NEW YORK — When Broadway
“I would wear a mask and gloves,” said actress Emily Hampshire, the “Schitt’s Creek” star and huge “Hamilton” fan. “I don’t think we can forget what happened for a long time.”
COVID-19 has shaken
Will every other seat be kept empty? Will there be thermometer checks? Mandatory masks? Bar service? Deep cleanings between shows? More ushers? More exits? No shows until a vaccine?
Producers and
“We have to be really, really careful about how we start to come back," said Mary McColl, executive director of the association, which represents more than 51,000 actors and stage managers.
"If we step wrong and we do something too quickly when we haven't figured out all of the ramifications, and it goes badly and people become sick because of it, that is going to set the whole industry back a long time.”
Broadway
The financial demands of Broadway shows don’t
Conventional wisdom is that many shows can break even while taking in 50% of their potential grosses — as long as they have full-price tickets and some premium customers.
But insiders say tickets will need to be deeply discounted to attract wary customers when Broadway reopens, and that means
“I cannot imagine Broadway
The shows with the best shot of survival will probably have to be both popular and offer attractive sale prices. Broadway will also have to depend more on New Yorkers, since tourism accounted for 65% of sales during the 2018–2019 season and the number of city visitors will likely dip.
Already some creators are adapting and innovating. Playwright Richard Nelson has written a six-person play designed to be livestreamed. Others have turned to putting new works on podcasts, benefit concerts or offering a song cycle online.
The shutdown frustrated composer Andrew Lloyd Webber's plans to mount a musical remake of “Cinderella” in London's West End. He and his cast were ready for rehearsals when they were stopped by force majeure, the legal term for unforeseeable circumstances.
Now he's thinking of returning to a business tactic he used at the start of his career when he couldn't get backing for a stage version of “Jesus Christ Superstar”: Release a cast album first.
“Not because I really want to go that way round, but because force majeure kind of makes one have to do that,” he said. “It’s not something I’ve done for a very long time, but it may well be that that’s the direction we’d have to go.”
Actors’ Equity Association is rethinking almost every direction: How can more space be added to dressing rooms? Which costume fabrics resist the virus better? How many people need to touch a prop in a 10-minute period and how can that prop be cleaned? They've hired David Michaels, who ran the Occupational Safety and Health Administration under President Barack Obama, to advise.
“I think if all of us — the whole
Broadway could learn some tips from the feisty, experimental downtown
“We are small and flexible,” said associate director Kate Valk, who is already at work on an audiovisual work tacking the pandemic. “I feel for the theatrical artists who depend on a commercial production. The bigger the machine, the harder it is to reinvent.”
Barrington Stage Company in Massachusetts offers another model — it's reducing its 520-seat main
Some creators see an opportunity for change. One of the most outspoken is Theresa Rebeck, an award-winning playwright and creator of the Broadway TV series “Smash.”
Rebeck hopes the shutdown can correct inequities like some producers taking too big a piece of the box office. “You end up with audiences paying very high ticket prices and actors and artists getting paid very little,” Rebeck said.
“There are many, many people living right at the edge of disaster, and this is really going to destroy a lot of lives and careers and there’s no way to pretend that that’s not happening right now,” Rebeck said.
Right now, perhaps one-man and one-woman shows will be deemed smarter than shows with large casts. Perhaps outdoor shows will be more attractive than cramming people into a conventional
“I think that for a while,
John Carucci And Mark Kennedy, The Associated Press