How to get 'Hamilton' tickets for L.A. and San Francisco? It's complicated - Los Angeles Times
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How to get ‘Hamilton’ tickets for L.A. and San Francisco? It’s complicated

"Hamilton" director Thomas Kail, left, creator and star Lin-Manuel Miranda, choreographer Andy Blankenbeuhler and music director Alex Lacamoire at the Richard Rodgers Theatre in New York.

“Hamilton” director Thomas Kail, left, creator and star Lin-Manuel Miranda, choreographer Andy Blankenbeuhler and music director Alex Lacamoire at the Richard Rodgers Theatre in New York.

(Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)
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Scoring tickets for the national tour of “Hamilton,” which kicks off next year in San Francisco before heading to Los Angeles, may not be as simple as walking up to the box office and asking for a pair of seats. At least not for now.

Local audiences who are planning to see the hit musical can obtain tickets only by purchasing or renewing a full-season subscription at the SHN Golden Gate Theatre in San Francisco or the Pantages Theatre in L.A.

In San Francisco, where “Hamilton” begins its national tour in March 2017, individual tickets will go on sale later. Group tickets will go on sale “this spring,” a spokeswoman for the SHN Golden Gate Theatre said via e-mail.

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The Pantages, where the musical will run from Aug. 11, 2017, to Dec. 30, 2017, said the sale of single and group tickets for “Hamilton” also will be announced.

A complete ticket package at the Pantages for 2016-17 season can range from $1,027 for the best seats in the house to $236 for less desirable sections. The package includes tickets for all seven season productions, including “Hamilton.”

For San Francisco, the price for a complete six-show package including “Hamilton” ranges from $245 to $700.

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Pricing for individual “Hamilton” tickets in either city hasn’t been announced.

In New York, where the musical opened last summer at the Richard Rodgers Theatre, tickets have become hot items, with individual seats going for as much as $475 for certain performances.

The Broadway run has instituted a daily lottery for discounted seats. Lotteries have become a popular standby alternative for fans looking to see popular Broadway shows like “The Book of Mormon” and “Wicked.”

Twitter: @DavidNgLAT

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