Discount Broadway Tickets

Pippin

Pippin Tickets

clock

This show is closed.

discount at theatre

Tickets at Music Box Theatre

The Music Box was opened in 1921 by producer Sam H. Harris and composer Irving Berlin to showcase a series of Berlin’s “Music Box Revues.” Heralded on more than one occasion as the “best looking house on Broadway,” this 87-year-old venue has only been home to legitimate theater—unlike many of its neighbors.


To this day, The Music Box is co-owned by Irving Berlin’s estate along with the Shubert Organization.

Address

239 West 45th Street
New York, NY 10036
View on Map Arrow up right
Music Box Theatre

Pippin Discount Tickets

About Pippin on Broadway

venue

Venue

Music Box Theatre
239 West 45th Street
New York, NY 10036
View on Map
duration

Duration

2 hours and 15 minutes (with 1 intermission)
Audience

Audience

May be inappropriate for 12 and under.
calendar

Opening

April 25, 2013

Closing

Jan. 4, 2015

Photos for Pippin

Story for Pippin

In a bold new staging of the dark and existential musical you thought you knew, young Prince Pippin (Matthew James Thomas) embarks on a dangerous journey, encouraged by a mysterious group of performers led by a Leading Player (Tony winner Patina Miller).

This is the first Broadway revival of Pippin since it thrilled audiences 40 years ago. With a beloved score by Tony Award nominee Stephen Schwartz (Godspell, Wicked), Pippin includes the popular songs "Magic to Do," "Simple Joys," "Glory" and "Corner of the Sky".

Pippin is directed by Tony winner Diane Paulus, director of the 2009 and 2012 Tony Award winners for Best Musical Revival (Hair and Porgy and Bess). This captivating reimagined production features sizzling choreography in the style of Bob Fosse and breathtaking acrobatics by Les 7 Doigts de la Main, the creative force behind the nationwide sensation Traces.

Critics’ Reviews for Pippin

critics reviews

"A musical miracle has landed at the Music Box Theatre. This brilliant new production is everything you could dream of in a musical. Diane Paulus has raised the bar on her work to dizzying heights of imagination and artistry. Pippin punctuates the Broadway season with a big, bold exclamation point. It is that extraordinary!"

Joe Dziemianowicz, New York Daily News
critics reviews

"It's amazing how Chet Walker's Fosse-inspired choreography blends seamlessly with the hand-walking, knife-throwing, backflipping, human-jump-roping antics of the enviably limber cast."

Thom Geier, Entertainment Weekly
critics reviews

"When the cast sings, by way of invitation in the opening number, ‘Join us, come and waste an hour or two,’ it's highly recommended you do so. Little can get the blood going this way."

Mark Kennedy, Associated Press