Posted on Leave a comment

Masquerade, the Off-Broadway Immersive Phantom of the Opera, Launches Ticket Lottery and Standby Line – Playbill

The lottery tickets will be priced at just $66.60, a fraction of the face value cost for the illustrious immersive experience.
If a masked man in your basement has been blackmailing your bank account dry leaving you wondering if you’ll ever be able to purchase a ticket to Masquerade, worry not, as the immersive NYC return of Andrew Lloyd Webber‘s Phantom of the Opera has launched both a ticket lottery and standby option, offering fans the opportunity to embark on the journey into the Phantom’s lair for as low as $66.60.
 “Lotto 666,” cleverly named in reference to the infamous chandelier’s auction lot number in the original production of the musical, will offer lottery winners $66.60 tickets to the show. The lottery will be held in-person, prior to the evening’s performances. The program will begin November 16, with entries opening and activities beginning at 5:00 PM. Special guests and other surprises may be in store for the program’s launch.
The “Black Tie Standby Line” will also offer a discount opportunity to attend the illustrious immersive event, though at a cost closer to the face value ticket price. A limited number of $170 tickets will be available for each performance in the hour prior to its start time, subject to availability from any returned or canceled tickets. Standby tickets will be available beginning November 12. 
Masquerade officially opened September 29 at 218 W. 57th Street (formerly Lee’s Art Shop), and is currently set to run through February 1, 2026. The inventive new staging plays to six small audience groups each evening, meaning the complete cast features more leads than the show did on Broadway. Across the six performance timeslots, the Phantom is played by Jeff Kready, Telly Leung, Hugh Panaro, Kyle Scatliffe, Clay Singer, and Nik Walker; and Christine and Meg are played by Haile Ferrier, Eryn LeCroy, Francesca Mehrotra, Riley Noland, Kaley Ann Voorhees, and Anna Zavelson.
Additionally, the role of Raoul is played in different scenes by Paul Adam Schaefer, Nicholas Edwards, and Francisco Javier González, and the role of Madame Giry is performed at various points by Satomi Hofmann, Maree Johnson, Tia Karaplis, and Betsy Morgan. Buquet is performed by both Jacob Lacopo and Andrew Wojtal, and Carlotta is played by both Satomi Hofmann and Betsy Morgan.
André is played by Raymond J. Lee, Barker is played by Chris Ryan, Firmin is played by Jeremy Stolle, and Piangi is played by Phumzile Sojola. Maxfield Haynes, Kody Jauron, and Kevin Zambrano collectively play the role Boy in the Cage.
The ensemble features Baby Byrne, Gabriella Enriquez, Nkrumah Gatling, Cooper Grodin, Maxfield Haynes, Bryan Hernandez-Luch, Kody Jauron, Nathan Keen, Joe Kerr, Claire Leyden, Georgia Mendes, Sami Merdinian, Charles Osborne, Jack Sullivan, and Kevin Zambrano.
The production, modeled after the seminal immersive production Sleep No More, which ran for 14 years at NYC’s McKittrick Hotel, seeks to plant audiences right into the plot of Gaston Leroux‘s The Phantom of the Opera—of course, within the lens of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s long-running 1986 West End-Broadway musical. Once you have entered the Opera House, you will join in on the “ghost hunt,” tracing the steps of the infamous Opera Ghost, who has been terrorizing the theatre’s performers and management. As the story unfolds, you learn of the Opera Ghost’s mentorship over Christine Daae—a young soprano who has become the object of his obsession.
Tony winner Diane Paulus (Waitress, 1776) is directing a creative team that includes Hunter Bird, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, Kathy Fabian, James Fluhr, Jessie Flynn, Nicola Formichetti, Skylar Fox, Kate Lumpkin, J. J. Janas, Brett Jarvis, Marc Kimelman, Lee McCutcheon, Scott Pask, Emilio Sosa, Gypsy Snider, Ben Stanton, and William Waldrop.
Attendees of the production have been given instructions from “their host,” which includes a dress code advising patrons dress “extravagantly” in black, white, or silver and to wear a masquerade mask (if you do not have one, one will be provided) and to avoid wearing high heels to facilitate safe walking in the building’s recreation of the Paris catacombs. The venue is described as fully ADA accessible, and guests with specific accessibility needs are encouraged to email [email protected].
The production team for the revival comprises Rosario Arcuri, Stephen Arnold, Sarah Battaglia, Sean Beach, Evan Bernardin, Will Blumberg, Antoine Boissereau, Carolyn Boyd, Simon Brouke, Kelbi Carrig, Ruth Carsch, Kerry Concannon, Brittany Coyne, Hailey Delaney, Eric Dente, Eli Diker, Elizabeth Emanuel, Randall Etheredge, Stephanie Leah Evans, Shoshana Fisher, Dawn-Elin Fraser, Megan Frazier, Misha Fristensky, Christina Grant, Chris Habana, Simon Hammerstein, Billie Harmon, Cesar Hawas, Isaac Hayward, Morgan Holbrook, Amelie Julicher, Andrew Katz, Viktoria-Isabella King, Jeffery Kurtz, McBee, Fiona McDougal, Brian Messina, Vittoria Orlando, Amanda Perry, Dotty Peterson, Cinder Petrichor, Diana Rebholz, Alicia Rodis, Sadie Schlesinger, Jake Scudder, Max Seelig, Giza Selimi, Ashley Setzler, James Sherwood, David Shocket, Naomi Symeou, Nakkia Smalls, Monet Thibou, Kristopher Thompson-Bolden, Madilyn Tramonte, Benjamin Weigel, Kat West, Nzinga Williams, Chelsea Wilson, David Andrew Wilson, Mike Wojchik, Alex Wolfe, Asher Young, and Alec Zbornak.
Visit MasqueradeNYC.com.

Masquerade Off-Broadway
Riley Noland and Clay Singer in Masquerade Off-Broadway
Telly Leung and Haile Ferrier in Masquerade Off-Broadway
Kaley Ann Voorhees and Nik Walker in Masquerade Off-Broadway
Kyle Scatliffe and Eryn LeCroy in Masquerade Off-Broadway
Jeff Kready and Anna Zavelson in Masquerade Off-Broadway
Hugh Panaro and Francesca Mehrotra in Masquerade Off-Broadway
Masquerade Off-Broadway
Masquerade Off-Broadway
Masquerade Off-Broadway
Hugh Panaro, Nik Walker, Jeff Kready, Clay Singer, Telly Leung, and Kyle Scatliffe in Masquerade Off-Broadway
Plus, get a first look at the world premiere at La Jolla Playhouse in California.
Seth Barrish will direct the drama following a team of ICU nurses amidst the opioid crisis.
The lottery tickets will be priced at just $66.60, a fraction of the face value cost for the illustrious immersive experience.
The Broadway revival made its national TV debut November 10.
The production’s current Simba is raising funds for himself and his neighbors to recover from a near total loss.
Felton returns to the role of Draco Malfoy as the production welcomes several other new company members to the Lyric.
Due to the expansive nature of Off-Broadway, this list is not comprehensive.
Both Lloyd and Finn will serve as as artistic directors of the company.
The social media influencer sat down with Playbill’s Jeffrey Vizcaíno to discuss her limited run in the musical’s Broadway return.
Copyright 1991–2025 © Playbill Inc. All Rights Reserved.

source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *