

“STOMP has a beat that just won’t quit!” - San Francisco Chronicle “STOMP is as crisp and exuberant as if it had opened yesterday.” - The New York Times As the Boston Globe says, “If you haven’t seen STOMP, GO! If you have seen it, take someone and share the pleasure!” STOMP. Year after year, audiences worldwide keep coming back for more of this pulse-pounding electrifying show. The eight-member troupe uses everything but conventional percussion instruments - matchboxes, wooden poles, brooms, garbage cans, Zippo lighters, hubcaps - to fill the stage with magnificent rhythms. The international percussion sensation has garnered armfuls of awards and rave reviews and has appeared on numerous national television shows. STOMP is explosive, inventive, provocative, witty, and utterly unique - an unforgettable experience for audiences of all ages. Instead Stomp is a celebration of variety, universality and the simple joy of being really, really noisy in a world that often swallows our individual. Thursday, the show will be up through May 14 at Sewell Hall, 6100 Main. STOMP returns to the UMass Amherst campus for a trio of performances presented by the Fine Arts Center. 12 of 18 13 of 18 'Stomp' Show More Show Less 14 of 18 Kelly Willis Getty Images Show More. Stomp at the Providence Performing Arts Center, Providence, RI. “A phenomenal show! Bashing, crashing, smashing, swishing, banging and kicking – a joyous invention!” - Chicago Tribune A remarkable show which creates thunderous music from everyday items. Since its beginnings as a street performance over 20 years ago, STOMP has become an international percussion sensation, thrilling over 20 million people on. STOMP closes after 29-year New York run The internationally-renowned show exploring the percussive possibilities of the human body and everyday objects ends Jan. A staple of New York's theater scene since 1994, the show is appropiate for all ages. Catch Stomp at the Des Moines Civic Center January 12-14 at the Des Moines Civic. The show combines dance, music and theatrical performance for a unique experience. beats at STOMP, the inventive and invigorating stage show thats dance, music and theatrical performance blended together in one electrifying rhythm. And it has sprouted multiple companies – as many as six at one time.STOMP Friday, April 28, 8 p.m., Saturday, April 29, 2 p.m. 'Stomp' is an inventive stage show in which the cast uses matchboxes, brooms, garbage cans, Zippo lighters, and more to create energizing beats. Its performers made appearances on Sesame Street and at the 2012 Olympic Games. Over the course of its run, it's become an international phenomenon, playing in 45 countries.


We just aren't selling enough tickets."īut that doesn't mean STOMP is going away. With Cobie Smulders, Jake Johnson, Tantoo Cardinal, Cole Sibus. "Foreign tourists became a major part of our audience and they really have not returned to New York since COVID. "Twenty-nine years is a long time to sustain a run," STOMP co-producer and general manager Richard Frankel said. The choreographic clatter of trash can lids, thud of boot heels and swish of brooms that has been synonymous with New York's downtown performing arts scene for nearly three decades is coming to an end this week. A scene from the New York production of STOMP featuring Desmond Howard and Emmanuel "Manny" Scott at the Orpheum Theatre. Matchboxes, brooms, garbage cans, Zippo lighters and more fill the stage with energizing beats at STOMP, the inventive and invigorating stage show thats.
