
You don't need NT Live or a London flight to catch them now. These are the West End hits, National Theatre transfers, and Olivier-tipped runs that earned their reputation across the pond and are currently on a Broadway or Off-Broadway stage in NYC.

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
90%
6.4k ratings
The eighth Harry Potter story, told with stagecraft so sleight-of-hand the audience gasps out loud — illusions, transfigurations, and a few tricks that genuinely don't seem possible from a theatre seat. The story picks up nearly two decades after the books left off, with the wizarding world looking different than fans remember. Crossed from London's Palace Theatre to the Lyric in 2018, and hasn't shown any sign of leaving.

& Juliet
91%
5.8k ratings
What if Juliet, balcony tragedy and all, just… didn't? A rom-com rewrite of Shakespeare in which she ditches the famous death scene for a second chance, scored by a catalog of pop earworms — 'Roar,' '...Baby One More Time,' 'Since U Been Gone' — stitched into a love story that talks back to the original. Crossed from London's Shaftesbury Theatre to the Stephen Sondheim in 2022.

SIX
88%
3.7k ratings
Henry VIII's six wives swap the history textbook for a pop concert and finally hold the mic for eighty intermission-free minutes of remix and reckoning. Each queen takes a turn pitching her divorced/beheaded/died case to the crowd, with the energy of an arena show in a Broadway house. Began as an Edinburgh Fringe student show in 2017, became a West End hit, and arrived on Broadway with a Best Original Score Tony in tow.

Hadestown
91%
5.2k ratings
Orpheus, Eurydice, and one wrong glance, retold in folk-jazz with a Depression-era underworld and a Hades who runs the place like a real-estate baron with too much leverage and not enough soul. The score moves between New Orleans brass, Appalachian folk, and full-throated rock anthems, while Persephone runs interference between heaven and hell. Made the leap from London's National Theatre to the Walter Kerr in 2019, where it's now in its seventh year.

The Rocky Horror Show on Broadway
91%
401 ratings
Five decades of dressing up, talking back, and doing the Time Warp — this time at Studio 54, where the late-night party energy of the original is built right into the room. The 1973 Royal Court Upstairs cult classic that never really stops touring the world, now staged with the kind of on-purpose chaos that rewards anyone who has memorized the callbacks. Brad and Janet's car still breaks down outside the mansion. You know the rest.

Chess
86%
1.5k ratings
A Cold War love triangle conducted across a chessboard, with a sweeping pop score that could hold its own against any concept album of the era — and never quite found its way to Broadway in the '80s when it should have. Forty years after its West End debut at the Prince Edward Theatre, it's finally getting a full Broadway production at the Imperial, with the political brinkmanship somehow more relevant than it was the first time.

The Fear of 13
91%
598 ratings
Twenty-two years on death row for a murder he insists he didn't commit, told through a series of prison-visit conversations that quietly blur the line between witness and participant. The case keeps asking what justice actually demands, what belief requires, and where the line sits between true freedom and the illusion of self-determination. Made the trip from London's Donmar Warehouse to the James Earl Jones Theatre this spring.

Fallen Angels
89%
389 ratings
Two upper-class wives, husbands away for the day, share a few too many toasts to a pre-marital dalliance with the same man — who just might be on his way over from France. Old rivalries surface, past scandals bubble up, and the champagne does most of the heavy lifting. A 1925 comedy of bad manners, recently revived at London's Menier Chocolate Factory and now on Broadway at the Todd Haimes for a short run.

Inter Alia on Broadway
A London Crown Court judge has spent her career on the right side of the system — until a single case forces her to reckon with what justice can actually deliver, and what holding it up costs the women doing it. The play moves between the bench, the home, and the maze in between, with a single performer carrying the whole thing. From the National Theatre to the West End, and on to the Music Box this November.

KENREX
95%
107 ratings
A small town decides to take justice into its own hands when the law won't, in a true-crime thriller that puts thirty-five characters in the hands of a single performer playing every role at full sprint. Direct from sold-out runs at the Southwark Playhouse, Sheffield Theatre, and The Other Palace — with two Olivier Awards collected along the way — now at the Lucille Lortel for an eleven-week run.