Stephen Sondheim Tickets | 2025-2026 Tour & Event Dates | GoComGo.com

Stephen Sondheim Tickets

Composer
Filter
Types
Theatres

Events8 results

Filter By
Musical
Royal Swedish Opera , Stockholm
18 Jan 2025, Sat
Composer: Stephen Sondheim
Cast: David Björkman , Jens Persson Hertzman , .... + 5
Musical
Save1%
Royal Swedish Opera , Stockholm
21 Jan 2025, Tue
Cast: David Björkman , Jens Persson Hertzman , .... + 5
View Tickets from 123 US$

In high demand – less than 16 of 1200 tickets left!

Booked 3 times today

Musical
Save1%
Royal Swedish Opera , Stockholm
23 Jan 2025, Thu
Cast: David Björkman , Jens Persson Hertzman , .... + 5
View Tickets from 123 US$

In high demand – less than 18 of 1200 tickets left!

Musical
Save1%
Royal Swedish Opera , Stockholm
27 Jan 2025, Mon
Cast: David Björkman , Jens Persson Hertzman , .... + 5
View Tickets from 123 US$

In high demand – less than 15 of 1200 tickets left!

Musical
Save1%
Royal Swedish Opera , Stockholm
29 Jan 2025, Wed
Cast: David Björkman , Jens Persson Hertzman , .... + 5
View Tickets from 123 US$

In high demand – less than 11 of 1200 tickets left!

Latest booking: 4 hours ago

Musical
Save1%
Royal Swedish Opera , Stockholm
1 Feb 2025, Sat
Cast: David Björkman , Jens Persson Hertzman , .... + 5
View Tickets from 77 US$

In high demand – less than 11 of 1200 tickets left!

Musical
Save1%
Royal Swedish Opera , Stockholm
3 Feb 2025, Mon
Cast: David Björkman , Jens Persson Hertzman , .... + 5
View Tickets from 123 US$

In high demand!

Latest booking: 3 hours ago

Musical
Save1%
Royal Swedish Opera , Stockholm
10 Feb 2025, Mon
Cast: David Björkman , Jens Persson Hertzman , .... + 5

About

Stephen Joshua Sondheim (/ˈsɒndhaɪm/) is an American composer and lyricist known for more than a half-century of contributions to musical theatre. Sondheim has received an Academy Award, eight Tony Awards (more than any other composer, including a Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre), eight Grammy Awards, a Pulitzer Prize, a Laurence Olivier Award, and a 2015 Presidential Medal of Freedom. He has been described by Frank Rich of The New York Times as "now the greatest and perhaps best-known artist in the American musical theater". His best-known works as composer and lyricist include A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1962), Company (1970), Follies (1971), A Little Night Music (1973), Pacific Overtures (1976), Sweeney Todd (1979), Merrily We Roll Along (1981), Sunday in the Park with George (1984), Into the Woods (1987), Assassins (1990), and Passion (1994). He also wrote the lyrics for West Side Story (1957), Gypsy (1959), and Do I Hear a Waltz? (1965).

Sondheim has written film music, contributing "Goodbye for Now" for Warren Beatty's 1981 Reds. He wrote five songs for 1990's Dick Tracy, including "Sooner or Later (I Always Get My Man)", sung in the film by Madonna, which won the Academy Award for Best Original Song.

Sondheim was president of the Dramatists Guild from 1973 to 1981. To celebrate his 80th birthday, the former Henry Miller's Theatre was renamed the Stephen Sondheim Theatre on September 15, 2010, and the BBC Proms held a concert in his honor. Cameron Mackintosh has called Sondheim "possibly the greatest lyricist ever".

Sondheim was born into a Jewish family in New York City, the son of Etta Janet ("Foxy," née Fox; 1897–1992) and Herbert Sondheim (1895–1966). His father manufactured dresses designed by his mother. The composer grew up on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and, after his parents divorced, on a farm near Doylestown, Pennsylvania. As the only child of well-to-do parents living in the San Remo on Central Park West, he was described in Meryle Secrest's biography (Stephen Sondheim: A Life) as an isolated, emotionally neglected child. When he lived in New York, Sondheim attended ECFS, the Ethical Culture Fieldston School known simply as "Fieldston". He later attended the New York Military Academy and George School, a private Quaker preparatory school in Bucks County, Pennsylvania where he wrote his first musical, By George, and from which he graduated in 1946. Sondheim spent several summers at Camp Androscoggin. He later matriculated to Williams College and graduated in 1950.

He traces his interest in theatre to Very Warm for May, a Broadway musical he saw when he was nine. "The curtain went up and revealed a piano," Sondheim recalled. "A butler took a duster and brushed it up, tinkling the keys. I thought that was thrilling."

When Sondheim was ten years old, his father (already a distant figure) had left his mother for another woman (Alicia, with whom he had two sons). Herbert sought custody of Stephen but was unsuccessful. Sondheim explained to biographer Secrest that he was "what they call an institutionalized child, meaning one who has no contact with any kind of family. You're in, though it's luxurious, you're in an environment that supplies you with everything but human contact. No brothers and sisters, no parents, and yet plenty to eat, and friends to play with and a warm bed, you know?"

Sondheim detested his mother, who was said to be psychologically abusive and projected her anger from her failed marriage on her son: "When my father left her, she substituted me for him. And she used me the way she used him, to come on to and to berate, beat up on, you see. What she did for five years was treat me like dirt, but come on to me at the same time." She once wrote him a letter saying that the "only regret [she] ever had was giving him birth". When his mother died in the spring of 1992, Sondheim did not attend her funeral. He had already been estranged from her for nearly 20 years.

The first musical for which Sondheim wrote the music and lyrics was A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, which opened in 1962 and ran for 964 performances. The book, based on farces by Plautus, was written by Burt Shevelove and Larry Gelbart. Sondheim's score was not well received; although the show won several Tony Awards (including best musical), he did not receive a nomination.

You are here
Top of page