Clybourne Park Show Poster

Clybourne Park Tickets

Who are the people in your neighborhood? In 1959, a white family moves out. In 2009, a white family moves in. In the intervening years, change overtakes a neighborhood, along with attitudes, inhabitants, and property values. Loosely inspired by Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun, Bruce Norris' pitch-black comedy takes on the specter of gentrification in our communities, leaving no stone unturned in the process.

This show is closed.

Performances ended on Sep. 2, 2012.

News & Features
About
Video & Photos
Venue
Story
Reviews
Cast & Creative

About Clybourne Park on Broadway

Previews: Mar 26, 2012 • Opening: Apr 19, 2012 • Closing: Sep 2, 2012
Broadway Plays Comedy
My Tickets
Your seats are always together. Bring your family and friends.
Unobstructed view. You'll have a clear view of the stage.
No worries. We provide quick returns if a show closes or cancels a performance.
Have questions? Talk to our expert customer service team.

Video & Photos

Venue

Walter Kerr Theatre Walter Kerr Theatre
219 West 48th Street
New York, NY 10036
Hearing Assistance
Available upon request.
Wheelchair Access
Theater is not completely wheelchair accessible. There are no steps to the designated wheelchair seating locations.
Elevators and Escalators
This theater does not have elevators or escalators.
More Theater Information

Story

What Is the Story of Clybourne Park?
At the heart of this Pulitzer Prize-winning play is a house. In act one, the house is being sold in 1959. Following a family tragedy, a white couple is selling their home in a suburban Chicago neighborhood, and their neighbors was dismayed to learn that the buyers are African-American. In act two the same house is again being sold. But now, in 2009, a white couple is purchasing the home from an African-American couple, and they butt heads over showing respect for a neighborhood that has become largely African-American. These two racially charged transactions tell the story of a home and a neighborhood, as well as the sense of history and entitlement people hang on to, even in the ever-shifting physical boundaries of the American cultural landscape.

Reviews

A collection of our favorite reviews from professional news sources.

"“Superb, elegantly written and hilarious. A master class in comic writing and playing.”"

The New Yorker

John Lahr

""Critic's Pick: A spiky and damningly insightful new comedy.""

The New York Times

Ben Brantley

""Absolutely sensational! The actors fire on all cylinders. Dazzlingly written by Bruce Norris.""

New York Post

Elisabeth Vincentelli

""Hilarious, sparky, delightfully unrepentant observations about life as we choose to know it.""

Newsday

Linda Winer

""Four stars: A superb world premiere! A dynamite cast glides between humor and tragedy and eras without a bobble.""

New York Daily News

Joe Dziemianowicz

""Remarkably perceptive, often hilarious and surprisingly poignant. Pam MacKinnon has staged the play with the precision of an orchestra conductor.""

Associated Press

Michael Kuchwara

Cast & Creative

Cast

Russ/Dan
Crystal Dickinson
Francine/Lena
Brendan Griffin
Jim/Tom/Kenneth
Damon Gupton
Albert/Kevin
Karl/Steve
Betsy/Lindsey

Creative

Written by
Bruce Norris
Director
Pam MacKinnon
Set Designer
Dan Ostling
Costume Designer
Ilona Somogyi
Lighting Designer
Allen Lee Hughes
Sound Designer
John Gromada
Back to Top