"Super Why Live: You've Got the Power!" at Tower Theatre on Saturday, May 4 (Up to Half Off). Four Options Available.
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Lively songs, dances, and aerial stunts dazzle youngsters in a dynamic multimedia show about the power of reading; based on the PBS hit
Children’s shows help kids imagine they’re anyone they want to be, whether it’s a pirate, a superhero, or a kid whose stupid brother isn’t allergic to every pet worth having. Let little ones dream big with this deal to see Super Why Live: You’ve Got the Power! at the Tower Theatre on Saturday, May 4. Choose between the following seating options:
- For $9.50, you get one G-Pass for balcony seating (up to a $19 value, including all fees).
- For $14.50, you get one G-Pass for seating in orchestra rows A–V (up to a $29 value, including all fees).<p>
For either option, choose between the following showtimes:
- 2 p.m.
- 5 p.m.<p>
Doors open one hour before each performance. Because the ticket is a G-Pass, our customers can use it to enter the venue directly; they will not need to redeem their voucher at will cal.
The dynamic, knowledge-seeking characters from the PBS hit TV show burst from the screen and onto the stage during Super Why. The interactive show features beloved characters such as Alpha Pig, Wonder Red, and Woofster the puppy as they set out on adventures in reading against a backdrop of dazzling multimedia. Aerial stunts, choreographed dances, and tunes such as “Fairytale Friends” envelop preschool audience members in a thrilling, exploratory world of learning that’s much more fun than getting locked in a library overnight.
Due to security restrictions, G-Passes must be printed out and presented in person at the event. They cannot be redeemed through the mobile app.
Need To Know Info
About Super Why Live: You've Got the Power!
Several decades of disparate architectural styles stand at the corner of 69th and Ludlow: an old-fashioned radio tower atop the Doric columns of a faux-classical cupola atop a streamlined marquee that broadcasts the year the Tower Theatre opened as a music venue: 1972. That's when it began helping introduce the world to such acts as David Bowie, Genesis, and Bruce Springsteen. Inside, red lights glow over an auditorium done up in the 1920s style of the movie palace that originally filled the venue, with marble pillars, Italianate archways, and an enormous light fixture that resembles an old film reel from the days before movies were beamed from computers into audiences' brains.