Oh Hello, on Broadway

Oh Hello, on Broadway Tickets

This show is closed.

Tickets at Lyceum Theatre

The Lyceum Theatre was built by producer Daniel Frohman in 1903. It was purchased in 1940 by a group of producers and later changed hands to the Shuberts where it has remained ever since. The building has been declared a landmark and still uses Frohman's former apartment above the theater as the Shubert Archive.


The Lyceum is Broadway's oldest continually operating legitimate theater.

Address

149 West 45th Street
New York, NY 10036
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How to Get Discounts at the Box Office

There are no active discounts for My Son’s a Queer (But What Can You Do?). However, you may visit their box office in-person to purchase tickets and save fees. As always, if you do not have flexibility we advise making a purchase in advance to secure your tickets.

Lyceum Theatre

Oh Hello, on Broadway Discount Tickets

About Oh Hello, on Broadway on Broadway

Venue

Lyceum Theatre
149 West 45th Street
New York, NY 10036
View on Map

Duration

90 minutes (no intermission)

Audience

Ages 13 and up

Previews

Sept. 23, 2016

Opening

Oct. 10, 2016

Closing

Jan. 22, 2017

Video for Oh Hello, on Broadway

Story for Oh Hello, on Broadway

The two hottest voices in comedy today, Nick Kroll (Comedy Central’s “Kroll Show”) and John Mulaney (Netflix’s “The Comeback Kid”), make their no-holds-barred Broadway debuts in Oh, Hello on Broadway! This fall, they take the stage as their acclaimed alter egos, Gil Faizon and George St. Geegland—outrageously opinionated, 70-something, self-proclaimed “legendary” bachelors born and bred in New York. And they’re still unable to swipe a Metrocard in under seven tries.

First seen in New York’s comedy underground over ten years ago, the characters of Gil and George rose to wild popularity on Comedy Central. Now, Broadway gets an evening with the guys The Hollywood Reporter calls “the funniest comic duo of their generation!”

Directed by subversive visionary Alex Timbers (Peter and the Starcatcher, Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson), Oh, Hello on Broadway is Gil and George’s pull-no-punches “memoir for the stage”—a laugh-a-minute two-man tour-de-force that’s part scripted, part spontaneous comedy, and totally unprecedented.