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Theater Shows in New York

Top 10 Theater

#1
New York Broadway Shows

See the magic of Broadway live in New York City

4.8 (529 reviews)
#2
Radio City Music Hall

The Radio City Music Hall is an Art Deco-style New York landmark, built in 1932. Its interiors are still considered some of the most impressive in the history of modern theater design. The hall is home to the Rockettes and functions as a year-round entertainment venue, located in Midtown Manhattan close to several subway lines. It's nicknamed 'The Showplace of the Nation'.

4.2 (80 reviews)
#3
LOL Comedy Lounge in Times Square

LOL Times Square Comedy Club is (unsurprisingly) a comedy club located in New York's busy Times Square area. The venue regularly hosts open-mic comedy and improv nights where amateur and local comics share the stage with well-known touring comedians.

4.1 (61 reviews)
#4
EastVille Comedy Club

EastVille is Brooklyn's only bonafide comedy club, and best of all, there's no drink minimum. That's no joke. EastVille's been running since 2008 and plays host to up-and-coming talent, along with established comedians. The fully-stocked bar also has everything it takes to create speciality cocktails. If you're looking for laughs, then you're in the right place.

4 (1 review)
#5
Minskoff Theatre

The Minskoff Theatre is a theatre on Broadway, New York, which has hosted shows including the Tony Award-winning The Lion King.

4.9 (77 reviews)
#6
Lyric Theatre

The original Lyric, managed by the Shubert Brothers, opened on October 12, 1903 with Old Heidelberg starring Richard Mansfield. Most of its successes were musical. Two major composers of operetta had hits there: Oscar Straus, whose most famous show, The Chocolate Soldier (based on Shaw’s Arms and the Man), opened at the Lyric in 1909 to run for 296 performances, and Rudolf Friml, whose first show, The Firefly, opened at the Lyric in 1912. Friml’s last hit, The Three Musketeers, produced by the fabled Florenz Ziegfeld, played there for seven months in 1928 (an impressive run in those days). The glory years of the Lyric, the 1920s, belonged to musical comedy in an era when both the music and the comedy were equally dazzling. During that decade, Fred and Adele Astaire appeared in For Goodness Sake, scored partly by the Gershwins. The Marx Brothers had their second Broadway hit (and the source of their first film) at the Lyric with The Cocoanuts (book by George S. Kaufman, songs by Irving

4.5 (33 reviews)
#7
New Amsterdam Theatre

The New Amsterdam Theatre is a state-of-the-art theater in Midtown Manhattan, at 214 West 42nd. This long-standing fixture of New York's theater scene first opened in 1903.

4.8 (98 reviews)
#8
Walter Kerr Theatre

In 1921, the Walter Kerr Theatre house opened under its original name, The Ritz. Owned by the Shuberts and designed by Herbert J. Krapp, it was intended to be a sister theater to the Ambassador Theatre. Starting in 1939, CBS and ABC used the space to record radio and TV programs. In the 1970s it was converted back to a movie theater but was restored to legitimacy in 1983. Its current owners, Jujamcyn Theatres, spent millions restoring the theater in 1990 and it has housed successful Broadway runs ever since.

4.8 (6 reviews)
#9
Gershwin Theatre

The Gershwin Theatre is a Manhattan staple and has hosted many popular productions since it opened its doors in 1972. The theatre is named after brothers, George Gershwin, a composer, and Ira Gershwin, a lyricist. It is now home to the hit musical, Wicked. It is located at 222 West 51st Street in midtown-Manhattan, in the Paramount Plaza building.

4.6 (23 reviews)
#10
Eugene O'Neill Theatre

The Eugene O'Neill Theatre is an iconic Broadway theatre venue located at 230 West 49th Street in midtown Manhattan. Named after playwright Eugene O’Neill, the theatre can accommodate an audience of up to 1,108 and has been home to hit musicals like Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Spring Awakening, and the record-smashing, 2011 Tony Award Best Musical winner, The Book of Mormon – which is still running to this day.

5 (3 reviews)

All Theater in New York

Hand-picked combinations in New York

Combine New York favorites. Some things are better together.

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Chicago on Broadway + MoMA

Book once and enhance your experience with this convenient combination of 2 must sees
4.6 (7)
From $110.40
$99.36

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