Fences Information |
Fences Tickets: Denzel Washington on Broadway! Fences tickets Broadway are the talk of the theater world right now, as Hollywood superstar Denzel Washington heads to the stage to show his pedigree as a real actor. The Fences Broadway schedule is currently set to run from April until July, and you're advised to buy Fences tickets in advance, as this powerful play about race and rage takes hold of America's imagination once again. Washington is perfect for the role, and it is no surprise that Fences tickets are causing a stir. Artistic Director Lou Bellamy, himself having both starred in and directed the production, is the best possible artistic guide for this gripping play, and he recognizes Fences as being a yardstick for what he calls "A whole army of people" who made their name by making Fences come alive during their formative years on the stage. Fences tells a story of how a man can rise and fall in a society frightened of its own impediments - especially its racial barriers. Washington is Troy Maxson, former Negro League baseball player and ex-con, a once proud athlete now reduced to working as a trash collector. The play is set in Maxson's Pittsburgh yard, where a man's private world dovetails with that of his neighbors. Viola Davis plays Washington's wife Rosa, a woman well familiar with what her husband's shortcomings - and society's prejudices - have done to her once happy life. Buy Fences tickets and be moved by this backyard drama, in which Washington's family are embroiled. The most famous of Troy Maxsons is of course, James Earl Jones, and Washington will need to bring himself to this one if he is to be remembered as the new greatest purveyor of a central role and theme in world theater. Fences on Broadway is the kind of play that never runs out of appeal, and this time with the added sparkle of Denzel Washington, we are looking at one of its finest hours. If you're looking for a real experience, played out by experts in the field, Fences tickets on Broadway are for you. Don't miss this latest - and possibly greatest - version of an already great play. |


