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Address

1634 Broadway
New York City, NY 10019-6894

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Winter Garden

Public Transportation

Subway Icon

By Subway:

1, 9 to 50th StN, R to 49th SC, E to 50th StB, D, E to 7th Ave

Bus Icon

By Bus:

Take the M7, M20, M50, or M104 bus.

Accessibility:

Parking

Parking

Valet parking garage: 51st St. in arcade between Broadway & 8th Ave. No high top vans.

Directions Subway

Directions Subway

1, 9 to 50th StN, R to 49th SC, E to 50th StB, D, E to 7th Ave

Elevator\Escalator

Elevator\Escalator

There are no elevators or escalators at this theatre.

Assisted Listening System

Assisted Listening System

Assisted Listening Devices are available and reservations are not necessary. Drivers license or ID with printed address required as a deposit. Please call: (212) 582-7678 to reserve in advance. Closed Captioning is also available through the GalaPro app. For more information on GalaPro, check here: https://www.galapro.com/

Wheelchair Info

Wheelchair Info

Theatre is not completely wheelchair accessible. There are no steps in the designated wheelchair seating location. Twenty ADA compliant viewing locations with companion seating. Patron purchases aisle seat and adjacent seat. Transfer optional.

Box Office

Box Office

Ticket Lobby. Counter 44". Accessible pass-through with writing shelf at 32". Assistance available.

Curb Ramps

Curb Ramps

NE corner of 51 St. & Broadway only.

Entrance

Entrance

Double doors in series: 1st set (each 28.5") has one pair of automatic doors from Broadway to Ticket Lobby with push-button control. 2nd set (each 28", attended by ushers) to Inner Lobby; 3rd set (each 28", attended by ushers) to orchestra.

Folding Armrests

Folding Armrests

Seventeen row-end seats with folding armrests.

Restroom

Restroom

Unisex: Inner lobby. Orchestra level. ADA compliant. Door 32". Stall 100" x 61". Commode 17". Grab bars.

Seating

Seating

Orchestra on ground level. Mezzanine reached only by stairs.

Telephone

Telephone

Ticket lobby. Coin slot 48". Cord 29". Volume control. With TTY and electric outlet.

Water Fountain

Water Fountain

Inner lobby. Spout 43".

Directions Bus

Directions Bus

Take the M7, M20, M50, or M104 bus.

Visual Assistance

Visual Assistance

Vision seats available for purchase in person or over the phone. Audio Description is also available through the GalaPro app. More information can be found here: https://www.galapro.com/

Translation

Translation

Subtitled language translations available in Spanish & Japanese for $5 on the GalaPro app. For more information, go to https://www.galapro.com/

Theater Description:

The Winter Garden Theatre

ORIGINALLY BUILT IN 1896 AS THE AMERICAN HORSE EXCHANGE FOR CORNELIUS VANDERBILT, THE WINTER GARDEN WAS CONVERTED INTO A THEATER IN 1911 BY WILLIAM ALBERT SWASEY FOR THE SHUBERTS.One of the largest theaters on Broadway, it was intended to present grand musical productions. The location, north of the main theater district between 50th and 51st Streets, was a gamble but it suited the Shuberts’ needs for a 1,800-seat theater and vaudeville stage. The March 20, 1911 opening production, La Belle Paree, featured Al Jolson in his Broadway debut. A year after its opening, a grand runway was added along the length of the orchestra, which broke down the barrier between the audience and players. Nearly naked showgirls pranced along the runway, making the Winter Garden a very popular venue. As entertainment gradually shifted to more intimate revues in the 1920s, the Shuberts hired Herbert J. Krapp to remodel the theater to better accommodate these new productions. Krapp also reworked Swasey’s original interior with an adaptation of the eighteenth-century neoclassical Adamesque style with bands of plasterwork that emphasized the proscenium arch, the boxes, and the stylized Corinthian columns. Of the four theaters that Swasey designed for the Shuberts, only the Winter Garden survives. In keeping with the original vision of presenting musical productions, the Winter Garden has housed some of Broadway’s most successful productions, including West Side Story, 42nd Street, and Cats, which ran for eighteen years.