Ethel Barrymore Theatre: Seating, Location & What to Know
A planning guide for visitors deciding where to sit, how to get there, and what to expect from one of Broadway’s most respected classic houses.
The Ethel Barrymore Theatre is not the biggest house in the Theater District, nor the flashiest. What it is, consistently, is one of Broadway’s most reliable homes for serious, actor-driven work — plays and productions that depend on performer-audience connection more than on spectacle. At roughly 1,058 seats across three levels, it sits in a middle range that suits dramatic material well: large enough to feel like a proper Broadway night, intimate enough that distance and angle matter in ways they do not at the giant houses.
That mid-size character is also why this guide exists. At the Barrymore, section choice matters. Stair awareness matters. Understanding what the house does well — and where its physical limitations sit — leads to a meaningfully better night than arriving without that context.
Quick Answers
About the Ethel Barrymore Theatre
The Barrymore opened on December 20, 1928, as the last theater the Shubert brothers would build before the Depression halted Broadway construction. It was designed by Herbert J. Krapp — the architect behind many of Broadway’s surviving mid-century houses — in a mix of Elizabethan, Mediterranean, and Adam styles. The facade is clad in rusticated terracotta with arched entryways; the auditorium has ornamental plasterwork, a sloped orchestra, and a 36-foot domed ceiling that gives the room a sense of proportion without grandeur. It is a house that takes its work seriously without announcing it.
The theater was built for Ethel Barrymore specifically — a contract arrangement in which the Shuberts offered to construct and name a house for her in exchange for managing her career. She opened it in a production of her own choosing. It is the only surviving theater the Shuberts built for a specific performer, and it has never been sold or renamed in nearly a century of continuous operation. That kind of institutional continuity is rare on Broadway and gives the building a quality that newer or more frequently renovated houses do not have: it still feels like itself.

Per Shubert Organization figures: Orchestra (582 seats), Front Mezzanine (196 seats), Rear Mezzanine (256 seats), and Boxes (24 seats). Some sources list slightly higher totals — use this as a reliable approximation rather than a fixed number. The important planning point is that just over half the house is on the orchestra level, with the mezzanine split between an elevated front section and a more distant rear balcony behind it.
Ethel Barrymore Theatre Seating Guide
The Barrymore’s layout is conventional for a Broadway house of its era: a sloped orchestra with side sections flanking a center block, and a mezzanine above divided into front and rear halves. Understanding the trade-offs between sections matters more here than at some larger houses, where sheer distance tends to smooth out the differences. At the Barrymore’s scale, the choice between center orchestra row J and rear mezzanine row D is not trivial.
The best direct sightlines in the house. Rows D–J center offer both proximity and a full-stage picture — close enough to read expressions, far enough back to avoid the neck-craning that plagues rows A–C. Center seats (numbered 101–114) are the most sought-after positions. This is where premium pricing is concentrated, and where it is genuinely justified for productions where faces and detail matter.
The first three rows of center orchestra are close enough that sightlines can strain upward, particularly at the top of the stage or for productions with vertical staging. For intimate dialogue-driven plays, rows B and C center can work well. For musicals or productions that use the full stage height, consider going a few rows back. Row A specifically is very close — immersive for some, uncomfortable for others.
Often the smartest buy at the Barrymore. The front mezzanine sits at an elevation that gives a genuinely balanced full-stage view — wide enough to take in ensemble scenes, close enough to follow individual performers with detail. Row A center, when priced at a meaningful discount to premium orchestra, is frequently the value recommendation for this theater. The rake is good; heads in front rarely obstruct.
The side sections of the front mezzanine angle outward, giving a more diagonal view of the stage. For productions with centered staging, this is a trade-off. The inside seats of each side section (closest to center) are significantly better than the outer edges, which can feel more like traditional box seats. If booking here, prioritize seats closest to the center aisle.
The rear mezzanine sits a meaningful distance from the stage — further than the front mezzanine and well behind the orchestra’s rear rows. The rake is good enough that sightlines are generally unobstructed, but facial expressions are difficult to read and detail is lost. For productions where the full-stage picture matters more than individual performance nuance — large ensemble works, or revisiting a show you already know — it remains a reasonable option at the right price. Less ideal for intimate plays where the writing and acting are the whole point.
The left and right orchestra sections run along the sides of the house. Seats in the inner portion of each side — closest to the center block — offer views comparable to center orchestra positions a few rows further back. Seats at the far outer edges, especially in the front portion, can involve meaningful stage angles that favor one side of the production over the other. Worth checking seat numbers carefully before purchasing discounted side positions.
A note on the boxes
The Barrymore has six boxes — three on each side of the orchestra level. Boxes can feel intimate and special, but they are positioned for lateral views that favor one side of the stage. They are not the best practical choice for most productions and are better understood as an experience than a sightline. If a box appeals to you, go in knowing the view will be angled rather than straight-on.
Best Seats by Visitor Type
The right section at the Barrymore depends less on a universal best-seat principle and more on what you are trying to get out of the night. These are practical recommendations organized by visitor priority.
The most reliable orientation to what Broadway feels like — close enough to the production, centered enough to take in the full stage, without the cost premium of the very front rows.
If the front mezzanine is priced at a meaningful discount to orchestra premiums, it often offers the best combination of view quality and ticket cost. The balanced sightline from above serves most production types well.
Rear mezzanine center rows offer unobstructed if distant views. Inner side orchestra seats are often priced lower than center but offer significantly better sightlines than the outer side positions. Worth comparing both before deciding.
For play-goers who want to follow acting closely — facial expressions, physical detail, the full texture of the performance — rows D through G center are the highest-fidelity positions in the house.
The orchestra is fully step-free from the entrance. The mezzanine requires three flights of stairs with no elevator alternative. If stairs are a concern, book orchestra seats and choose early — wheelchair positions are in the orchestra only. See the accessibility section below for full detail.
Front mezzanine center rows accommodate a range of priorities well — good view for detail-oriented theatergoers, accessible pricing for budget-conscious ones, and a single level that works for the whole group without splitting between orchestra and upper sections.
Accessibility and Mobility Notes
The Barrymore’s accessibility profile is worth understanding before you book, particularly because the mezzanine requires a significant stair climb and there are no mechanical alternatives.
The Mezzanine is reached via three flights of stairs — approximately 30 steps total from street level to the mezzanine level. Once there, each row requires approximately two additional steps down from the entry point. There are no elevators or escalators anywhere in the theater. If climbing stairs is difficult or impossible, the orchestra is the correct section — plan accordingly when purchasing.
Orchestra access
The orchestra is step-free from the theater entrance and lobby. There are no steps between the sidewalk and the orchestra seating level, making it the accessible section. Wheelchair seating is located in the orchestra only — there are approximately five wheelchair spaces, each with companion seats available.
Wheelchair seating
Wheelchair positions are available in the orchestra. There is one unisex wheelchair-accessible restroom on the main floor with no steps. Non-accessible restrooms are located two flights of stairs below the theater level — worth knowing before the show rather than during intermission. When booking, accessible seats can be purchased through Telecharge or by contacting Shubert Audience Services.
Assistive listening and captioning
The Shubert Organization provides infrared assistive listening devices for every performance at the Barrymore. Audio description devices, hand-held captioning devices, and downloadable caption/description options via personal mobile device are available beginning four weeks after a show’s official opening night. Prior to four weeks out, live CART captioning via hand-held device is available upon request with two weeks’ advance notice. Contact Shubert Audience Services at 212-944-3700 or audienceservices@shubertorg.com to arrange.
Transfer seats
Seven transfer seats with folding armrests are available across orchestra rows A through Q, for guests who can transfer from a wheelchair to a standard seat. These are bookable through the standard accessible ticketing process.
What Kind of Productions the Barrymore Suits
The Ethel Barrymore Theatre has a character that has been shaped by nearly a century of production choices. It is not, historically, a house for spectacle musicals built around visual scale. It is a house where the material tends to be the point — where the writing, the acting, and the specific human weight of what is being performed does the work that fog machines and fly systems do elsewhere.
That tendency makes it particularly well-suited to plays, serious revivals, and actor-centered productions of all kinds. The room’s proportions and acoustics support dialogue and dramatic tension in ways that larger houses simply cannot. A performance at the Barrymore rarely feels remote. Even the rear sections sit closer to the action than corresponding rows at the Gershwin or the Majestic.
A production history worth knowing
The clearest argument for the Barrymore’s identity is the record of what has played here. The list is not accidental — it reflects what kind of work the room attracts and the kind of audience that seeks it out.
The 2026 return of Joe Turner’s Come and Gone to the Barrymore is not just a scheduling coincidence — it is the kind of theatrical full circle that gives a house its meaning. A play that premiered here in 1988, won the Tony, and helped define August Wilson’s reputation as one of America’s essential dramatists, now returns to the same address nearly four decades later. For visitors attending the current production, that history is part of the room they’re sitting in.
Planning a Night Around the Barrymore
Location and getting there
The Barrymore is at 243 West 47th Street, between Broadway and 8th Avenue — well within the Theater District’s core. The nearest subway is the N/Q/R/W trains to 49th Street (one block north), or the C/E trains to 50th Street at 8th Avenue. Times Square on the 1/2/3 and N/Q/R/W lines is also a short walk. The getting to a Broadway show guide covers transit options in more detail. If you are driving, the parking near Broadway guide covers nearby garages — transit is generally easier and faster for this part of 47th Street.
Arrive with time to spare
The Barrymore’s lobby and bar open approximately 30 minutes before curtain. Arriving 20 to 25 minutes before the show gives you time for will-call pickup, the security check, finding your section, and settling in — particularly important if you are in the mezzanine, where navigating the three flights of stairs and the rows themselves takes a few extra minutes. Broadway shows begin on time; late seating is at management’s discretion.
Pre-show dinner timing
47th Street between Broadway and 8th Avenue is in the thick of the Theater District’s pre-show restaurant zone. The closest options are convenient but generally more tourist-oriented; moving a few blocks west toward 9th Avenue or Hell’s Kitchen improves both quality and pricing for the same logistics. Plan to be seated for dinner no later than 90 minutes before curtain — 2 hours is more comfortable if you want to eat without rushing into the show. The pre-show dining guide covers timing strategy, and the restaurants near Broadway guide has specific options.
Hotels and the neighborhood
Theater District hotels along 7th Avenue and 8th Avenue are within easy walking distance of the Barrymore. The hotels near Broadway guide covers options across price points, and the Theater District neighborhood guide gives a fuller picture of this part of Midtown — useful for visitors planning more than one evening in the area.
Frequently Asked Questions
243 West 47th Street in Manhattan, between Broadway and 8th Avenue in the Theater District. The nearest subway stops are 49th Street on the N/Q/R/W lines (one block north) and 50th Street on the C/E lines at 8th Avenue.
The Shubert Organization’s figures put the capacity at 1,058 seats: 582 orchestra, 196 front mezzanine, 256 rear mezzanine, and 24 box seats. Some sources list slightly different totals; use roughly 1,058 as the reliable figure.
No. There are no elevators or escalators anywhere in the theater. The Mezzanine requires three flights of stairs — approximately 30 steps — from street level. Once on the mezzanine level, each row requires approximately two additional steps down. If stairs are a concern, book orchestra seats, which are step-free from the entrance.
Partially. The orchestra level is fully step-free from the street entrance, and wheelchair seating (approximately five positions with companion seats) is available in the orchestra. There is one unisex wheelchair-accessible restroom on the main floor. The Mezzanine is not accessible without stairs. To book accessible seating, use Telecharge’s access line or contact Shubert Audience Services at 212-944-3700.
Center orchestra rows D through J offer the most reliable combination of proximity, sightline, and full-stage view. Rows A through C center are very close and can involve upward sightlines for tall or vertically staged productions. Front mezzanine center rows A through C are frequently the best value in the house — balanced elevated sightlines at a meaningful discount to premium orchestra, when priced well. Rear mezzanine center is a budget option with decent but distant views.
Both work, but the theater’s history and physical character favor productions where the writing and acting carry the weight. It has hosted some of Broadway’s most significant plays — A Streetcar Named Desire, A Raisin in the Sun, Death of a Salesman, The Band’s Visit — and it suits that kind of work particularly well. Musicals have also played here successfully; the key is that the room rewards intimacy and dialogue over sheer spectacle scale.
As of spring 2026, the current production is Joe Turner’s Come and Gone by August Wilson, directed by Debbie Allen and starring Taraji P. Henson (her Broadway debut), Cedric the Entertainer, Joshua Boone, and Ruben Santiago-Hudson. Notably, Wilson’s play made its original Broadway premiere at this same theater in 1988. Verify the current production schedule and any future bookings on the Shubert Organization’s official site before attending.
The theater opened December 20, 1928, designed by Herbert J. Krapp for the Shubert brothers, who built it specifically for Ethel Barrymore under a management contract. It is the last theater the Shubert brothers constructed before the Depression, and the only surviving house they built for a specific performer. It has operated continuously as a legitimate theater since its opening and has never been sold or renamed — one of Broadway’s rarest institutional continuities. Both its facade and its interior are New York City landmarks.
The Barrymore in Brief
The Ethel Barrymore Theatre is one of Broadway’s most consistently purposeful houses — a room that has drawn serious work for nearly a century and continues to do so. Its mid-size proportions make section choice meaningful rather than trivial: the right seat here makes a real difference, and the wrong one — particularly for visitors who did not anticipate the mezzanine stairs — can complicate an otherwise well-planned evening.
Understanding the theater before you book is the simplest way to make sure the night goes the way you want. The Broadway theaters guide covers the full picture of what each house in the district is like, and the Broadway shows hub is the right starting point for finding what is currently playing and deciding which production fits your night.
Ethel Barrymore Theatre at a Glance
- Now Playing Joe Turner’s Come and Gone
- Theater Type
- Address 243 West 47th Street, between Broadway and 8th Avenue
- Opened 1928
- Capacity 1,058 total seats
- Seating Layout 582 orchestra · 196 front mezzanine · 256 rear mezzanine · 24 boxes
- Accessibility Orchestra is accessible without steps. Wheelchair seating is in the orchestra only. Mezzanine requires three flights of stairs.
Barrymore is a classic smaller Broadway house that rewards careful seat choice. It is especially worth planning ahead if stairs, mezzanine access, or section value matter to you.
