Drunk Shakespeare — NYC Guide
A 21+ immersive comedy night in a hidden library speakeasy near Times Square. One actor gets five shots of whiskey. The rest try to hold Shakespeare together. Here’s what to know before you go.
Drunk Shakespeare is not a theater night in the traditional sense. It is a comedy show that happens to use Shakespeare as its raw material — and the tension between the polished source and the chaotic execution is exactly where the fun lives. Five professional actors convene in a hidden library as members of “The Drunk Shakespeare Society.” One of them has taken five shots of whiskey before stepping on stage. The other four attempt to perform a Shakespeare play normally. What happens next is different every night, and that unpredictability is the whole point.
The show has been running in New York since 2014, has a New York Times Critics’ Pick designation, and has built its following on word of mouth from people who went in skeptical and came out surprised. You do not need to know Shakespeare. You do not need to be a theater person. You need to be 21 or older with a valid photo ID, and willing to have a good time in a room where the script is technically optional.

What Drunk Shakespeare Actually Is
The setup is consistent every night. Five actors arrive as members of the fictional Drunk Shakespeare Society. Before the show begins, one of them takes five shots of whiskey — the first in front of the audience, to confirm it is real — and is then assigned a major Shakespeare role. Which play they are performing rotates; you will not know until you are there. The drunk actor attempts the role. The four sober ones try to perform around them, keep the scene going, and improvise around whatever the fifth is doing. When the drunk actor goes off-book, or freezes, or starts riffing entirely, the others follow them in.
The show has been described as live-action improv wearing a Shakespeare costume. That is accurate. The actors are professionals — they know the plays, they know how to improvise, and they know how to play the room. The comedy is not just “person is drunk doing funny things.” It is the collision of trained performance and genuine unpredictability, in an intimate in-the-round setting where the audience is close enough to feel part of the event rather than just watching it.
If you are looking for a polished, classical Shakespeare interpretation, this is not it and was not designed to be. If you want a funny, loose, interactive Off-Broadway experience where the room has genuine energy, the actors are skilled, and no two nights are identical — this is one of the stronger options in the current Off-Broadway cluster. The speakeasy-library setting at The Ruby Theatre does real atmospheric work. It does not feel like a generic black-box studio. The environment is part of what makes the evening feel like going out rather than attending a play.
The content advisory from the official production is explicit: strong language, vulgarity, sexual humor, audience interaction, and possible nudity. Those are not edge cases — they are structurally built into an improv-driven show where the performers have latitude to follow wherever the drunk actor goes. Know that before you sit down, and you will have a better time. Be surprised by it, and you may not.
Who Should See It — and Who Should Skip It
- Adults 21 and up looking for a genuinely fun date night
- Friend groups, birthday parties, and bachelorette nights
- Visitors who want Off-Broadway energy over a formal theater experience
- People who enjoy improv, crowd engagement, and live unpredictability
- Anyone who does not want to sit quietly and watch — this room is participatory
- People who actively dislike Shakespeare — knowing it is not the point
- Shakespeare fans who can laugh at the material being wrecked in real time
- Anyone in your group is under 21 — strictly enforced, no exceptions
- You want a traditional or faithful Shakespeare production
- You prefer a quieter, more structured theater experience
- Strong profanity, sexual humor, or audience interaction is a concern
- You are traveling with family or mixed-age groups
- You are sensitive to crowd energy or being singled out during a show
The 21+ policy is firm and consistent. The official FAQ says no exceptions, and the door enforces it with photo ID checks. This is not a guideline or a soft recommendation — it is the show’s actual admission policy. Plan accordingly if your group includes anyone under 21, because they will not be let in regardless of how the tickets were purchased.
Seating at The Ruby Theatre
The space is configured in the round — meaning the stage is central and the audience surrounds it from multiple tiers. There is no bad angle for watching, but each tier has a distinct relationship with the performers.
Closest to the action. If the performers are going to pull someone in or interact directly with the audience, Stage Side is where it happens most. Best for people who want to be fully inside the experience.
Slightly elevated, still very close. Good for people who want strong sightlines without being the most likely target of direct audience interaction. The sweet spot for most groups.
Further back and above. The most affordable seats and still a strong vantage point for the in-the-round staging. Works well for groups who want the full picture without front-row proximity.
A throne seat — literally. Two guests are crowned King or Queen and Squire for the night, receive premium seating, cocktails, and champagne, and become characters in the show itself. A strong option for birthdays and special occasions.
Because the space is in the round and intimate, every seat is genuinely close to the performers. The choice of tier is more about how much you want to be inside the action versus watching it, rather than about quality of view.
What to Know Before You Go
21+ with photo ID — no exceptions at the door
Everyone is ID’d on arrival. The official policy says no exceptions, and that applies even if you have already purchased tickets. If someone in your group does not have a valid photo ID proving they are 21 or older, they will not get in and the ticket will not be refunded. This is the single most important logistical fact about the show.
Arrive 15 to 20 minutes early — late seating is not guaranteed
The official FAQ explicitly recommends arriving 15 to 20 minutes before the show. Late seating is at the sole discretion of management, is not guaranteed, and if granted, may be in a different section than what you purchased. There are no refunds for late arrivals or unclaimed tickets. The show is 90 minutes with no intermission — there is no natural break to slip in.
Drinks are ordered from your seat throughout the show
Craft cocktails and other drinks are available for purchase from the full-service bar and delivered to your seat during the performance. This is part of the experience, not an add-on. You are not required to drink, but the room is set up so that you can participate in the boozy atmosphere if you want to.
The play changes — you will not know which one until you arrive
The show rotates through multiple Shakespeare plays. You will not know which one is on a given night until you get there. This is by design: part of the show’s identity is that the cast and the situation are different every night. If you are attending specifically to see a particular play done badly, you may or may not get it. If you are attending to see what happens, you will.
Content advisory: strong language, sexual humor, audience interaction, possible nudity
This is the official production advisory. It is not hypothetical — these are consistent features of an improv-driven adult show. The audience interaction element in particular is worth knowing in advance: the performers engage the room, and if you are in Stage Side or Mezzanine, there is a reasonable chance you will be part of what happens on stage at some point. That is most people’s highlight. For a minority of guests it is a source of discomfort. Know which you are before you book.
The Ruby Theatre is wheelchair accessible
The venue at 35 West 39th Street is wheelchair accessible. Contact the box office directly at will@drunkshakespeare.com with specific accessibility questions before your visit.
The Ruby Theatre — Location and Logistics
The Ruby Theatre is at 35 West 39th Street, near Times Square — a central Midtown location that is easy to reach from most parts of Manhattan and from any of the Midtown hotels. The venue itself is designed to feel like a hidden library speakeasy: the space has over 10,000 books lining the walls, the atmosphere is dim and intimate, and entering through the door reads less like walking into a theater and more like being let in somewhere secret. That environmental design is not incidental — it is part of why the evening feels like going out rather than attending a play.
At 90 minutes with no intermission and drinks available from your seat, Drunk Shakespeare works naturally as the main event in a night-out itinerary. A dinner before the show — somewhere in Midtown or Hell’s Kitchen, which is a short walk west — sets up the evening without rushing anything. The restaurants near Broadway guide covers the pre-show dining options close to this part of Midtown. If you are building a full evening and need hotel options nearby, the hotels near Broadway guide has the closest-positioned options.
For getting there from elsewhere in the city, the getting to a show in Midtown guide covers subway options and arrival timing for this part of 39th Street.
How Drunk Shakespeare Compares to Other Off-Broadway Options
Drunk Shakespeare occupies a specific lane that nothing else in the current Off-Broadway cluster quite replicates — adult-only, immersive, nightlife-forward, and built around unpredictability rather than a fixed script. Knowing how it sits relative to the other options helps clarify the choice.
Physical farce with broad appeal across ages — no 21+ restriction, no content advisory. Works for groups that include younger adults or people who want comedy without the adult-nightlife framing. Less immersive, more traditional theater format.
14 and up, with a full content advisory. A musical with edge and attitude rather than boozy improv. Different tone entirely — sharper and more theatrical, less nightlife-adjacent. Strong for fans of the film or dark pop-rock musicals.
Family-appropriate, 5 and up, with a warmer and more sentimental tone. The opposite end of the spectrum from Drunk Shakespeare — polished and broad rather than loose and adult-only. Good if your group is mixed-age.
Ages 2 and up, 70 minutes, pure visual spectacle. Mentioned here only to mark the contrast: this is the most family-friendly option in the cluster; Drunk Shakespeare is the most adult-only. They serve entirely different trips.
Within the Off-Broadway cluster, Drunk Shakespeare is the clearest pick specifically when the priority is an adult nightlife-forward theater experience — something that has energy, crowd engagement, and the feeling of a night out rather than a conventional show. If that framing resonates, it is genuinely one of the stronger options currently running in Midtown. See the Off-Broadway guide for the full current landscape.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, strictly. The official policy is 21 and up with no exceptions, and photo ID is checked at the door for every guest. Anyone who cannot prove they are 21 or older will not be admitted, regardless of whether they have already purchased a ticket. There are no refunds in that situation. If anyone in your group is under 21, this show is not an option for that night.
90 minutes, with no intermission. Regardless of which Shakespeare play is being performed, all shows run within that runtime. Arrive early — the official recommendation is 15 to 20 minutes before showtime, and late seating is not guaranteed.
At The Ruby Theatre, 35 West 39th Street, near Times Square in Midtown Manhattan. The nearest subway is the B, D, F, or M train to 42nd Street–Bryant Park. The venue is also accessible from multiple Times Square subway lines a short walk north.
No. The official FAQ says explicitly that Drunk Shakespeare is equally enjoyed by Shakespeare enthusiasts and people who know nothing about the plays. The comedy comes from the performance situation, the improv, and the room’s energy — not from recognizing specific lines or plots. You do not need any background knowledge to have a good time.
Yes. Drinks are available to order from your seat during the performance through the full-service bar. This is built into the experience deliberately — the show is designed around a boozy atmosphere, and audience members ordering drinks while watching is part of the normal evening.
Off-Broadway, and in a category of its own — it is more of an immersive adult comedy experience than a traditional Off-Broadway show. The Ruby Theatre is not a conventional performance space, and the show is not a conventional Off-Broadway production. That is what makes it an interesting choice for people who want something outside the standard theater-night format.
The play rotates and is not announced in advance — you find out when you arrive. The show has cycled through multiple Shakespeare works over its years in New York, and which one is on a given night is part of the show’s unpredictability. If you are attending for a specific play, you should know that it may or may not be the one you get.
The Straight Answer
Drunk Shakespeare is one of the easiest Off-Broadway nights to recommend for adults who want comedy, a fun room, and a Midtown experience that feels more like going out than attending a conventional play. The 90-minute runtime, the drinks-at-your-seat setup, the intimate speakeasy environment, and the genuine unpredictability of the show give it an energy that most Off-Broadway options do not have. It has run in New York since 2014 for a reason.
It is also a show with a specific audience. If anyone in your group is under 21, if strong adult content is a concern, or if the priority is a polished traditional theater experience — this is not the right night. The show is honest about what it is, and this page tries to be too.
For tickets and the current performance calendar, check the official site at DrunkShakespeare.com. For the rest of your evening — dinner before, drinks after, hotel nearby — the restaurants near Broadway guide and the hotels near Broadway guide are the right starting points.
