Ebrin R. Stanley, Rixey Terry, Leslie Odom Jr., Morgan Anita Wood, Trey Curtis, and Tamar Greene are seen at the curtain call during a performance of 'Hamilton' on Broadway at Richard Rodgers Theatre on September 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 made more than $4 million last week, marking the highest gross the musical has hit in its ten years on Broadway. Notably, the tally of $4.042 million comes outside of the holiday season, when shows typically see their highest grosses and slightly bests Hamilton's previous high of $4.041 million, which was set in 2018 in the Christmas week. The total comes as Leslie Odom Jr. continues to reprise the role of Aaron Burr, which he originated, and as the average ticket price increased to $376 from $348. The Broadway fall season is also ramping up as several productions began previews last week, boosting the overall industry tally up 25 percent. Related Stories Lifestyle How Danny Strong Became the Guy to Fix the Musical 'Chess' Business Broadway Musicians Vote to Authorize Strike Among the new shows, Little Bear Ridge Road, which marks Scott Rudin's return to Broadway producing, played its first eight previews last week and got off to somewhat of a slow start with capacity at 83 percent and a tally of $371,635 at the Booth Theatre. The play, which stars Laurie Metcalf and Micah Stock, is set to open Oct. 30. Beetlejuice returned to Broadway last week and brought in a strong $1.16 million across its first seven performances at the Palace Theatre. The musical comes to Broadway as part of a tour, marking its third run here in recent years, and, as such, it's eschewing the traditional preview process. The show began performances and opened Oct. 8. Queen of Versailles, starring Kristin Chenoweth as the reality star who hopes to build her dream home, brought in a strong $775,752 across its first four previews at the Palace Theatre, with an average ticket price of $131.59 and playing to 100 percent capacity. After Hamilton, the highest grossing shows were Wicked with $2.5 million, The Lion King with $2.3 million, Waiting For Godot, starring Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter, with $1.8 million and Art, starring James Corden, Neil Patrick Harris and Bobby Cannavale for $1.76 million. THR Newsletters Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day Subscribe Sign Up Film and TV Tax Credits Los Angeles Film and TV Production Levels Hit New Lows Spotify Netflix Inks Deal With Spotify to Stream Video Podcasts pete hegseth Nearly All Major TV Networks Reject Pentagon Press Access Rules Erik Feig Erik Feig Launches New Production Banner With Major Saudi Backing VFX This Deep-Pocketed New Studio Aims to Bring GenAI Filmmaking and VFX to Legacy Media cinema united Cinema United Extends Michael O'Leary's Contract for Five More Years Film and TV Tax Credits Los Angeles Film and TV Production Levels Hit New Lows Spotify Netflix Inks Deal With Spotify to Stream Video Podcasts pete hegseth Nearly All Major TV Networks Reject Pentagon Press Access Rules Erik Feig Erik Feig Launches New Production Banner With Major Saudi Backing VFX This Deep-Pocketed New Studio Aims to Bring GenAI Filmmaking and VFX to Legacy Media cinema united Cinema United Extends Michael O'Leary's Contract for Five More Years