—or will he?!—such perils as boiling grease, an axe and a circular saw. Each escape is connected thematically to one of the old seven deadlies, and his battery of pulchritudinous male and female assistants seems likely to induce at least one of them. 

  • Musicals
  • Hell's Kitchen

Before Mean Girls there was Heathers, a pitch-black comedy about how high-school popularity can be murder. Kevin Murphy and Laurence O'Keefe'S 2014 musical based on that film now returns Off Broadway in a revised version, directed by the U.K.'s Andy Fickman, that is likely to appeal to newcomers as well as to the show's loyal fans (known as Corn Nuts, after one character's dying words). Heathers tells the story of a nice girl named Veronica who falls into the bad company of three cruel student dictators and a sociopathic newcomer who wants to rid the school of their ilk. The impressive cast includes Lorna Courtney (& Juliet), Casey Likes (Back to the Future), McKenzie Kurtz (Frozen), Olivia Hardy, Elizabeth Teeter and Broadway comic treasure Kerry Butler (Xanadu).

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  • Musicals
  • Midtown West

The Phantom of the Opera ended its 35-year Broadway run in 2023, but you can't keep a masked man down for long. The Andrew Lloyd Webber musical—adapted by the composer and Richard Stilgoe from Gaston Leroux's 1910 horror novel, and featuring lyrics mostly by Charles Hart—is already somehow here again, and in a surprising new form: an immersive experience, à la Sleep No More, in which audiences are led en masque through multiple locations in a complex designed to evoke the 19th-century Paris Opera House where soprano Christine Daaé is tutored and stalked by a serial killer who lives in the basement. Six groups of 60 spectators at a time enter at staggered 15-minute intervals; each group gets its own Phantom and Christine, but the other roles are played by one to four actors each; to help sustain the atmosphere, audience members must wear black, white or silver cocktail or formal attire—and, hopefully, comfortable shoes. (Masks are provided for those who do not bring their own.) Don't expect the same old Phantom: This version has been heavily streamlined and rearranged to fit its new form, and material about the Phantom's history has been added. Director Diane Paulus (Pippin), who kick-started the immersive-theater trend with 1999's The Donkey Show, oversees an extremely complicated system of simultaneous performances. The cast includes Hugh Panaro, Jeff Kready, Telly Leung, Nik Walker, Kyle Scatliffe, Clay Singer, Kaley Ann Voorhees, Anna Zavelson, Betsy Morgan, Raymond J. Lee, Jeremy Stole and Phumzile Sojola, though never all in the same track. 

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  • Drama
  • Gramercy

In the manner of A.R. Gurney's Love Letters, rotating pairs of veteran actors co-star in Michael Griffo's epistolary two-hander, which traces the long-distance friendship between two women (one American, the other British) over the course of five decades, starting in the 1950s. After a successful winter run, director SuzAnne Barabas's production returns for an encore with some of the same performers. Nancy McKeon (The Facts of Life) and Gail Winar (Trans Scripts) share the stage from August 15 through August 31; after that come Michelle Clunie and Megan Follows (Sept 2–14), original Angels in America costars Kathleen Chalfant and Ellen McLaughlin (Sept 17–28), Kate Burton and Pauletta Pearson Washington (Oct 15–26) and Sharon Lawrence and Maureen McCormick (Nov 12–23). 

  • Comedy
  • Upper East Side

The seasoned actor-playwright-polemicist Brian Dykstra ($elling Out) debuted his latest show at 59E59 last year as part of the complex's East to Edinburgh festival before taking it overseas for a well-received run at the Fringe. Now he and director Margarett Perry bring it back home for an extended run. Dykstra plays a billionnaire arts patron who wants to hire playwrights to "translate" Shakespeare into modern speech; Kate Levy is the head of a theater company he supports, and Kate Siahaan-Rigg is a struggling writer tempted by his offer. As a meta bonus, the play—which is inspired by real events—is written entirely in iambic pentameter. 

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  • Dance
  • Burlesque
  • Bushwick
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Company XIV's seductive take on Alice in Wonderland is a singular sexcess: a transporting fusion of haute burlesque, circus, dance and song. Impresario Austin McCormick has assembled an array of alluring and highly skilled artists, who look smashing in Zane Pihlstrom's lace-and-crystal-encrusted costumes. With its soundtrack of pop songs, attractive ensemble cast and immersive aesthetics—plus chocolate and specialty cocktails—Queen of Hearts feels like Moulin Rouge! for actual bohemians. Hell, it even has a cancan.—Raven Snook

  • Musicals
  • Hell's Kitchen

Half a century after the fall of Saigon, Kenneth Ferrone directs the NYC premiere of this hit 2014 Austalian jukebox musical about the Vietnam War and the protest movement that emerged in response to it. The show's story, by journalist Bryce Hallett, incorporates more than 20 classic-rock staples made famous by such artists as Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones, Steppenwolf, Simon and Garfunkel, the Animals, the Impressions and Santana. The cast of six comprises Drew Becker, Cassadee Pope, Justin Matthew Sargent, Daniel Yearwood, Courtnee Carter and Deon’te Goodman.

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  • Drama
  • Red Hook

Avast! The Waterfront Barge Museum is the scene of a site-specific production of a musical that imagines the love affair between the 18th-century pirate Black Sam Bellamy and Goody Hallett, a headstong Massachussetts lass who would come to be known as the Witch of Wellfleet. The show is by songwriter Jason Landon Marcus and the very aptly named book writer Chas LiBretto, who previously collaborated on 2012's rowdy Cyclops: A Rock Opera (ripped from Euripides's satyr play). Emily Abrams directs a cast that includes Maggie Lickani, Danny Hayward, Korie Lee Blossey and Lauren Molina.

  • Drama
  • Hell's Kitchen

Olivia Dennehy-Basile recasts the Bible story of Cain and Abel as a feminist tale of teenage sisters in an empty house in 1979 Long Island. Jennifer McCabe directs the premiere for Bitter Maiden Productions, which is mounting it under the aegis of WP Theater's Space Program. Shaelin McKenna and Bryn Frazee lead the cast of six. 

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  • Drama
  • Midtown West

Playwright Rishi Varma urges us to clean up our acts in a darkly comical and glancingly absurdist "eco-gothic drama" that looks at the ruinous effects of industrial pollution as reflected in 40 years of one family's history. Megumi Nakamura directs the show's Off Broadway premiere, which features Kendyl Davis in the central role. 

  • Shakespeare
  • Central Park

After taking last summer off for renovations to the open-air Delacorte Theater in Central Park, the Public Theater's cherished annual series Shakespeare in the Park returns with one of the Bard's most popular plays: an ever-popular comedy of cross-purposes, cross-dressing and cross-gartered socks. Resident director Saheem Ali (Buena Vista Social Clubdirects a starry cast: Lupita Nyong’o and her brother Junior Nyong'o as Viola and Sebastian, nearly-identical siblings separated by a shipwreck; Sandra Oh as the mourning noblewoman who takes a shine to Viola when she is dressed as a boy; and Peter Dinklage, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Khris Davis, Bill Camp, Daphne Rubin-Vega and Moses Sumney as various figures in the lovely Olivia's orbit. Tickets are, as always, free; see our complete guide to Shakespeare in the Park tickets for details.

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  • Interactive
  • Midtown West

Punchdrunk’s Sleep No More gave up the ghost last fall after 14 years, but fans of that immersive theatrical experience have a new show to tide them over: a smaller-scale work by Punchdrunk founder Felix Barrett that invites audience members to move barefoot through a labyrinthine installation inspired by Barry Pain’s 1901 gothic short story “The Moon-Slave," as adapted by the acclaimed British writer Daisy Johnson. Participants wear headphones and are guided through the 50-minute experience at the Shed via narration in the voice of Helena Bonham Carter. 

  • Drama
  • Chelsea
  • 5 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

The title of Conor McPherson’s 1997 masterwork The Weir refers to a small dam, an interruption in the natural flow of a river. And certainly the Irish Repertory Theatre’s offering boasts a palpable liquidity, an accelerating rush of people swept off their feet by loneliness who are nonetheless caught and stilled in a village bar. In Ciarán O’Reilly’s production, we can almost feel the heat emanating from designer Charlie Corcoran’s photo-perfect pub. But the work moves beyond mere coziness; an excellent cast and McPherson’s profoundly felt humanism make the piece warming on some deep, maybe even soul-deep, level.—Helen Shaw

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  • Drama
  • Fort Greene

New York stage treasure Quincy Tyler Bernstine stars as a Midwestern woman navigating the ruins of her life in Bubba Weiler's debut play. Director Jack Serio (Grangeville) has assembled a knockout ensemble cast to support her: Emily Davis, Constance Shulman, Amelia Workman, Will Dagger, Danny McCarthy, Cricket Brown and—making a long overdue return to the stage after more than a decade—Michael Chernus (Severance).

LONG-RUNNING OFF BROADWAY SHOWS

  • Shakespeare
  • Midtown West
  • Open run

Five classically trained actors gather to perform a Shakespeare play, but this dramatic cocktail is served with a twist: One of them gets boozed up before the show—in the vein of Comedy Central's Drunk History—and hilarity ensues as the four sober cast members try to keep the script on track. 

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  • Hell's Kitchen
  • Open run
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Self-described “bubble scientist” Fan Yang's blissfully disarming act (now performed in New York by his son Deni, daughter Melody and wife Ana) consists mainly of generating a dazzling succession of bubbles in mind-blowing configurations, filling them with smoke or linking them into long chains. Lasers and flashing colored lights add to the trippy visuals.—David Cote

  • Comedy
  • Hell's Kitchen
  • Open run

The Canadian performer Katsura Sunshine, billed as the only Western master of the traditional and rigorously trained Japanese comic stortellying art of Rakugo, performs a monthly show at New World Stages. In keeping with the genre's minimalist practice, Sunshine performs in a kimono using only a fan and a hand towel for props. 

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  • Musicals
  • Hell's Kitchen
  • Open run
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Milo Manheim, Elizabeth Gillies and Jeremy Kushnier currently star in the latest revival of this dark, tuneful and utterly winsome 1982 horror-camp musical about a flesh-eating plant who makes dreams come true for a lowly flower-shop worker. Composer Alan Menken and librettist Howard Ashman wrap a sordid tale of capitalist temptation and moral decay in layers of sweetness, humor, wit and camp. Michael Mayer directs the feeding frenzy in this deeply satisfying revival.—Adam Feldman

  • Musicals

The boys are back in town! Five nice-looking men take it all off and vocalize in this collage of musical vignettes on gay themes, revamped since its 1999 debut with new jokes and more up-to-date references. Although sex is central to most of the numbers, the goofy nudism has no erotic charge (and when the show tries to be serious, it's sometimes hard to watch). After a hiatus of several years, NBS has returned to NYC at a new venue in 2023.

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  • Drama
  • Midtown West
  • Open run

A wily cop tries to psych out a possibly homicidal shrink in Warren Manzi’s moldy, convoluted mystery. The creaky welter of dime-store Freudianism, noirish attitude and whodunit gimmickry is showing its age. (Catherine Russell has starred since 1987.)—David Cote

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  • Comedy
  • Hell's Kitchen
  • Open run
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Ah, the joy of watching theater fail. The possibility of malfunction is part of what makes live performance exciting, and Mischief Theatre’s farce takes that notion to extremes as amateur British actors perform a hackneyed whodunnit amid escalating calamities. Depending on your tolerance for ceaseless slapstick, the show will either have you rolling in the aisles or rolling your eyes. Directed by Mark Bell, the mayhem goes like cuckoo clockwork on Nigel Hook’s ingeniously tumbledown set.—Adam Feldman 

  • Musicals
  • Hell's Kitchen

Cooper Jordan's comedic musical twist on the movie Saw combines slasher flick with slash fiction, imagining a queer romance between franchise protagonists Lawrence Gordon and Adam Stanheight (who do, after all, meet in a bathrooom). Stephanie Rosenberg directs the showm which has a book by Zoe Ann Jordan and a score by Patrick Spencer and Anthony De Angelis. Expect multiple characters to spill their guts in song, and be warned: The VIP front row is billed as a splash zone. 

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  • Musicals
  • Midtown West

Four single and neurotic New Yorkers get up to no good in this long-running section of the Theatre Center's must-stage-TV repertory lineup, which also includes shows inspired by Friends and The Office. Like those, Singfeld! has a libretto by Bob and Tobly McSmith; the music in this case is by fellow musical spoof artist Billy Recce (A Musical About Star Wars). Marc David Wright directs.

UPCOMING OFF BROADWAY SHOWS

  • Musicals
  • Flatiron

In Michael Shaw Fisher's head-spinning spoof, Emma Hunton (Spring Awakening) stars as an actress who becomes possessed by a demon while starring in a musical adaptation of The Exorcist. After more than a decade in development, this wickedly potty-mouthed rock musical had a hit 2023 engagement in Los Angeles early this year, followed by a Halloween stint at the Box that year. Among the guest stars scheduled to pop in during this latest run are Lance Bass, Jaime Cepero, Nicci Claspell, Garrett Clayton, Frankie Grande, Lena Hall, Nina West, Marissa Jaret Winokur and Evan Rachel Wood.

  • Shakespeare
  • Morningside Heights

The Public Theater's civically ambitious Public Works series, which collaborates with multiple New York communities to create large-scale theater, lost its leader when director Laurie Woolery fell victim to budget cuts at the Public last year. But the program soldiers on with songwriter-playwright Troy Anthony's new musical adapatation of one of Shakespeare's strangest plays: a kind of Ancient Mediterranean Flash Gordon adventure (often co-attributed to Elizabethan ne'er-do-well George Wilkins) that includes shipwrecks, contests to win a princess’s hand, a pirate abduction, a virgin in a brothel and a guest shot by the goddess Diana. Carl Cofield directs the production, which is performed at the impressive Cathedral of St. John the Divine in Morningside Heights in lieu of the usual Delacorte Theater, which is busy hosting Shakespeare in the Park this year. Casting of the principal roles—usually played by professional actors, leading an army of amateurs—has not yet been announced.

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  • Drama
  • Hell's Kitchen

Six sexually nonconforming performers imagine life under queer royal rule in a counterfactual metatheatrical comedy by Canada's Jordan Tannahill, directed by the very busy Shayok Misha Chowdhury (Public Obscenities). The ensemble cast comprises K. Todd Freeman, John McCrea, Rachel Crowl, Mihir Kumar, N’yomi Allure Stewart and recent New York Drama Critics' Circle Award lifetime-achievement honoree David Greenspan. After a sold-out summer run for Soho Rep at Playwrights Horizons, the production returns for a fall extension at Studio Seaview.

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  • Comedy
  • Chelsea

As half of the Coen Brothers, Ethan Coen has been one of the cinematic auteurs behind such classics as FargoThe Big Lebowski and No Country for Old Men—but in his spare time, he likes to write short comedies for the stage. Neil Pepe has already directed two collections of them for his Atlantic Theater Company (2008's Almost an Evening and 2011's Happy Hour) and was set to bring in another in 2020, A Play Is a Poem, before Covid interfered. The company has been mum about the contents of this latest trio of playlets, except to say that their subject is love. Aubrey Plaza headlines a promising cast that also includes Nellie McKay, Noah Robbins, Mary Wiseman, CJ Wilson, Dylan Gelula and Atlantic regulars Chris Bauer and Mary McCann.

  • Drama
  • Hell's Kitchen

The National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene, founded in 1915, pays homage to Hannah Senesh: a young woman who escaped Hungary in 1939 only to be murdered there, five years later, while on a courageous rescue mission to save Jews from the Nazis. Written and directed by David Schechter, this solo piece—which NYTF first mounted in 2019—stars Jennifer Apple and includes poems and diaries by Senesh herself (translated by Marta Cohn and Peter Hay) along with music by Steven Lutvak and additional songs by Schechter and Elizabeth Swados.

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