WAITRESS THE MUSICAL cancels Sydney season, with show to close in Melbourne
The producers of Waitress have confirmed the musical will not travel to Sydney. The show, starring Rob Mills and Natalie Bassingthwaighte, will now play its final performance at Her Majesty’s Theatre in Melbourne on 19 July. A planned season at the Lyric Theatre from 1 August has been cancelled.
According to the Sydney Morning Herald, producer John Frost of Crossroads Live Australia cited cost-of-living pressures, rising interest rates, and broader economic uncertainty as the drivers behind what he called a “difficult decision.” Ticket sales, while not without enthusiasm from audiences, did not reach the levels needed to sustain the production’s costs.
The news lands as the third significant blow to Australian musical theatre in recent months. In November last year, Back to the Future: The Musical — also produced by Crossroads Live — closed early at the Sydney Lyric and abandoned plans for a national tour. Earlier this month, the Michael Cassel Group announced the cancellation of the national tour of Beetlejuice the Musical for similar reasons.
The fact that three high-profile productions have now fallen short of their planned runs in quick succession — two of them under the same producer — suggests something beyond isolated misfortune. These are not fringe shows or risky new works; they are proven, commercially established titles with built-in name recognition and existing fanbases. If productions like these cannot generate the advance sales needed to justify a national run, it is difficult to imagine what can. The cancellations will almost certainly give other producers pause before committing to ambitious touring schedules, and may quietly reshape what kinds of shows get programmed — and where — in the seasons ahead.
No official statement has been issued by the Waitress social media accounts at the time of publishing, though the official website has quietly been updated — Sydney dates have been removed, with the site now noting the show must close 19 July in Melbourne.

