Free Ticket Offer at the Public Theater

Hi NYCTUG!

I’m excited to offer a limited number of tickets to an upcoming performance of ILLYRIA at the Public Theater to NYCTUG members. Details below - filling out the form is necessary as tickets are limited!

IMPORTANT INFORMATION about reserving your ticket:

  • We are only able to offer one ticket per person, but you may send this to a friend if you would like someone to accompany you to the performance.
  • YOU WILL NOT RECEIVE AN IMMEDIATE CONFIRMATION EMAIL. Your name will be automatically added to our list when you complete the form. (When you click submit, a confirmation message will appear on your screen. This message confirms your ticket, and then you will receive an additional reminder email closer to the performance date).
  • In addition, you will receive a confirmation email closer to the performance.
  • PLEASE DO NOT RSVP IF YOU ARE UNSURE THAT YOU WILL BE ABLE TO ATTEND. We will be tracking those who RSVP and do not attend.

 

Click the link below to access the ticketing form:

 

THE FORM WILL STOP WORKING ONCE PERFORMANCES ARE FILLED. However, if the form is no longer accepting responses and you would like to add your name to a wait list to receive tickets in the event that more become available, please fill out THIS FORM. You will receive an email if we are able to move you off the waitlist and guarantee your ticket.

 

A little bit about ILLYRIA:

 

The New York Times has called Tony Award-winning playwright and director Richard Nelson’s plays “a triumph of civic theater.” This season, the writer-director of the acclaimed Apple Family Plays and last season’s The Gabriels returns to 425 Lafayette to reveal a forgotten chapter of The Public Theater’s own history.

It is 1958, and New York City is in the midst of a major building boom; a four-lane highway is planned for the heart of Washington Square; Carnegie Hall is designated for demolition; entire neighborhoods on the West Side are leveled to make room for a new "palace of art." And a young Joe Papp and his colleagues face betrayals, self-inflicted wounds, and anger from the city’s powerful elite as they continue their free Shakespeare productions in Central Park.

From the creator of the most celebrated family plays of the last decade comes a drama about a different kind of family – one held together by the simple and incredibly complicated belief that the theater, and the city, belong to all of us.

For more information about the show, please visit:

https://www.publictheater.org/Public-Theater-Season/Illyria/