The show has its high points. A dance number lit by phone flashlights has a uniquely 2020s feel, and the choreography tells a clear story about how our relationship to our phones can keep us from focusing on real life. However, this dance, in the show's second half, is the first time we learn that this issue is one of the couple’s marital struggles, and there’s no resolution. But for theatregoers who aren’t too pressed for story, the nonstop dancing — with a Post-it-themed climax, of course — is entertaining enough.
Critics' Reviews
'11 to Midnight' Off-Broadway review — TikTok dance sensations Cost n’ Mayor bring the party
From: New York Theatre Guide | By: Austin Fimmano | Date: 2/11/2026
In ’11 to Midnight,’ TikTok’s Cost n’ Mayor deliver the year’s best dance party
From: One-Minute Critic | By: Ryan Leeds | Date: 2/11/2026
Whether Cost n’ Mayor’s social media following translates to box office success remains uncertain, but here’s what’s definitive: in a cultural moment defined by isolation, cynicism, and endless scroll, 11 to Midnight offers something genuinely subversive: communal joy.