Tickets are now on sale for NYC & Company’s biannual Off-Broadway Week, offering two-for-one tickets to select Off-Broadway shows from September 25–October 8. 36 shows are participating in the discount initiative, including the London transfer of A Clockwork Orange, Suzan-Lori Parks’ Red Letter Plays, the revival of Harvey Fierstein’s Torch Song, and the New York premieres of Mary Jane, Charm, and For Peter Pan on her 70th birthday, among many other productions.
Of the participating shows, 21 are new to NYC Off-Broadway Week.
First launched in February 2009, Off-Broadway Week is produced and presented by NYC & Company in partnership with The Off-Broadway League. To purchase tickets and for additional details, visit nycgo.com/offbroadwayweek.
Below is a complete list of participating shows:
A Clockwork Orange
Arden/Everywhere: The “As You Like It” Project
As You Like It
Avenue Q
Blue Man Group
Charm
Curvy Widow
The Death of the Moon
Desperate Measures
Drunk Shakespeare
For Peter Pan on her 70th birthday
Frankenstein, A New Musical
Gazillion Bubble Show
The Gospel According to Thomas Jefferson, Charles Dickens and Count Leo Tolstoy: Discord
The Home Place
Howard Crabtree’s When Pigs Fly
I of the Storm
The Imbible
In & Of Itself
The Last Match
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
The Marvelous Wonderettes
Mary Jane
Naked Boys Singing!
NEWSical The Musical
On the Shore of the Wide World
One Night Only
Perfect Crime
Puffs, Or: Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic
The Red Letter Plays: F***ing A
The Red Letter Plays: In the Blood
Sistas: The Musical
Spamilton
Stomp
Torch Song
The Violin
“With the wide variety of productions found Off-Broadway in New York City, there is something for everyone to enjoy, and NYC Off-Broadway Week allows them to experience it for less,” commented Fred Dixon, president and CEO of NYC & Company, in a press statement. “With over 35 participating shows, we invite visitors and New Yorkers to partake as an audience member in this vibrant and world-class performing arts scene.”