How to Dance in Ohio has announced its closure on Broadway. The show’s final performance will be February 11. The new neurodivergent coming-of-age musical opened at the Belasco Theatre December 10 after beginning previews November 15. At the time of closing, the musical will have played 27 previews and 72 regular performances.
The production was a major milestone for neurodivergent representation on Broadway, with seven openly autistic actors playing the show’s seven autistic characters, as echoed in the show’s mantra: “nothing about us without us.”
The show had just released its cast album January 19.
“Developing new work is always a risk, but producing this show was an endeavor we eagerly accepted,” said the show’s producers in a statement. “We’re incredibly proud that this original, joyful, and life-affirming musical has deeply moved countless audience members at the Belasco Theatre and beyond. Broadway has been changed forever because of How to Dance in Ohio and all the artists involved. We look forward to seeing its legacy continue in new and exciting ways.”
Directed by Sammi Cannold, the production is a verifiable cornucopia of Broadway debuts, with Cannold making her long-awaited Main Stem debut alongside the show’s writers, composer Jacob Yandura and book writer and lyricist Rebekah Greer Melocik, and much of the cast.
Adapted from Alexandra Shiva’s 2015 HBO documentary, the show follows the challenges faced by a group of autistic young adults at a counseling center in Ohio. With the support of clinical psychologist Dr. Emilio Amigo, the center arranges a spring formal dance and encourages them as they encounter love, fear, stress, excitement, and hope, along the path to human connection.