"Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical" (November 16–25)
Similar deals
The Grinch wages a losing battle against the spirit of Christmas in a musical based on the beloved animated television special
- Seating: main floor, side loge, or front balcony; rear main floor or middle balcony
- Click here to view the seating chart
- Free admission for children less than one year old.
Available performances
- Friday, November 16, at 7 p.m.
- Sunday, November 18, at 6 p.m.
- Tuesday, November 20, at 7 p.m.
- Wednesday, November 21, at 7 p.m.
- Friday, November 23, at 7 p.m.
- Saturday, November 24, at 7 p.m.
- Sunday, November 25, at 6 p.m.
How G-Pass Works: Within an hour of purchase, your G-Pass will be in your account. You may redeem your G-Pass via the mobile app when you enter the venue. You may also print it out in advance. Use the G-Pass to enter the venue directly; you won’t need to redeem at will call. Discount reflects the merchant’s current ticket prices - price may differ on day of event.
Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical
Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical looks back on the events of history’s most famous holiday heist through the eyes and narration of an elderly Max, the Grinch’s long-suffering pooch. When the Grinch can’t bear the thought of another Christmas polluting Mount Crumpit’s airspace with its cacophony of jing-tinglers and blum-bloopers, he hatches a scheme to stop the holiday from coming. Soon enough, he is skulking through the darkened homes of Whoville in a jerry-rigged Santa disguise, stripping decorations, retracting Christmas trees like umbrellas, yanking candy canes out of the arms of sleeping babes, and gleefully drop-kicking presents into his enormous sack. The production finds inventive ways to replicate all the iconic imagery from the book—down to the overstuffed sleigh teetering atop a mountain peak—but also conjures just the right song for everything, from the comedy-duo antics of the Grinch and Max to the growing suspicions of the adorable Cindy Lou Who.
Shining out from this lineup of new tunes are the cherubic strains of “Welcome Christmas” and the rumbling basso profundo slander of “You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch”—both made famous by Chuck Jones’ classic animated adaptation. The backdrops, however, mirror Dr. Seuss’ hand-drawn illustrations, and the cast pads their red long johns to make their proportions look just as cartoonishly off-kilter as Whoville’s residents. Yet the greatest attention to detail is lavished on the Grinch himself, who dominates the stage with his matted green fur, floppy fingers, and—through the magic of Method acting and elective surgery—a heart withered by exactly two sizes. Not content with simply transgressing Whoville’s walls, the Grinch transgresses the fourth wall as well with asides to the audience and mean-spirited pranks on the narrator. But even a brain full of spiders and a soul full of gunk can’t shut out the true spirit of Christmas, which may prove sweeter than any slice of roast beast.