Robert Klein to Host Berger & London's 'MOSES TO MOSTEL' at The Town Hall

By: Feb. 12, 2016
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

The Town Hall presents From Moses to Mostel: A History of The Jews (According to Musical Theater), a premiere chronological history of the Jewish people as depicted on stage and in song, on Saturday, February 27 at 8 p.m. Tickets start at $45.

Hosted by comedian/actor/singer Robert Klein and written by playwright Glen Berger, From Moses to Mostel also features musical director Frank London and an ensemble of special guests, including The Klezmatics, performing music from Broadway, off-Broadway, Yiddish Theatre and more.

Expect representative songs from Fiddler on The Roof, Cabaret, Jesus Christ Superstar, The Sound of Music, I Can Get It For You Wholesale, History of the World Part 1 and many more! From Moses to Mostel deftly explores the humor, complexity and pain of a celebrated people.

The event will feature Broadway stars ROB EVANS (Tarzan, Little Shop of Horrors, Les Miserables), JOANNE BORTS (Once, Fiddler on the Roof), RACHEL STERN (Shrek, High Fidelity), and STEVE ROSEN (Guys and Dolls, Spamalot).

For more performance details, click here, and for more information, go to thetownhall.org.

The Town Hall is located at 123 West 43rd Street, just off 6th Avenue in the heart of Midtown Manhattan, nearby a wealth of restaurants, bars, banks and additional conveniences via Times Square. Getting to the Venue: Town Hall is a short walk from the 1 / 2 / 3 / N / Q / R / S / 7 subway lines off the 42 Street - Times Square stop, the A / C / E subway lines off the 42 Street - Port Authority stop, and the B / D / M / F subway lines off the 42 Street - Bryant Park stop. Town Hall is also accessible via the M42, M5, M7 and M20 bus lines. Detailed instructions on approaching the venue by car are available at thetownhall.org/directions.

Tickets to all shows may be purchased in person at our on-site box office, Monday through Saturday from noon to 6:00 pm. Our box office is closed on Sunday, except one hour prior to and during scheduled Sunday performances. All in-person ticket sales are subject to a $2 per ticket service fee. Half-price student rush tickets (student ID required, subject to availability) are available a half-hour prior to showtime for many of Town Hall's Spring Series events; visit The Town Hall website for more details. Town Hall produced events may also be purchased up to two weeks in advance of showtime by postal mail, UPS or FedEx. Send a letter with the date / artist / time for the show you are inquiring about, a credit card number or check for payment, and a means or contact (email or phone) to confirm your ticket purchase to: Town Hall Box Office / 123 West 43rd Street / NYC NY, 10036.

Advance tickets to all shows are available on the web via TicketMaster.com or by phone at 1-800-982-2787. Will-call tickets purchased via TicketMaster are available night of performance; will-call purchasers must provide the credit card used to purchase tickets along a matching photo ID. When content appropriate for audiences of all ages, NYC Fire Code requires a ticket for any person entering the hall regardless of age and inclusive of infants and children. The Town Hall is wheelchair and visually-impaired accessible. Purchase of tickets for special needs patrons should be reserved via our box office in person or via phone at 212-840-2824; Mon-Sat from 12pm-6pm. Special needs patrons should request the House Manager's assistance upon arriving at the venue.

For more than 90 years, The Town Hall has played a pivotal role in the cultural and political history of New York City. The Hall was founded in 1921 by a vibrant group of suffragists whose ultimately successful fight for the ratification of the 19th Amendment led them to coordinate the purchase and building of a meeting space with the intent of engaging and educating the public on important social issues of the day. Town Hall was designed to reflect the democratic principles of the nation; box seating was eliminated and the layout of the orchestra and balcony insured every seat had an unobstructed view of the stage. Indeed, the maxim "not a bad seat in the house" was coined in direct reference to Town Hall's still-unchanged-to-this-day layout.

In its first several decades, Town Hall was host to historic programs and debuts featuring Marian Anderson, Paul Robeson, Margaret Sanger, Andres Segovia, Pablo Casals, Sergei Rachmaninov, Eleanor Roosevelt, Isaac Stern, Langston Hughes, Sarah Vaughn, Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, Nina Simone, Igor Stravinsky, Louis Armstrong and countless more legends and icons. The Town Hall provided a forum for over two decades to the immensely influential America's Town Meeting of the Air, a national weekly radio forum for progressive political discussion.

In more recent years, Town Hall has hosted performances and talks from His Holiness The Dalai Lama, Ravi Shankar, Robin Williams, Depak Chopra, Marianne Faithful, Cyndi Lauper, Rufus Wainwright, Elvis Costello, Eric Idle, Nick Cave, Philip Glass, Hillary Clinton, Steve Martin, Meredith Monk, Wayne Shorter, Joan Baez, Barack Obama and literally hundreds more artists and luminaries in every genre and field imaginable. The Town Hall remains at the forefront of New York City's most prestigious venues, offering an ongoing selection of daring and high-quality programming with a distinctly populist edge. Town Hall was registered as a U.S. National Historic Landmark in 2013 and operates as a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization.



Videos