About

About the show

Comedy is easy.
Marriage is hard.

THREE COUPLES. PLAYED BY TWO ICONS. IN ONE PERFECT EVENING OF COMEDY.

Matthew Broderick (two-time Tony Award® winner) and Sarah Jessica Parker (two-time Emmy Award® winner) perform together in London’s West End for the very first time – in Neil Simon’s smash-hit comedy PLAZA SUITE. A hilarious and razor-sharp look at love and marriage that took Broadway audiences by storm, don’t miss your once-in-a-lifetime chance to see these two world-class actors play three different couples who stay in one iconic hotel room.

Karen and Sam are a long-married pair whose relationship may be headed for an early checkout. Muriel and Jesse are former high school sweethearts who seem destined for an extended stay. And Norma and Roy are the mother and father of the bride, ready to celebrate their daughter’s nuptials – if only they can get her out of the bathroom.

Directed by Tony winner John Benjamin Hickey, this romantic comedy for the ages – Plaza Suite – is now open at the Savoy Theatre for a strictly limited engagement.

In New York, PLAZA SUITE became the must-have ticket for Broadway audiences. The production played to sold-out houses and shattered multiple box-office records at the Hudson Theatre, becoming the third-highest grossing play revival in Broadway history during its limited 19-week engagement.

Matthew Broderick returns to the West End stage following his acclaimed run in The Starry Messenger in 2019. PLAZA SUITE marks Sarah Jessica Parker’s West End debut.

The creative team includes two-time Tony Award® winner John Lee Beatty (set design), Tony Award® winner Jane Greenwood (costume design), five-time Tony Award® winner Brian MacDevitt (lighting design), Tony Award® winner Scott Lehrer (sound design), Tony Award® winner Marc Shaiman (incidental music), and Jim Carnahan (casting director).

Behind the Scenes

Plaza Suite trailer
Black and white image of Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick. They are both wearing black tie attire and embracing, looking into each other's eyes lovingly. Black and white image of Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick. They are both wearing black tie attire and embracing, looking into each other's eyes lovingly.

The Legendary Neil Simon

Even if Plaza Suite is your first Neil Simon play, you may feel you know him already. He’s a writer who’s always with us, in one way or another.

But where did his legacy come from?

Director of Plaza Suite, Neil Simon
Director of Plaza Suite, Neil Simon with two laughing ladies.

The Comedy

Neil Simon became one of America’s most beloved and successful playwrights because he knew how to write comedy with a heart. His plays are hilarious and filled with great one-liners, and they’ve also got jokes that let us laugh at ourselves.

As Harvey Fierstein says, Neil Simon “could write a joke that would make you laugh, define the character, the situation, and even the world’s problems.”

His unforgettable style is still influencing artists today. Whether its Seinfeld characters delivering zingers in Jerry’s apartment or 30 Rock episodes delivering 30 jokes a minute, they’re all influenced by plays like Plaza Suite. “It’s hard to overstate the impact Neil Simon has had on comedy,” says Steve Levitan, who co-created the sitcom Modern Family. “We all learned from him.”

Vintage photo of a man and woman. The man lies on a sofa while the woman hunches over him to drip something in his eye or pluck his eyebrow. They are dressed in formal clothing and in a nice hotel room.

The Emotion

Neil Simon’s plays know a lot about being alive. In smart comedies like Plaza Suite, tender dramas like Brighton Beach Memoirs, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Lost In Yonkers, he tells stories that we’re always happy to hear. “He brought a unique eye for life to stage and screen,” says Dan Rather. “He prodded us—in laughter and tears—to contend with the traits that make us human.”

And here’s the thing: Everyone loved him for doing it. In The Season, William Goldman’s famous book about Broadway, he wrote, “In an envy-ridden racket, no one ever says anything unkind about him. He is not only the best comedy writer, he is somehow undespised. Until you’ve spent a year talking with these people about these people, you can’t realize what an achievement that is.” That’s the kind of 
funny-smart tribute that Neil Simon himself might have written.

Matthew Broderick in Brighton Beach Memoirs in 1983

The Cast

Neil Simon’s shows also became famous for the incredible actors who appeared in them. Plaza Suite‘s Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker are part of a lineage that includes Robert Redford, George C. Scott, Gwen Verdon, Bernadette Peters, and Maureen Stapleton, to name just a few.

Actors flocked to his plays because they knew he’d write great parts for them. In fact, 20 actors have won Tony Awards for their work in Neil Simon’s plays and musicals—including Matthew Broderick, who won a Tony in 1983 for Brighton Beach Memoirs. “I owe him a career,” Broderick says.

Actors loved working with Neil himself as much as they loved being in his plays. “There was no sweeter sound a young actor could hear than the laughter of Neil Simon during your audition,” recalls Josh Radnor. Linda Lavin adds, “You wanted Neil Simon in the room while you were rehearsing his plays, because when he laughed, you knew you’d hit the truth!”

Black and white photo shows Neil Simon and a young Matthew Broderick stand outside a theatre showing Brighton Beach Memoirs in 1983.

The Broadway Bonanza

With the possible exception of Shakespeare, there has never been a Broadway playwright more successful than Neil Simon. He had 30 different shows on Broadway, and including revivals, they’ve been produced 41 times.

In the first six months of 1967, he had four shows running at once. Throughout his career, he had 17 productions that ran for over a year.

A Broadway theater was named after him in 1983, when he was only 55. It’s incredibly rare for a theater to be named after a living writer, let alone a writer
so young.

In the 1960s, his plays had more performances than Edward Albee, Tennessee Williams, William Inge, Arthur Miller, and Harold Pinter combined.
The original production of Barefoot in the Park is the tenth longest-running play in Broadway history, with 1,530 performances.

The original productions of Brighton Beach Memoirs (1,299 performances) and Plaza Suite (1,097 performances) are among the 25 longest-running plays in Broadway history.