New York City’s coronavirus-ravaged theatre community was given a much-needed shot in the arm on Monday.
Lin-Manuel Miranda, the creator and star of the Broadway hit Hamilton, joined officials for the launch of a Covid-19 vaccination centre in Times Square to serve the city's arts community.
Addressing the event in midtown Manhattan, Miranda said he was “emotional today” and that the vaccination site would help to pave the way for reopening Broadway’s long-shut theatres.
...@Lin_Manuel got to speak from the heart ❤️ in the heart of Broadway!!! pic.twitter.com/UTcV743qee
— Luis A. Miranda, Jr. (@Vegalteno) April 12, 2021
“If you worked on Broadway or you worked off-Broadway or in theatre or in the wardrobe department, if you were stage manager or an usher ... you are welcome to this incredible facility on 47th Street, which I have just toured," he said.
The new Broadway vaccination site will serve theatre workers and film and TV employees, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said.
The show must go on and in New York City, the show will go on again!
— Mayor Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) April 12, 2021
The arts and culture are coming back to life. The #COVID19 vaccination site in Times Square will serve our theater, film, and TV industries to ensure this important part of our identity continues to thrive. pic.twitter.com/kGuUzievz4
“New York City is all about arts and culture,” Mr de Blasio said on Monday.
“New York City’s identity, what makes us great, one of the things that stands out is our extraordinary cultural community.”
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Broadway theatres were closed in March 2020 as New York became the global centre of the Covid-19 pandemic, leaving much of the industry’s workforce jobless and with little hope of new shows opening any time soon.
Restrictions on the industry were eased this month, but theatres and other entertainment venues are limited to 33 per cent capacity or up to 100 people indoors.
Theatres cannot make a profit with so many empty seats.
The vaccination centre was launched amid other signs of green shoots in a city that has been ravaged by the pandemic, with layoffs, lockdowns, a mass departure of residents and a death toll of 32,000.
New York City has administered more than 5 MILLION #COVID19 vaccine doses — and we’ve proven we can do more than half a million doses a week. As long as we have the supply, we will get the job DONE. pic.twitter.com/cJKdAuqdsM
— Mayor Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) April 12, 2021
Mr de Blasio also announced on Monday that 51,000 New York City public school pupils who have been learning remotely for the past year will be able to return to classrooms this month.
New York on Monday announced it would no longer require international travellers to enter quarantine, although it continued to recommend they do, in what could boost its vital tourism sector.