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Broadway raises curtain again on big musicals, and casts serenade the city

Broadway raises curtain again on big musicals, and casts serenade the city
Audience members arrive outside the Gershwin theater ahead of the first return performance of Wicked, as Broadway shows begin to re-open to live audiences after being closed for more than a year due to the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19), in Manhattan, New York City, New York, US, on Sept 14, 2021.
PHOTO: Reuters

NEW YORK - Broadway's biggest musicals roared back to life on Tuesday (Sept 14) after an unprecedented 18-month, pandemic-induced shutdown that cast an eerie silence over New York's usually bustling theater district.

The curtain rose again on top musicals Hamilton, The Lion King and Wicked before packed audiences in the biggest sign that Broadway is open again for business.

Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda kicked off the night by hosting a rousing impromptu rendition of New York, New York at the stage door with the casts of all three musicals.

"Broadway is back. Get a mask, get vaccinated and come see live theater!" Miranda urged fans.

Chicago also reopened on Tuesday.

Broadway was one of the first institutions to close when the pandemic hit in mid-March 2020 and is the last to reopen in the United States. It has taken months to upgrade air filter systems and figure out how to maintain social distancing on stages full of blood, sweat and tears.

Audiences, actors, musicians and backstage crew must provide proof of full vaccinations and wear masks during all Broadway and off-Broadway shows in New York.

Hamilton, The Lion King and Wicked were the biggest box office earners, each taking in more than $1 million (S$1.3 million) a week, before the pandemic shuttered some 40 theaters in mid-March 2020, throwing thousands of actors, stagehands, musicians and dancers out of work.

"Every single nerve is tingling with joy and world peace. How lucky we are to be back at work," said "Hamilton" producer Jeffrey Seller, speaking at the theater.

"It has been 700,000, 100 and 25 minutes since we've last been able to perform for a live audience, and what I perceive here is 1,300 people who are teeming with the energy and the desire to get back to the theater," Seller added.

Musicals Hadestown and Waitress returned 10 days ago, and the first new play, Pass Over, opened its doors in August. The discount TKTS ticket booth in Times Square also reopened on Tuesday.

Talking Heads musician David Byrne, whose "American Utopia" musical reopens on Friday, said theater-goers are overjoyed to be back.

"The audiences are just erupting in applause and cheers and excitement just to be back together in a theater, to be back together with other people," Byrne told Reuters.

Another dozen musicals and plays will re-open during September, bringing back one of the city's biggest cultural attractions. City authorities hope their return will also spur tourism and revitalize once-crowded restaurants, bars and hotels.

Broadway and city authorities are organising a weekend festival of concerts and performances in Times Square to promote theater, with performers from 18 musicals taking part.

"Broadway's reopening is like a huge welcome mat for New Yorkers and visitors to return to Times Square," Tom Harris, president of the Times Square Alliance, said in a statement.

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