It might have been said before, but you know who is ridiculously attractive? That all-dappered-up, smart suit-wearing, assassin-smiling Hugh Jackman. He is, as the name of his new show goes, Back on Broadway with an 18-piece orchestra and a bevy of strutting dancers to help show off his all-out talent and musical theatre prowess. And showing off he is. Grossing more than $1.2 million in its first week (of previews!), the show has earned a charming $10 million in advance sales which would not doubt be warming the hearts of his producers.
As the temperature drops along the concrete streets of New York to the dreary single digits with the arrival of fall, the buoyancy of Hugh’s all-singing, all-dancing romp has given a nice uptick to Broadway’s audience numbers. Jackman’s classic demographic doesn’t seem at all perturbed by the This Is Your Life-style set-up which takes audiences on the journey of his life complete with scrapbook photos and childhood stories, as well as an homage to the Peter Allen role that embedded him in the hearts of the theatre community.
So just how does Jackman make perfection so palatable (especially in a city that bites)? Critics never name him the best singer, dancer or actor but they always come to the conclusion that he is the quintessential performer, piled high with charisma and that intangible quality. The New York Times’ notoriously prickly reviewer Ben Brantley declared Jackman the “dream date” in the show despite reservations about the “hokey jokes”. The New York Post challenged audience members to not end up in a “puddle of blissed-out goo” during the show and both made comparisons of Jackman to legends of a bygone era, throwing around names like Sinatra, Garland, Davis and Minnelli. Not to mention crowning him the current King of Broadway.
Jackman’s physicality – tall, strong and agile – has to play a part in his ability to have all sides of the Broadway audience eating out of his hand. The action-hero-meets-Broadway-enigma is a combination that is rarely perfected but Jackman’s genuineness seems to win over even the greatest non-believer (case in point: the investment banker in Row R who thought a theatre date with the statuesque blonde would make him the King of E-Harmony).
So with all this dreaminess, it’s certainly not easy, nor cheap, to score a ticket to the Jackman extravaganza. The show has an average ticket price of $150 which is no mean feat considering the continuous conversation of recessions, unemployment and defaulting filtering out of Washington and on to the main streets of America. Broadway relies on a vast majority of its audience to come from out-of-town, and in tourist-sensitive times particularly from around its own nation, and the 30-plus shows on the Great White Way are extraordinarily sensitive to the economy (case in point: the sudden shelving of Funny Girl). It’s a testament to Jackman’s flawless public persona that the issue of success or failure has not even been a conversation topic in Broadway circles, although everyone knows that a celebrity name can ring dollar signs with greater ease than for those without a headliner to help mount a musical or play in the current climate.
It’s with this in mind that we pay such homage to the amazing and incredible story of The Book of Mormon, a mega-star new musical that has shown Broadway a thing or two about marketing and audience trends in this day and age. The show is over-sold each night, with ticket prices heading upwards to $450, and even out-selling Hugh (not our Hugh!). Producers chose to continue advertising the show despite rarely having a seat to give away to even the most famous or privileged. The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints significantly increased their ad campaign “I’m A Mormon” to counteract, or take advantage of (depending on your perspective), the nationwide, and indeed worldwide, profile of this year’s unequivocal winner of Best Musical.
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