The Steven Tanger Center for the Performing Arts announced the shows for its second Broadway season on Wednesday, March 9.
The 2022-2023 Broadway series sponsored by First Bank adds a seventh show to the season’s lineup.
The 2022-2023 Broadway season will kick-off on with Pretty Woman: The Musical from Oct. 25 to Oct. 30, 2022.
The other six shows in the Broadway season are:
- Jagged Little Pill: Dec. 6-11, 2022
- CATS: Jan. 24-29, 2023
- The Book of Mormon: Feb. 21-26, 2023
- Ain’t Too Proud – The Life and Times of The Temptations: March 14-19, 2023
- Beetlejuice: April 18-23, 2023
- Disney’s Frozen: May 17-June 4, 2023
Current Broadway Season Seat Members have first access to seats by renewing current subscriptions by Wednesday, May 4 at FirstBankBroadway.com and clicking on “Renew Here.” In the inaugural Broadway season the Tanger Center had a record breaking 17,400 Season Seat Members.
For the general public, Broadway season memberships will go on sale on Monday, June 6 at 10 a.m. at FirstBankBroadway.com .
The sale dates for tickets for each of the seven shows is to be announced.
Managing Director of the Greensboro Coliseum Complex Matt Brown said, “Our Broadway partners, Nederlander and PFM, have delivered another spectacular lineup of premier national touring Broadway productions for our second season. We look forward to building on the incredible public response to our inaugural season as the Tanger Center continues to draw capacity crowds to downtown Greensboro and generate huge economic impact for the Piedmont Triad region.”
The opening of the $93 million Tanger Center was delayed by COVID restrictions from March 2020 to September 2021, which made the 2021-2022 Broadway season the first for the Tanger Center. Since its opening the Tanger Center has hosted over 200,000 patrons at a wide variety of live entertainment performances.
If they are as LOUD as Lion King, include me out.
That’s what she said.
100 million dollar taxpayer Boondoggle is getting same plays as the ignored and neglected War Memorial (under the direction of Matt Brown) such as on 2015 when Cats came to the Coliseum complex. Too bad the elite and donor class disdain working class neighborhoods and would rather build monuments to excessive donors next to properties they are profiting from. Shenanigans and smokescteens, Greensboro residents will be on the hook for the Arts Centers deficiencies just like the other city owned facilities that are allowed to crumble so contracts and real estate speculators can cash in at citizens expense. Also if Performance Arts center sells dinners and desserts how does that benefit nearby small businesses?
Show me on the doll where the arts hurt you.
I am glad the Tanger center is here. People who own restaurants and bars in Downtown GSO are glad too! This was a great investment in our community.
Well said. The returns are already pouring in with several soldiers out shows. Only more to come.
When government takes tax dollars and then decides what arts are worth funding and it turns quickly into crony, big business, and corporate run homogeneous reruns of 50 year old touring shows that regularly came anyway it is incumbent to ask why. To increase property values for the elite property owner downtown class. Artists and arts are hurt by the city subsidizing their preference of bland corporate run entertainment for folks with big bank accounts and little taste. This crushes independent theaters, dance troupe ,etc by making them compete with publicly supported and funded entities. More real art happens in living rooms and barroom than at any hack performances paid for with money better spent on public safety and infrastructure (the real job of city government ).
I regularly attend shows at the comedy zone (local theater) and you assume because I went to see a sold out comedy show at Tanger that I am going to stop seeing shoes at the Comdey Zone? Nope. Not gonna happen.
The reviews of the Tanger are glorious. Guess all those who attended didn’t have to sit upstairs in the cheap seats where the TV screen was unviewable due to poor placement and didnt have to pay twenty five dollars for convenient Handicap parking.