Broadway's 'Frozen' Is First Musical To Permanently Close Due To Virus
"Frozen" -- based on Disney's blockbuster hit movie -- will not reopen on Broadway, the production said Thursday, marking the first musical to announce permanent cancellation due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The show had been performed 851 times since its May 2018 opening at New York's St. James Theatre.
The musical's staff is "heartbroken" over the closure, the production said on Twitter.
"Some people are worth melting for, and today our hearts melt with you," the post said, in reference to the show's snowy plot.
According to Broadway World, "Frozen" brought in some $155 million at the box office and was seen by more than 1.35 million viewers.
"Beetlejuice," another big-budget production, has already announced that it will not return to the stage, though the show was already slated to end in June, even before the coronavirus struck.
The plays "Hangmen" -- which had not yet opened -- and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" also announced their closures, though they were both more limited productions than a musical.
The Broadway League professional association announced Tuesday that New York's famous theaters will remain shuttered until at least September 6, and local authorities have not yet offered a potential timeline for reopening.
On Tuesday the revival of New York theater power couple Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker's much-anticipated show "Plaza Suite" -- originally set to open in March -- was postponed until March 2021.
And on Wednesday the musical "MJ" announced it would also open in March 2021 instead of July 2020.
"Frozen" could still tour in North America or maintain performances in London, Sydney, Hamburg and Tokyo, the production said.
The first performances are currently set for the end of October in London and early December in Sydney.
The North American tour is set to begin in Boston on September 9.
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