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Disgraced

First Preview: Sep 14, 2014
Opening Date: Sep 14, 2014
Closing Date: Mar 1, 2015
Running Time: 01:25
Disgraced

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Playing @
Lyceum Theatre
149 W 45th St, New York, NY 10036
The winner of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize, Disgraced is an explosive tale of the stories we tell our friends, the secrets we tell our lovers, and the lies we tell ourselves to find our place in the American Dream. 

Starring Josh Radnor (How I Met Your Mother), Gretchen Mol (Boardwalk Empire), Karen Pittman (Domesticated), and Hari Dhillon (star of the acclaimed London production), and written by Ayad Akhtar, one of the most astonishing new voices in American theatre, this provocative tale of big city aspiration and cultural assimilation dares to face the truth hiding just below the deception. 

PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE:
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY &THURSDAY @ 7 PM
FRIDAY & SATURDAY @ 8 PM
WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY @ 2 PM
SUNDAY @ 3 PM
BroadwayPlay - Drama
Show Notes: No Intermission
Age Guidance: 16

TDF Tickets Offers:

TDF Member tickets:

Not currently available for this show

Listed at

Never

Full-price tickets:

$37.50 - $138.00

Lottery & Rush

$32 tickets will be available day of at the box office only. There will be a limited number of tickets available
and only one ticket will be sold per person.

Video

Reviews

  • “Bon appétit!” The festive phrase announcing the start of a meal sounds more like a bell signaling another round in a prizefight when it is chirped by Gretchen Mol, playing a hostess whose dinner party has become a verbal jousting tournament in Ayad Akhtar’s terrific, turbulent drama “Disgraced.”

    -------New York Times
  • FOUR STARS
    This is a superior production to the one that opened at Lincoln Center in 2012, with a more charismatic cast and a better sense of the rising ideological stakes. In the lead role of proudly assimilated lawyer Amir Kapoor, Hari Dhillon cuts a handsome, graceful figure. He has an easy chemistry with his pretty wife, Emily (Gretchen Mol), an artist whose recent work is influenced by Islamic ornamentation.

    ------TimeOutNY 
  • It’s a good thing that the playwright Ayad Akhtar is Muslim, because if any non-Muslim wrote Disgraced — and you could almost imagine someone like Bruce Norris wanting to — the response from both left and right would be furious. As it is, the intense 80-minute drama, which seems to ask whether there is something inherent in Islam that predisposes believers to violence, incites furious responses anyway; at the preview I attended, a member of the audience, echoing one character’s description of the Muslim protagonist, shouted, “He is a f**king animal!”

    -------Vulture
  • “Bon appétit!” The festive phrase announcing the start of a meal sounds more like a bell signaling another round in a prizefight when it is chirped by Gretchen Mol, playing a hostess whose dinner party has become a verbal jousting tournament in Ayad Akhtar’s terrific, turbulent drama “Disgraced.”

    -------New York Times

Accessibility

  • Restroom

    There is a wheelchair accessible restroom
  • Seating

    Orchestra Seating is accessible to all parts of the Orchestra without steps. No steps to the designated wheelchair seating locations. Mezzanine Located on the 2nd level, up 2 flight of stairs from the Orchestra. Please note: on the Mezzanine level there are approximately 2 steps per row. Entrance to mezzanine is behind row J. Balcony Located on the 3rd level, up 4 flights of stairs from Orchestra. There is a separate entrance from street level.
  • Telephone

    Payphone - Located in the ticket lobby. Accessible at 54" w/utility outlet.
  • Entrance

    No steps into the theater from the sidewalk. Please be advised that where there are steps either into or within the theater, we are unable to provide assistance.
  • Water Fountain

    Located in the ticket lobby Accessible at 36"
  • Assisted Listening System

    Please call: (212) 582-7678 to reserve in advance. Drivers license or ID with printed address required as a deposit.
  • Elevator/Escalator

    There is no elevator or escalator at this theatre. Handrails are available at the end of every stepped seat row in the Mezzanine and Balcony.
  • Wheelchair Info

    Theatre is not completely wheelchair accessible. There are no steps into the theatre from the sidewalk. Please be advised that where there are steps either into or within the theatre, we are unable to provide assistance.

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