Thank you for your Leadership Sponsorship Thank you for your Achievement Sponsorship Eileen & James Thomas Thank you for Supporting Us Thank you for Supporting Us Thank you Guy Carpenter for your Achievement Sponosrship Thank you for your Growth Sponsorship Thank you Patrice & John Kelly for your Mentor Sponsorship Thank you for the $4,500 Grant Thank you for your Growth Sponsorship Thank you for your Achievement Sponsorship Thank you NCMT Adult Riders for your Growth Sponsorship Thank you Tara & Anthony Coniglio for your Mentor Sponsorship Thank you Elizabeth Klein for your Mentor Sponsorship Thank you Leslie Charleson for your Growth Sponsorship Thank you Cove Tent for your Support Thank you for your Growth Sponsorship Thank you for creating videos that beautifully tell our story Thank you to our Media sponsor
Previous Item Next Item

Opening Night on Broadway!

$250 current bid
5 Bids

Description of the Item:

Register or sign in to buy or bid on this item. Sign in and register buttons are in next section

Want to place a bid?

REGISTER NOW

Already have an account?

1 Watcher

Enjoy two tickets plus two party passes for opening night performance of COST OF LIVING on Broadway, October 12, 2022

NY Times write up from Micheal Paulson on April 18, 2022

Martyna Majok's "Cost of Living," a play that explores disability and caregiving and which won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 2018, will be staged on Broadway this fall.

Manhattan Theater Club, one of the four nonprofits that operate Broadway houses, said it would stage a production of the play at its Samuel J. Friedman Theater this fall.

The play has two parallel plots, one about a man with cerebral palsy and his hired caregiver, and the other about a double amputee and her estranged husband. The Pulitzer board described the play as "An honest, original work that invites audiences to examine diverse perceptions of privilege and human connection."

Manhattan Theater Club previously staged the play, in 2017, at its Off Broadway space at New York City Center, where it won praise from the New York Times critic Jesse Green, who wrote, "If you don't find yourself in someone onstage in 'Cost of Living,' you're not looking."

Donated By Manhattan Theatre Club