The back row of the mezzanine at “Good Night and Good Luck,” starring George Clooney, is $272. Front row center is about $600.
Row D at “The Picture of Dorian Gray,” with “Succession” Emmy winner Sarah Snook, is a relatively kind $450.
Tickets costing the same as an apartment rental in Kansas City is especially rich coming from an industry that prides itself as a warrior against inequality.
Um, none of the people you’re fighting for can afford your freakin’ shows!
Expensive tickets are nothing new, of course. Scalpers make a mint selling hot tickets to high rollers.
“The Producers” caused a stir in 2001 when its face value jumped to $100. How quaint.