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

  • Drama
  • DUMBO

The five-time Oscar nominee Michelle Williams returns to the stage in a revival of Eugene O’Neill's Pulitzer Prize–winning 1921 tale of a former prostitute and her troubled romance with a sailor. Hamilton's Thomas Kail directs the production, which also stars Tom Sturridge and that great Broadway everyman Brian d’Arcy James. 

  • Drama
  • Hell's Kitchen

Screen stars Owen Teague and Abbey Lee play recovering alcoholics who stumble into a blurry, co-dependent and co-enabling love affair in this one-act two-hander, which marks the U.S. debut of the rising English playwright Joe White. Rory McGregor directs them through the protracted Days of Wine and Roses daze of their romantic drama. 

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  • Drama
  • West Village

In Matthew Libby's Silicon Valley thriller, Karan Brar—all grown up since his stints as an immigrant Indian kid on the Disney Channel's Jessie and Bunk'd—plays a computer genius who gets recruited into a potentially sinister data-mining operation. Brandon Flynn, Sophia Lillis and Justin H. Min round out the cast of the play's NYC premiere, which is directed by Tyne Rafaeli (The Coast Starlight)

  • Comedy
  • Greenwich Village

Playwright-director Erica Schmidt's seriocomedy seems intended to update—and critique—the kind of 1930s drawing-room romp in which an egocentric male artist plays ringmaster to a theatrical circus but is eventually forgiven his trespasses. Ben Braxton (Hamish Linklater) is a self-dramatizing cinematic auteur married to a extraordinarily patient novelist, Mira (Miriam Silverman); a midlife crisis leads him to throw himself at a forward young actress named Julie (Madeline Brewer). Unfortunately, the play's messages about marriage, art and other questions are buried in a production that is nearly unbearable to watch; although the script specifies that Ben "MUST BE CHARMING," he is an insufferable manchild from beginning to end, and nothing more than that.—Adam Feldman

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  • Musicals
  • Upper West Side

The groove-worn hits of pop composer Burt Bacharach, mostly written with lyricist Hal David, are marvel of craftsmanship that invite and support multiple interpretations, and their signature shifts of time signature help them keep surprising listeners even after all this time. In this new musical review (directed by David Zippel), vocalists Hilary Kole, John Pagano and Ta-Tynisa Wilson perform such neostandards as “Alfie," "Anyone Who Had a Heart," “That’s What Friends Are For," "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)" and "Do You Know the Way to San Jose?" Musical director and arranger Adrian Galante leads the five-piece band.

  • Musicals

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
  • Open run
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Ever since the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical The Phantom of the Opera hung up its mask in 2023, the show’s admirers have been wishing it were somehow here again. And now it is, albeit significantly revised to fit a very different form: an immersive experience, à la Sleep No More, in which audiences are led en masque through a midtown complex designed to evoke the 19th-century Paris Opera House where soprano Christine Daaé is stalked by the killer who lives in the basement. The very notion of this reimagining—created by Lloyd Webber and director Diane Paulus, from a concept by Randy Weiner—is surprising; perhaps even more surprising is that, somehow, they pull it off. It’s a blast.—Adam Feldman

  • Drama
  • Midtown West

Manhttan Theatre Club proffers the local premiere of writer-director Ngozi Anyanwu's two-person drama, which was commissioned by New Jersey's Two River Theater and premiered there last year. Okieriete Onaodowan (Hamilton) plays a mixed martial arts champion who agrees to train his estranged younger half-sister, played by Aigner Mizzelle (Chicken & Biscuits), as both of them spar with demons from their childhoods.

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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. Randy Graff and Beth Leavel share the stage through February 1; after that come Brooke Adams and Marilu Henner (Feb 4–15), Carmen Cusack and Gina Torres (Feb 18–Mar 1) and Jodi Benson and Marcia Mitzman Gaven (Mar 4–15)

  • Musicals
  • Midtown West

A Korean-American woman returns to her home in the Blue Ridge Mountains to bond with her grandfather in director-conceiver Sherry Stregack Lutken's three-person musical, which draws its score from Appalachian legacies of bluegrass and folk. The script is by Lutken, Lisa Helmi Johanson, Morgan Morse and David M. Lutken; the latter two also costar with Tora Nogami Alexander. The show returns for an encore run at Urban Stages after a successful engagement in the fall.

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  • Musicals
  • Hell's Kitchen

Danny Mefford directs a revival of William Finn and Rachel Sheinkin's beloved 2005 musical about six weird kids on a quest to be letter-perfect. Recent Broadway breakout stars Jasmine Amy Rogers (Boop!) and Justin Cooley (Kimberly Akimbo) are two of the grown-ups playing adolescents, joined by Autumn Best, Philippe Arroyo, Leana Rae Concepcion and Glee's Kevin McHale. 

  • Experimental
  • Noho

Elevator Repair Service is best known for Gatz, its brilliant micro-epic eight-hour dramatization of the entire text of The Great Gatsby. The experimental company now returns to the Public Theater, under the aegis of the festival Under the Radar, with another literary-minded adaptation—this time, heavily condensed—of James Joyce's densely witty and allusive 1922 modernist novel, Ulysses, an odyssey through a single day in 1904 Dublin and into the minds of several of its denizens. ERS's John Collins directs an cast of seven: Maggie Hoffman, Vin Knight, Stephanie Weeks, Kate Benson, Christopher-Rashee Stevenson, Dee Beasnael and principal Gatz man Scott Shepherd (who is also this production's dramaturg and co-director).

LONG-RUNNING OFF BROADWAY SHOWS

  • 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

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  • Comedy

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. 

  • Musicals
  • 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

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  • 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
  • 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

  • Comedy
  • 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 

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  • Musicals

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

  • Drama
  • Hell's Kitchen

Just Sean! Three years after his Tony-winning turn in Good Night, Oscar, Sean Hayes (Will & Grace) returns to the New York stage alone in a solo thriller by David Cale, who specializes in writing one-man shows for himself (We're Only Alive for a Short Amount of Time) and others (Harry Clarke). Hayes plays a writer on a rural retreat, whose increasing suspicion that he is in danger may—or may not—be a function of cabin fever. The ever-reliable Leigh Silverman (Suffs) directs the world premiere.

  • Drama
  • Midtown West

Like Robert Icke's Oedipus and Simon Stone's Medea, writer-director Alexander Zeldin's contemporary British psychodrama is adapted from an ancient Greek tragedy—in this case, Sophocles's prototypical protest play, Antigone. Emma D’Arcy (House of the Dragon) has the central role and Tobias Menzies (The Crown) is the unyielding uncle who refuses to budge on his funeral plans for a relative. The Shed, which frequently serves as a warehouse for luxury-brand English imports, presents a limited run of Zeldin's production, which premiered at London's National Theatre in 2024; Lorna Brown and Ruby Stokes join the cast alongside original stars D'Arcy, Menzies, Jerry Killick and Lee Braithwaite.

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  • Shakespeare
  • Fort Greene

In Shakespeare's political tragedy, which has been enjoying something of a renaissance lately, the hoi polloi of ancient Rome turn against an arrogant war hero (and lifelong mama's boy) when he refuses to show off his scars in the traditional manner. McKinley Belcher III plays the titular general, Roslyn Ruff is his domineering mater and Mickey Sumner is his Volscian nemesis—now a woman!—in Ash K. Tata's modern-minded TFANA production; Jason O'Connell, Barzin Akhavan, Sarin Monae West, William DeMerritt and Zuzanna Szadkowski have the larger supporting roles. 

  • Comedy
  • Hell's Kitchen

Playwrights Horizons launches its Unplugged wing—devoted to minimalist stagings that focus on performance and text—with the world premiere of Jacob Perkins's ensemble drama about a women's recovery group that meets weekly for a period that seems to stretch into foreverLes Waters (Dana H.) directs a wow of an ensemble cast led by NYC stage legends Kathleen Chalfant and Elizabeth Marvel and filled out very nicely indeed by April Matthis, Keilly McQuail, Mallory Portnoy ​​and Maria Elena Ramirez.

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  • Drama
  • East Village

Before he went Munchkin in the Wicked movies, Ethan Slater demonstrated his major gift for physical theater in Broadway's underrated SpongeBob SquarePants. That should come in handy—handy in white gloves—as he plays the great French mime Marcel Marceau in a biodrama that Slater co-wrote with director Marshall Pailet. The play looks at the young Marceau's work with an underground network that rescued fellow Jews from Nazi-occupied France. The fine cast also includes Max Gordon Moore, Maddie Corman, Tedra Millan, Alex Wyse and Aaron Serotsky. 

  • Comedy
  • Chelsea

In Jake Brasch's memory-themed play, Noah Galvin (The Real O'Neals) plays young man struggling to stay sober who finds that his booze-addled brain helps him relate to the dementia of his elderly grandparents. Well-loved stage vets Mary Beth Piel, Chip Zien, Caroline Aaron and Peter Maloney portray the seniors, joined by Heidi Armbruster and Matthew Saldívar. Shelley Butler directs the NYC premiere for the Atlantic.

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  • Comedy
  • Hell's Kitchen

Writer-director Aya Ogawa taps into the mother lode in a carnivalesque exploration of maternity that combines satirical vignettes, music and dance, bouffon-style physical theater and general chaos. Mamma mia! The production features original songs by Leyna Marika Papach and choreography by Catherine Galasso; the all-mom cast of five consists of Cindy Cheung, Maureen Sebastian, Marina Celander, Robyn Kerr and Liz Wisan.

  • Comedy
  • West Village

Search Party's Alia Shawkat plays a lost young woman named Mae whose aging father (Succession's Peter Friedman) is being treated for cancer in Clare Barron's extraordinary play, directed in this rivicaal—as in its 2014 Off Broadway premiere—by the highly adept Anne Kauffman (Marjorie Prime). It’s about the denial of death, but it unfurls mostly in the mode of weird character comedy, with detours into gnarly and frustrated horniness; whether Mae tries to escape into banality or fantasy, time’s one-way arrow keeps piercing through. Caleb Eberhart, Nadine Malouf, Nina White, Spenser Granese and Misha Brooks complete the promising cast.

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  • Shakespeare
  • Hell's Kitchen

The Elizabethan equivalent of a slasher film, Titus Andronicus is the Bard's goriest horror show, in which cycles of violence and revenge leave no body part unhacked: The title character serves his enemy a pie that is stuffed with the flesh of her sons, and that's just the tip of the viceberg. Broadway's favorite baddie, the deeply sonorous Patrick Page (Hadestown), stars in a production directed by Jesse Berger for his often bloody-minded classical company, Red Bull Theater.

  • Comedy
  • Hell's Kitchen

The New Group's Scott Elliott directs a revival of Elmer Rice’s 1923 gimlet-eyed expressionist classic about the soul rot of conventionality, newly revised by the willfully perverse playwright-provocateur Thomas Bradshaw (Burning). Its antihero, Mr. Zero, is a craven, bigoted, sexually repressed number cruncher who is incapable of creative thought—a willing cog in the same social machinery that is grinding him to paste. The announced cast so far includes Jennifer Tilly, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Only Murders in the Building's Michael Cyril Creighton and And Just Like That… survivor Sarita Choudhury. 

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  • Shakespeare
  • Fort Greene

Hiran Abeysekera, who starred in Life of Piin the West End and on Broadway, gets mad and then goes mad as the melancholy Dane of in Shakespeare's contemplative revenge tragedy, where a ghost and a prince meet and everyone ends in mincemeat. This 2025 production of London's National Theatre, directed with contemporary cheekiness by Robert Hastie (Operation Mincemeat), now hops the Pond for a multiweek run at BAM. 

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