Photo: Taylor Hill/Getty Images

Broadway is back — starting with The Boss.
Bruce Springsteen, 71, took the stage for his part-singing, part-storytelling show at Jujamcyn’s St. James Theatre in New York City on Saturday night.Springsteen on Broadwayis the first production to open since Broadwaywent darkin March 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Proof of vaccinationwas required to enter the theater. “Unmasked, sitting next to each other,” Springsteen said of the crowd, which filled nearly all 1,684 seats in the house. “It’s been a long time coming.”
Little Fang Photography

Opening night was star-studded: Transportation SecretaryPete Buttigieg, 39, and his husband Chasten, 32,Jack Antonoff,37, and Springsteen’s E Street bandmateSteven Van Zandt, 70, all sat in the orchestra section.
Outside the theater, however, a crowd of anti-vaccine protesters lined up with chants and signs, opposing the theatre’s policy to require proof of the COVID-19 vaccine.
Near the top of the show, Springsteen joked about hisNovember 2020 arrestfor suspicion of DWI. “I was handcuffed and thrown in jail,” he said, after casually listing his other quarantine activities — releasing a podcast and a new album. “That took some doin'. … I didn’t wake up one morning, get on my motorcycle and say, ‘I think I’ll drive to jail!'”
Springsteen recounted that in “Zoom court,” the case was labeled “United States vs. Bruce Springsteen.” “You have engaged in an act so heinous, the entire U.S. is against you,” he said, adding, “Two shots of tequila!”
Rob DeMartin

Throughout the show, Springsteen took audience members through the journey of his life with just his piano, a couple of guitars, and a harmonica around his neck. An intimate experience, the 2.5-hour show is filled with moments that erupt in laughter and others that pack the quiet power of a sermon.
Like his stadium tours, it was of course peppered with audience cheers of “Bruuuuce!” between songs.
Springsteen shared it all, from childhood memories of guitar lessons in New Jersey that were so “boring” he almost quit, to more searingly personal revelations. He spoke of his father, who died in 1998; his 95-year-old mother, who has Alzheimer’s and can’t walk or speak, but, in her way, still loves to dance; his beloved late bandmate, saxophonist Clarence Clemons; and his own survivor’s guilt that came from meeting veterans after he’d avoided being drafted for the Vietnam War. (“I do sometimes wonder who went in my place,” he mused.)

Never did Springsteen look happier to be performing again than when his “Jersey girl,” wifePatti Scialfa, 67, joined him for two duets. The pair looked as in love as ever, high-fiving when he mentioned their recent 30-year anniversary.
Springsteen on Broadwayoriginally played a yearlong, sold-out run at the Walter Kerr Theater starting in 2017. It was later released as aNetflix specialand live album.
As for why he was eager to come back to the stage — before other Broadway productions are slated to open in September — Springsteen offered one reason. “I get to visit my dad every night that I’m up here,” he said, through tears.
After a year of imaginable loss for so many, Springsteen traded his original run’s finale song “Born to Run” for the cathartic “I’ll See You in My Dreams” from his latest album.
“You’ve provided me with purpose and a whole lot of joy,” he told the crowd. “I hope I’ve done the same for you.”
Springsteen on Broadwaywill run at the St. James Theatre through September 4.
source: people.com