The Broadway musical âRodgers & Hammersteinâs Cinderellaâ achieved a relatively rare feat last week, grossing more than $1 million even though the show is still in preview performances and has no star actors, according to box office data released on Tuesday.
Previews are traditionally a monthlong period when ticket prices are sharply discounted as the cast and creative team continue honing the production; usually musicals only join the millon-dollar club after opening to good reviews that producers splash in advertising campaigns. Hit musicals like âThe Book of Mormon,â âWicked,â âThe Lion King,â âOnce,â âNewsies,â and âMary Poppinsâ never hit $1 million during previews; âEvitaâ did last year, thanks to its star Ricky Martin, and so did âSpider-Man: Turn Off the Darkâ in 2010 (after an unprecedented wave of bad publicity) and the highly anticipated âBilly Elliotâ in 2008.
According to several Broadway ticket agents who sell large blocks of seats to schools, churches a! nd synagogues, and civic organizations, âCinderellaâ - an updated retelling of the classic story - has emerged as the hot musical of the winter for group sales, with the Wednesday matinee in particularly huge demand for students. âCinderellaâ also appears to be benefiting from the March 3 closing of âMary Poppins,â because several groups that had been eyeing âPoppinsâ for the spring have moved on to âCinderella.â It is also doing well with adult groups, who may have affection for the fairy tale or interest in Rodgers and Hammerstein, given that their version of âCinderellaâ has never been on Broadway. (It was originally made for television.)
To be sure, the show partly prospered last week because many students were out on winter vacation; âCinderellaâ also has plenty of high-priced orchestra seats on offer, given that it is ina large house, the 1,500-seat Broadway Theater.
But âCinderellaâ will soon face stiffer competition as Broadwayâs battle of the girls intensifies with the March 4 start of previews for âMatilda the Musical,â a massive hit in London. Another Broadway musical, âAnnie,â is also performing well at the box office, though the group sales agents said that âCinderellaâ has had the edge lately. (âAnnieâ has grossed more than $1 million a week on several occasions, though only after previews ended.)
Few producers expect âCinderellaâ to beat âMatildaâ at the box office, given the considerable buzz for âMatildaâ in New York. Reviews from theater critics will li! kely be a! factor in ticket sales; âAnnieâ received mixed notices in November, and the critics will weigh in on âCinderellaâ in early March and âMatildaâ during the second week in April.
âCinderella,â which stars Tony Award nominee Laura Osnes (âBonnie and Clydeâ) in the title role and Santino Fontana as the prince, grossed $1,056,544 last week, about 75 percent of the maximum possible amount, with nearly all seats sold. It was the fifth highest-grossing show on Broadway last week, following âWicked,â âThe Lion King,â âThe Book of Mormon,â and âSpider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.â Over all, Broadway musicals and plays grossed $19.1 million last week, compared to $20.1 million during the same week in 2012.