The Miracle Worker
Tickets and Information
SHOW INFORMATION
Opened Mar 3, 2010
Closed Apr 4, 2010
2hr. 0min.
(includes 1 intermission)
Visit the The Miracle Worker website:
http://www.miracleworkeronbroadway.com
WHAT IS IT ABOUT?
Set in Tuscumbia, Alabama in the 1880s, The Miracle Worker tells the story of the young Helen Keller, who became blind and deaf after a childhood illness, and the extraordinary woman, Annie Sullivan, who taught her to communicate with the world.
The 50th Anniversary production and first Broadway revival of William Gibson's Tony Award® winning The Miracle Worker will be staged in the round for the first time. Starring Abigail Breslin and Alison Pill.
Call 800-432-7780 for Group tickets.
THEATER/VENUE INFORMATION:
WHAT ARE CRITICS SAYING?
What are other members saying?
Great performance
My husband and I went with a school group and we loved it. We loved the intimate stage and the atmosphere and cast was fabulous...made us feel like we were right there with them! Very emotional and funny at times. Would love to see it again and bring our children to see it...if it was not closed already! I am so sad about that!!
Reviewed by ourapr
on Wednesday, Apr 7th, 2010
Fabulous
I took my Grandaughter as a surprise for her 10th birthday. Shes a big Abigail Breslin fan. We really enjoyed the show and Abi did a great performance. Afterwards we were able to meet Abigail. What a fantastic young lady. She took time out to say Hi and signed autographs for everyone who waited to see her.
Reviewed by Barbara Macko
on Thursday, Mar 18th, 2010
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Directions & Map
Most audiences likely to see director Kate Whoriskey's mostly effective Broadway revival of William Gibson's 1959 drama The Miracle Worker, now at Circle in the Square, will know that its embattled protagonists -- 20-year-old, first-time teacher Annie Sullivan (Alison Pill) and pre-teen deaf, blind, and mute Helen Keller (Abigail Breslin) -- reach an historic win-win victory. So it's not much of a spoiler to declare that the final five minutes of this drama, in which Helen at last understands that the letters w-a-t-e-r Sullivan has been spelling on her palm stand for the substance coming out of the garden pump, remains not just exhilarating, but is indisputably one of the most effective se[...]