Broadway has a great holiday but data not great for 2015
Broadway ended 2015 and started the New Year with a bang, generating the best attended and highest grossing week in history. But theatre producers may have a hangover when they see that box office receipts and overall attendance for 2015 dipped from the previous year.
According to Broadway League statistics released Monday, the total gross was $1.354 billion for 2015 and total attendance was put at 12.98 million. That’s a decline from 2014’s $1.362 billion haul and 13.13 million in attendance.
But there was plenty of Champagne popping last week when 20 shows —among the 38 playing — grossed over $1 million, with four grossing over $2 million (Aladdin, The Book of Mormon, The Lion King and Wicked.)
New records were made at several Broadway theatres, including over at the New Amsterdam Theatre, where Aladdin made $2,398,110 for nine shows. The return of the super magical group “The Illusionists” took in $1,801,326 over 13 performances, smashing the Neil Simon Theatre’s record set by All the Way in 2014.
The Peter Pan tale Finding Neverland also found a new weekly record haul at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre with $1,477,174 over nine shows and School of Rock — The Musical did the same at the Winter Garden Theatre with $1,671,621 over the same nine performances.
In fact, the week ending Sunday “was the best attended and highest grossing New Year’s week, and the best attended and highest grossing week on Broadway overall to date,” according to the league. Over the seven days, Broadway box offices pulled in a staggering $43,065,466, helped by premium pricing, shows adding extra performances to their schedules and mild weather