My Shows
News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Chess Broadway Reviews

About the Show

This fall, see powerhouse trio Tony Award® winner Aaron Tveit (Moulin Rouge!), acclaimed stage and screen star Lea Michele (Funny Girl, Glee), and breakout talent Nicholas Christopher (Sweeney Todd, Hamilton)... (more info)

Theatre Imperial Theatre (Broadway)
Previews Oct 15, 2025
Opened Nov 16, 2025
Critics' Rating
6.28 Mixed
4 Positive
13 Mixed
1 Negative
Readers' Rating
4.91 Mixed
Rate This Show
Select a score 1–10
Write a Review

Critics' Reviews

7
Thumbs Sideways

'Chess’ Review: At Least They Have the Music

From: The New York Times  |  By: Elizabeth Vincentelli  |  Date: 11/16/2025

Parts of the show are absolutely thrilling and parts are flat at best, aggressively dumb at worst. At least Mayer’s production, starring Nicholas Christopher, Lea Michele and Aaron Tveit, is not a bland bore. Thinking back to Michele’s big, then ...

5
Thumbs Sideways

Chess - Board stiff.

From: TimeOut  |  By: Adam Feldman  |  Date: 11/16/2025

All of the above might make for an entertaining evening if Chess were just a concert, which unfortunately it is not, despite Mayer’s concert-style staging: the orchestra is onstage, with minimal sets (by David Rockwell and video designer Peter Nigr...

The new Broadway revival once again attempts the impossible, under the direction of Michael Mayer and book writer Danny Strong. On paper, their involvement suggested a clear-eyed rethink: Mayer excels with emotional pop-rock material (“Spring Awake...

8
Thumbs Up

‘Chess’ returns to Broadway with a Cold War that feels white hot

From: 1 Minute Critic  |  By: Matthew Wexler  |  Date: 11/16/2025

Pinkham, along with a deliciously dry performance by Sean Allan Krill as CIA agent Walter de Courcey, balances the above-the-title star power, including Aaron Tveit as clinically depressed and bipolar US chess champion Freddie Trumper, his coach/love...

4
Thumbs Sideways

Chess: Just Another Bored Game

From: New York Stage Review  |  By: Bob Verini  |  Date: 11/16/2025

Tveit (Moulin Rouge!) seems to be coasting a bit, not completely committed to the Bobby Fischer-inspired Freddie’s bipolar swings – just a little too composed; but Michele (Glee; Funny Girl), looking terrific, tears into her impossible role of pi...

8
Thumbs Up

Chess: Thank You for the Music

From: New York Stage Review  |  By: Melissa Rose Bernardo  |  Date: 11/16/2025

If you’ve never seen, or heard, Chess, trust us. Every song is a banger, and the stars—Nicholas Christopher as Russian chess champion Anatoly Sergievsky, Aaron Tveit as American champ Freddie Trumper, and Lea Michele as Florence Vassy, a top ches...

Lovers of ABBA may continue to think the score’s great. For the rest of us, the musical features a couple of treacly sweet love songs and a slew of ponderous anthems and percussive dirges driven by propulsive rhythms. Audial exhaustion sets in abou...

8
Thumbs Up

Review: ‘Chess’ on Broadway is ridiculously fun ’80s entertainment

From: Chicago Tribune  |  By: Chris Jones  |  Date: 11/16/2025

This is the Broadway show of the fall that some will claim to dislike and yet most everyone will enjoy, even if that has to be in secret. Happily, that’s a match for one of the main themes of a 1980s musical that always saw geopolitics, even the da...

Alas, the debate of whether ‘Chess’ can be saved or fixed must continue, for this is likely not the best iteration of the material. What Florence sings rings true for ‘Chess’ overall: ‘I’ve still a lot to prove; there must be more I could...

There’s a strange, undermining, conflicted nature to Mayer’s project, a push and pull between eras and customs. Perhaps that is actually the great insight of this Chess. Not about the Able Archer 83 incident that almost ended the world, nor about...

But for all its shortcomings, it’s impossible not to fall under the spell of this powerhouse cast. After swooping in to save the ill-conceived 2022 revival of “Funny Girl,” Michele earned enough critical goodwill and box-office pedigree to pick...

8
Thumbs Up

Chess is not a serious musical. Fine. Good, even! When the show is at its best, it hits levels of unironic ludicrousness that are more fun than most things on Broadway. Back in 1988 Frank Rich ripped Chess’s American premiere a new one: ‘The char...

The script has been reworked and the characters retooled, only for Chess to end up back where it started: impeccable music, a flat story and a baffling execution. But the eternal contradiction of Chess is that while its flaws are many, it's still a d...

7
Thumbs Sideways

The wacky chess musical is back, and it’s packed with bangers

From: The Washington Post  |  By: Naveen Kumar  |  Date: 11/16/2025

What everyone is really here for are the handful of blow-your-hair-back, 1980s-style rock ballads sung by the love-triangulated leads. Whether or not you appreciate the outrageous decibels at which they are amplified here, the bangers are built to im...

3
Thumbs Down

‘Chess’ Review: A Broadway-Musical Blunder

From: The Wall Street Journal  |  By: Charles Isherwood  |  Date: 11/16/2025

Chess matches can be agonizingly long, lasting for numerous hours at the professional level. So maybe it’s perversely apt that the Broadway revival of the musical “Chess” should feel eye-glazingly interminable, despite a cast of thrillingly goo...

7
Thumbs Sideways

Chess

From: Cititour.com  |  By: Brian Scott Lipton  |  Date: 11/16/2025

Giving what I think is his best-ever Broadway performance – actually making us feel sorry for the difficult Freddie – Tveit stops Act II in its tracks with his extraordinary rendition of the ultra-difficult ‘Pity the Child’… Frankly, for al...

5
Thumbs Sideways

‘Chess,’ Theater’s Most Notorious Strange Beast, Finally Returns

From: The Daily Beast  |  By: Tim Teeman  |  Date: 11/16/2025

But while the show’s songs run furiously hot, its characters stay resolutely cold and uninvolving. And, the book—despite Pinkham’s comically authoritative guiding hand—remains a messy puzzle, using the lingering Cold War and 1980s nuclear sup...

Chess might not be for everyone: Diehard fans may bemoan the modern updates, while newcomers may get lost in the 2-hour-and-40-minute back-and-forth of plot that covers, essentially, two chess matches. But for those who go to Broadway musicals hoping...

Audience Reviews

Add Your Review

To add an audience review, you must be Registered and Logged In.

Videos