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What's Closing Soon on Broadway & Off Broadway- March 2025

Which shows close soon in NYC? We have the full list for March 2025!

By: Feb. 27, 2025
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It's closing time! Last call to catch some of your favorite stars in action on and off Broadway, including a Pulitzer Prize winner and more. Get your tickets to these shows now before they are gone for good.  

Check out which shows are closing in March 2025 below and learn more about what's coming to Broadway in 2025 and the best shows on Broadway right now.


Closing Soon on Broadway

What's Closing Soon on Broadway & Off Broadway- March 2025  Image

English (Broadway, 3/2/2025)
It's not language that defines you. It's your voice. That's the message of English- the Pulitzer Prize-winning play coming to Broadway via Roundabout Theatre Company. Written by Sanaz Toossi and directed by Knud Adams, the play arrives on Broadway, after its world premiere co-production with Atlantic Theater Company. once again directs this English is about the universal foibles of language and miscommunication. The comedy unfolds in an Iranian classroom where adult English learners practice for their proficiency exam. As they leapfrog through a linguistic playground, their wildly different dreams, frustrations, and secrets come to light. Can they overcome the limits of language to discover what they really want to say? English won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 2023, beating out finalists On Sugarland by Aleshea Harris and The Far Country by Lloyd Suh. The company features the entire cast from the off-Broadway premiere, including Tala Ashe, Ava Lalezarzadeh, Pooya Mohseni, Marjan Neshat, and Hadi Tabbal. All are making their Broadway debuts in the production.


Closing Soon Off-Broadway

Mary Said What She Said (Off-Bway, 3/2/2025)
Award-winning French actress Isabelle Huppert gives a tour de force performance in this remarkable production, directed and designed by the American theatre visionary Robert Wilson. Mary Said What She Said charts the life and torments of Mary Stuart, the sovereign whose passions cost her a crown. Mary Said was written by novelist and playwright Darryl Pinckney and features an evocative classical score by the Italian composer Ludovico Einaudi. It premiered in 2019 at Théâtre de la Ville–Paris and is the second monologue and third play directed by Robert Wilson starring Isabelle Huppert, following Orlando (1993) and Quartet (2006).


Safe House (Off-Bway, 3/2/2025)
SAFE HOUSE continues St. Ann’s longtime championing of the singular work of Tony Award-winner Enda Walsh, whose haunting and visionary plays — The Walworth Farce, New Electric Ballroom, Penelope, Arlington, Misterman, Ballyturk, Medicine, his adaptation/direction of Max Porter’s Grief is the Thing with Feathers—and first opera The Last Hotel have all been introduced on American soil at St. Ann’s Warehouse. In this production from the Abbey Theatre, Ireland’s national theater, Walsh teams up as lyricist and director with electronic-acoustic composer Anna Mullarkey. The exquisite performer Kate Gilmore plays the role of Grace. “A dazzling achievement…in the form of a song cycle” (The Guardian, in a five-star review), this “beautifully realized, multifaceted work” is an experience of “sensory envelopment through film imagery, orchestral composition, rippling sound design and Kate Gilmore’s stunning performance.” In Walsh’s own words: “I’ve never made anything like this before. It’s a brand new form for me. A song cycle. A theatre memory play. A cut up film. A gig. It’s not for me to say what it is really. It’s its own thing.”


The Brothers Size (Off-Bway, 3/16/2025)
The Shed presents a powerful new staging of Academy Award-winning writer of Moonlight Tarell Alvin McCraney’s acclaimed play, The Brothers Size. This co-production with Los Angeles’s Geffen Playhouse marks the 20th anniversary of this groundbreaking work, which explores themes of brotherhood, resilience, and the complexities of the Black male experience. Directed by Bijan Sheibani and presented in the round in The Griffin Theater, this play invites audiences to witness the raw and intimate story of two brothers navigating life after incarceration, weaving into the storytelling the rich tradition of the Yoruba people of West Africa. The Brothers Size is a modern-day fable about two brothers in the Deep South. Ogun, the elder brother, embodies hard work and reliability, while Oshoosi, formerly incarcerated, is seemingly carefree and unpredictable. Their relationship is tested when the charismatic Elegba arrives, tempting Oshoosi back to his old habits. As the brothers wrestle with loyalty, freedom, and duty, their humanity is revealed through a raw and heartfelt exploration of the bonds of brotherhood.


Grangeville (Off-Bway, 3/23/2025)
Across a void of thousands of miles and oceans of hurt, two half-brothers tentatively reconnect over the care of their ailing mother. Grangeville is a new play about the fallibility of memory, the stories we tell to make sense of our suffering, and the complexity of forgiveness.


Dakar 2000 (Off-Bway, 3/23/2025)
In Senegal on the eve of Y2K, an idealistic Peace Corps volunteer survives a mysterious car accident. An imposing State Department operative arrives at his hospital where she immediately takes command of the situation and his safety. Though they couldn’t be more different, they form an unlikely relationship. But when it becomes clear that they both have secrets, the volunteer is roped into a darker side of public service–one he can’t come back from. Unpredictable at every turn, this world-premiere thriller was commissioned by Manhattan Theatre Club.







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