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Imperial Theatre
History
The Shuberts conceived of the Imperial Theatre, their fiftieth New York venue, as a home to musical theatre hits, and their dream has been realized many times over. The playhouse was constructed as a replacement for the Shubert’s 20 year old (and out-of-date) Lyric Theatre.

Productions
Over the years, the Imperial has witnessed a distinguished roster of hits. Its inaugural production was Mary Jane McKane (1923) followed by Broadway’s biggest grosser of the 1920s, the operetta Rose-Marie (1924). Next was George and Ira Gershwin’s Oh, Kay! (1926) starring Gertrude Lawrence, which included the now-classic “Someone to Watch Over Me.” Successes of the 1930s included two George and Ira Gershwin tuners, Of Thee I Sing (1933) and Let ‘Em Eat Cake (1933), Moss Hart and Cole Porter’s Jubilee (1935), which featured premieres of “Begin the Beguine” and “Just One of Those Things”, and Rodgers and Hart’s On Your Toes (1936). Mary Martin debuted on Broadway in Cole Porter’s Leave It to Me (1938), singing “My Heart Belongs to Daddy”, and backed up by a chorus boy named Gene Kelly.

Many of the 20th century’s most respected and successful composers and musical theatre stars played the Imperial Theatre. Irving Berlin had four hits here in the 1940s: Louisiana Purchase (1940), Miss Liberty (1949), Annie Get Your Gun (1946) and Call Me Madam (1950). Cole Porter had his collaboration with Herbert and Dorothy Fields Let’s Face It (1941), and Silk Stockings (1955).

Frank Loesser’s The Most Happy Fella (1956) led a new generation of hits, followed by Carnival (1960), Oliver! (1963) and the history-making Fiddler on the Roof (1964) starring Zero Mostel, which went on to become the longest running musical of its time in Broadway history. When Fiddler trasnferred to the Majestic to finish its run, two John Kander and Fred Ebb musicals moved in: Cabaret (1967) and Zorba (1968).

The most successful shows of the 1970s were Bob Fosse’s production of Stephen Schwartz’s Pippin (1972) starring Ben Vereen, and back-to-back Neil Simon hits: Chapter Two (1977) and They’re Playing Our Song (1979). Michael Bennett’s Dreamgirls (1981) was followed by two Shubert-produced musicals: Chess (1988) and Jerome Robbins' Broadway (1989). In 1990, Les Misérables moved to the Imperial from the Broadway, and completed its 6,680 performance run.

Most recently, the Imperial welcomed Australian heartthrob Hugh Jackman in the Peter Allen musical biography, The Boy From Oz (2003), the award-winning musical Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (2005), Tracy Lett's acclaimed August: Osage County (2007), and the Tony Award-winning Best Musical Billy Elliot (2008).

Architecture
Like many other Shubert theatres, the Imperial was designed by Herbert Krapp in his trademark Adam-style. The recessed ceiling and ornamental panels that grace the walls are elaborately decorated with a number of motifs, including florals and geometrics. The rectangular auditorium is wider than it is deep, which allows most audience members to feel close to the stage and performers.

Imperial Theatre Exterior, 45th Street, <em>Les Miserables</em>
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Imperial Theatre Exterior, 45th Street, Les Miserables spacer
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Seat Detail, Imperial Theatre
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Seat Detail, Imperial Theatre spacer
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Imperial Theatre Interior, Proscenium, Stage and Mezzanine
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Imperial Theatre Interior, Proscenium, Stage and Mezzanine spacer
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Imperial Theatre Exterior,<br>Gertrude Lawrence in <em>Oh, Kay!</em>, 1926
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Imperial Theatre Exterior,
Gertrude Lawrence in Oh, Kay!, 1926
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Imperial Theatre Interior,<br>Orchestra and Mezzanine, view from boxes
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Imperial Theatre Interior,
Orchestra and Mezzanine, view from boxes
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Coming Up
Nice Work if You Can Get It
Here’s a surefire recipe for a sparkling, spirited and totally intoxicating musical cocktail: Take two-time Tony Award® winner Matthew Broderick (The Producers) and three-time Tony® nominee Kelly O’Hara (South Pacific), give them a songbook of the greatest American standards ever sung, stir things up with a cast of bootleggers, chorus girls, playboys and politicians, set them loose in a glorious Long Island mansion in the rip-roaring 1920s – and let the fun begin.

Hilarious Broadway entertainment is back in high style with Nice Work if You Can Get It, the song-and-dance spectacular by two-time Tony® winner Joe DiPietro (Memphis), directed and choreographed by three-time Tony® winner Kathleen Marshall (Anything Goes). Overflowing with 15 great songs, including “But Not For Me”, “Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off”, “I’ve Got a Crush on You” and “Someone to Watch Over Me”, this brand-new Gershwin musical comedy combines laughter, romance and high-stepping musical magic.

Nice Work if You Can Get It: ‘S wonderful, ‘s marvelous, ‘s what you’ve got to see!

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Theatre Specs
Imperial Theatre
249 West 45th Street
Between Broadway and 8th Avenue
New York, NY 10036
spacer Imperial Theatre
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Year Builtspacer1923
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Seating Capacityspacer1443 Total
Orchestraspacer759
Front Mezzaninespacer283
Rear Mezzaninespacer377
Boxesspacer24
Pit (Add'l)spacer16
Wheelchairspacer2
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Theatre Dimensions 
Proscenium Opening:39' 7"
Height of Proscenium:25' 0"
Depth to proscenium:33' 8"
Depth to front of stage:40' 2"
Stage Type:Proscenium
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Seating Map
Click on the chart to see a larger version.
Imperial Theatre Seating Map
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