![]() The hotel is also renowned for one-of-a-kind experiences including live concerts, intimate music festivals, and spectacular soirées for May Fair, Halloween and New Year’s Eve.įor additional information, visit. The McKittrick features New York’s most unique venues, including the all-season rooftop restaurant & bar Gallow Green jazz speakeasy Manderley Bar and private performance space The Club Car. The McKittrick Hotel is home of immersive theater spectacle Sleep No More late-night cabaret Bartschland Follies spellbinding sleight-of-hand Speakeasy Magick and limited engagement presentation of The Woman in Black – a ghost story in a pub. A full calendar of live performances and tickets is available at. To purchase tickets, visit and select event date. ![]() A Champagne upgrade is also available for $150 per guest. For more information about Susanne Bartsch, visit General Admission is $35 and reserved seating is $75 per guest. Susanne & DeeDee Luxe host an unforgettable evening of performances by NYC's most brilliant nightlife personalities every week in The Club Car. The McKittrick Hotel joined forces with the Queen of Clubs Susanne Bartsch to create Bartschland Follies - an eclectic and eccentric cabaret extravaganza where a night at the opera collides with a madcap burlesque circus. Tickets are required for entry and there is a full bar available. ![]() If you do, it’s highly unlikely to be your last, anyway.The McKittrick Hotel (home of ‘Sleep No More’) presents Bartschland Follies, hosted by Susanne Bartsch & DeeDee Luxe on Fridays in The Club Car. Of course, if this is to be your first foray into the whimsical world of The McKittrick and you have not yet experienced the spectacle that is Sleep No More, you should most certainly start there. Initially set to end this month, tickets to the show - which is hosted by veteran entertainer Todd Robbins (Off-Broadway’s Play Dead) and also includes performers Alex Boyce ( How to Transcend a Happy Marriage), Jason Suran ( The Other Side), Mark Calabrese ( Penn & Teller: Fool Us), Matthew Holtzclaw ( Penn & Teller: Fool Us), Prakash Puru (celebrity favorite) and Rachel Wax ( A Taste of Magic) - are now available for performances through April 2. The show features parlor magic and up-close-and-personal prestidigitation by the city’s top magical talents, and feels not dissimilar to speed-dating in nature. ![]() Speakeasy Magick is edgy, gripping, intimate and just straight up good fun. Not a magic person, you say? Think again. Alongside the immersive murder mystery in a pub The Woman in Black, there’s Speakeasy Magick, which took up residency at The McKittrick nearly three years ago and has been met with a near constant slew of rave reviews ever since. That said, Sleep No More isn’t the only entertainment experience worth the price of admission. Based on Punchdrunks original 2003 London production, the company reinvented Sleep No More in a co-production with the American Repertory Theatre (A.R.T.), which opened at the Old Lincoln School in Brookline, Massachusetts on October 8, 2009. We recently took a trip to Chelsea to visit The McKittrick to take stock of the offerings and left with many sentiments. Sleep No More is an immersive theatre production created by British theatre company Punchdrunk. While attendees can enjoy an expansion of tableside magic show Speakeasy Magick, the recently transformed rooftop at Gallow Green, a new seasonal menu from the hotel’s Executive Chef, Pascal Le Seac’H, and the reintroduction of Sleep No More, those are hardly the only reasons to pencil in a visit. As of March 2021, Sleep No More currently has an average rating of 4 out of 5 stars on Yelp, based on 1,284 reviews, with 70 of all reviews being 4 stars or above. For a variety of reasons (the Delta variant and a lack of show-goers chief among them), that never happened, and the show’s reopening was pushed back to February 2022.īut now, alas, the day has finally come, and after welcoming the critically acclaimed Sleep No More home last week, the 1930s-themed mecca of inventive dinner theater has triumphantly returned to its pre-pandemic grandeur - and then some. Sixteen months later, in July 2021, it was announced they would resume ticket sales for Sleep No More performances in October 2021. Best known for its spooky, old-timey vibes and a rotating slate of immersive plays and performances, The McKittrick Hotel was forced to close its doors back in March of 2020, much to the dismay of drama junkies and staff alike.
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