Caissie Levy and Patti Murin Set Final Performance Date In Frozen
The original Frozen stars are setting sale
Caissie Levy and Patti Murin are say goodbye to Arendelle this February. The duo, who have been with the production since its pre-Broadway run in Denver, originate the roles of Elsa and Anna respectively. The pair will say goodbye to the production on February 16, after three years as the royal sisters.
Based on the mega movie of the same name, Disney's Frozen opened at the St James Theater on March 22, 2018.
With music by Oscar winning team Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez Frozen features a book by Jennifer Lee, directed by Michael Grandage and choreography by Rob Ashford.

What is Frozen about?
If you're not already familiar with the story, where have you been?! Loosely based on Hans Christian Anderson's fairytale The Snow Queen, the story takes place in the Scandinavian surrounds of Arendelle, where two royal sisters, Elsa and Anna must grow up alone after losing their parents in a tragic sea accident.
Elsa, the elder of the two must also contend with a secret - she has the power to create ice and snow with her bare hands, which she must keep secret, even from her sister, who nearly died whilst playing together as little girls. Anna by contrast is a sunny, albeit naive young lady who yearns for the outside world, having been isolated from Elsa since the accident.
When Elsa comes of age, she must take the throne as Queen, and the kingdom is reopened for her coronation - just for one day. Anna meets a handsome and charming Prince called Hans, who she instantly wishes to marry, much to Elsa's consternation. When the argument inadvertently reveals Elsa's powers, she flees to the wild North Mountain to live out a life of solitude and freedom. But Anna must find her sister and bring her back (with the help of an ice-seller, his reindeer and a talking snowman), otherwise the fate of Arendelle will be frozen forever, and left to the mercy of a cruel power.
Frozen is now playing at the St James Theater.






