Leslie Odom Jr. and Morgan Anita Wood at the curtain call during a performance of 'Hamilton' on Broadway at Richard Rodgers Theatre on Sept. 9, 2025 ,in New York City. Valerie Terranova/Getty Images Share on Facebook Share on X Share to Flipboard Send an Email Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Print the Article Post a Comment Hamilton hit close to $4 million last week as original cast member Leslie Odom Jr. returned to the Broadway production. The musical, which recently celebrated its 10th anniversary on Broadway, brought in the eye-popping $3.8 million last week, which is a total the musical has only previously seen around its lucrative holiday weeks, and played to more than 100 percent capacity. The average ticket price was $352.36, which only pales in comparison to the average ticket price for Waiting for Godot. Odom is set to play the role of Aaron Burr through Nov. 26. Related Stories Movies Robert Redford, Golden Boy of Hollywood, Dies at 89 TV Patricia Crowley, Star of TV's 'Please Don't Eat the Daisies,' Dies at 91 Waiting for Godot, starring Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter, played its first preview performance at the Hudson Theatre last week and brought in $367,206 in one show. If the trend continues across future performances, this could spell close to $3 million at the weekly box office. The revival, which played to 100 percent capacity at its first performance, is set to open Sept. 28. Wicked was the second-highest-grossing show of the week with $2 million, followed by The Lion King with $1.7 million, Mamma Mia! with $1.6 million and Death Becomes Her with $1.4 million. Art, starring James Corden, Neil Patrick Harris and Bobby Cannavale, fell slightly outside of the top five last week, as the play had four heavily comped press performances leading up to opening night Tuesday. The revival still brought in $1.35 million and played to close to 100 percent capacity at the Music Box Theatre. Cabaret saw its grosses jump close to $250,000 from the prior week, to reach close to $630,000, and capacity also jumped to 91 percent from 68 percent as the understudies David Merino and Marty Lauter alternated in the lead role of the Emcee, taking over from Billy Porter. Porter announced on Sept. 7 that he was withdrawing from the show as he recovered from a serious case of sepsis. In turn, the musical announced that it would be closing weeks earlier than expected, with the understudies alternating the role until the closing date of Sept. 21. However, grosses had already been trending down ahead of the closing notice amid mixed to negative word-of-mouth about Porter's performance. THR Newsletters Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day Subscribe Sign Up Webtoon Webtoon Shares Soar on Disney Digital Comics Partnership Deal for Marvel, 'Star Wars' Content Transformers Hasbro Entertainment President Olivier Dumont Exits golf Amazon Adds Coverage of The Masters to Sports Lineup Video Games TV Adaptations of Video Games Are Creating Millions of New Players Shari Redstone Shari Redstone's Next Act: Mogul Named Chair of 'We Will Dance Again' and 'Bad Boy' Studio Sipur TV Ratings Football Helps Cable, Broadcast Reclaim Some Viewers in August Webtoon Webtoon Shares Soar on Disney Digital Comics Partnership Deal for Marvel, 'Star Wars' Content Transformers Hasbro Entertainment President Olivier Dumont Exits golf Amazon Adds Coverage of The Masters to Sports Lineup Video Games TV Adaptations of Video Games Are Creating Millions of New Players Shari Redstone Shari Redstone's Next Act: Mogul Named Chair of 'We Will Dance Again' and 'Bad Boy' Studio Sipur TV Ratings Football Helps Cable, Broadcast Reclaim Some Viewers in August