CONSERVATORY FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS
SWEENEY TODD: THE DEMON BARBER OF FLEET STREET
A MUSICAL THRILLER
Oct. 10–13, 2024
Viterbo University Fine Arts Center Main Theatre
Main Floor/Lower Balcony: $28
Upper Balcony: $22
Plus a $3 convenience fee and $1 facility fee per ticket.
All orders will include a 5.5% sales tax.
Group and Rush Tickets Available
Rated R for mature themes, strong language, violence, and elements of gore.
Enter the dark world of Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street, where revenge and razor-sharp wit meet in Stephen Sondheim’s Tony Award-winning masterpiece. It’s 19th-Century London and Sweeney has been exiled unjustly. He returns with a thirst for revenge and a knack for helping with “fresh” ingredients in Mrs. Lovett’s infamous meat pies. It’s the perfect recipe for an exhilarating musical theatre experience.
Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
Book by Hugh Wheeler
From an Adaptation by Christopher Bond
Originally Directed on Broadway by Harold Prince
Orchestrations by Jonathan Tunick
Originally produced on Broadway by Richard Barr, Charles Woodward, Robert Fryer, Mary Lea Johnson, Martin Richards in association with Dean and Judy Manos
SWEENEY TODD Is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI). All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI. www.mtishows.com
Sponsored By: FOX 25/48 and Life Time Financial Services
IMPORTANT NOTICE:
The Viterbo University Fine Arts Center’s official and exclusive ticketing partner is OvationTix. Make sure you are buying directly through our website, www.viterbo.edu/fac or OvationTix. We do not use a third-party ticket reseller/vendor. Do not purchase through unauthorized resellers, as we will not be able to guarantee entry. If you are using a search engine to find tickets, be careful. Unauthorized sites with overpriced/counterfeit/invalid tickets are often listed above official ones. If you come across an offer online/on social media for resale tickets, please be extra cautious. If there is a ticket offer–especially from someone you do not know–that seems too good to be true, it is probably fake.