Did you miss Broadway's Waitress initial run in movie theatres? Good news鈥攖he first set of screenings went so well that Bleecker Street and Fathom Events are extending the film's run (which had previously been scheduled to end December 11). Waitress will now be screened in theatres until December 21, and composer Sara Bareilles credits it to the show's fans ().
And that's not all. The film is currently available to pre-order on and for $14.99鈥攖hough a date has not been set for its release.
The move follows a surprisingly well-performing weekend of screenings for the film. According to , the film brought in more than $3.2 million, making it the eighth highest-grossing movie of the weekend and officially a wild success for a theatrical release of a stage film. Go to to learn more.
Captured during the musical's 2021 Broadway encore run starring Bareilles, the film premiered last summer at Tribeca Film Festival before getting a wide theatrical release beginning December 7. Long a poorly kept secret, the film's existence was finally confirmed by the production in April. Fans had been aware of the project thanks to Bareilles briefly sharing footage of her watching a rough cut of the live stage capture on her Instagram stories.
READ: Sara Bareilles on Filming Waitress, and Becoming a Tony-Nominated Composer and Actor
Adapted from the 2007 film and featuring a book by Jessie Nelson and a Tony-nominated score by Bareilles, Waitress was developed and premiered by Massachusetts' American Repertory Theater before debuting on Broadway in 2015, picking up four 2016 Tony nominations, including Best Musical. The work made a Broadway return at the Ethel Barrymore following the COVID-19 shutdown beginning September 2, 2021, sticking around through December 20. Bareilles (Into the Woods, Girls5Eva) first played Jenna as a replacement to original star Jessie Mueller; she ended up headlining two more limited engagements throughout the original run and did a stint in London鈥檚 West End prior to the coronavirus shutdown.
The 2021 return run paid tribute to the late Nick Cordero, who originated the role of Earl on Broadway. The board listing Jenna鈥檚 cleverly named confections at the diner where she works newly included 鈥淎 Big Ol Slice of Live Your Life Pie鈥濃攁 nod to the Cordero song that became an anthem as he battled a severe COVID-19 case. He died in July 2020, at the age of 41.
In the filmed musical, Bareilles stars as Jenna and is joined by Waitress' complete encore run cast, including Christopher Fitzgerald in his Tony-nominated performance as Ogie, Drew Gehling as Dr. Pomatter, Charity Ang茅l Dawson as Becky, Caitlin Houlahan as Dawn, Eric Anderson as Cal, Dakin Matthews as Joe, and Joe Tippett as Earl. The Broadway encore company was rounded out by Tyrone Davis, Jr., Matt DeAngelis, Andrew Fitch, Henry Gottfried, Molly Jobe, Emily Koch, Max Kumangai, Anastacia McCleskey, Gerianne P茅rez, Stephanie Torns, and Nyla Watson.
Waitress, produced by Barry and Fran Weissler alongside Norton and Elayne Herrick, features sets by Scott Pask, costumes by Suttirat Anne Larlarb, lighting by Ken Billington, and sound by Jonathan Deans. Nadia DiGiallonardo serves as music supervisor. Casting is by Telsey + Company's Pat Goodwin.
Diane Paulus directed Waitress for the stage, with Brett Sullivan directing the film capture and Nelson serving as creative advisor. Alecia Parker is executive producer of the screen capture, with Michael Roiff, Barry and Fran Weissler, Bareilles, Nelson, and Paul Morphos serving as producers.