The headline in this week's trade publication Variety offers some bad news for New York Post, the ceaseless critical foe of Bombay Dreams.
'Dream week for Bombay Dreams' declares the headline in the influential trade weekly. In its first full session of eight performances, Bombay Dreams grossed $766,721 (out of a $1 million potential) and entered the chart at No 7. It grew $201,038 to enjoy the week's biggest uptick, reports Variety.
The show, which cost $14 million, has to do better and stay ahead in the competition for over six months to recoup.
Each week, the show has to earn $500,000 to break-even.
The Post had announced last week that in its first night following the premiere that had drawn heavyweights such as businessman Donald Trump and television journalist Mike Wallace, the show had grossed just about $80,000. At that rate, its producers better start giving the box-office figures in rupees, the Post added.
Though many newspapers including The Washington Post and USA Today slammed the musical, it got a rave from New York's Daily News newspaper and Entertainment Weekly and an above-average review from Newsday. Try to get that music out of your mind, challenged the Newsday review. The producers have begun aggressively advertising the show not only in New York newspapers but also in major newspapers outside the state. The ads found quite a few positive lines even in adverse reviews.
Though Bombay Dreams took just three Tony nominations -- best choreography, costumes and orchestration -- the audience reaction has continued to be strongly encouraging, its producers say.
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