THE TONY AWARD®-WINNING MUSICAL THE CHER SHOW
FIRST NATIONAL TOUR WILL LAUNCH IN THE FALL OF 2021.

THE TONY AWARD®-WINNING MUSICAL!
HER LIFE. HER STORY. HER LEGEND.

Superstars come and go. Cher is forever. For six straight decades, only one unstoppable force has flat-out dominated popular culture — breaking down barriers, pushing boundaries, and letting nothing and no one stand in her way. THE CHER SHOW is the Tony Award-winning musical of her story, and it’s packed with so much Cher that it takes three women to play her: the kid starting out, the glam pop star, and the icon.

THE CHER SHOW is 35 smash hits, six decades of stardom, two rock-star husbands, a Grammy®, an Oscar®, an Emmy® and enough Tony Award-winning Bob Mackie gowns to cause a sequin shortage in New York City, all in one unabashedly fabulous new musical that will have you dancing in the aisles!

Tour Route


TO BE ANNOUNCED


The Cher Show Broadway Cast Recording is Now Available

LISTEN HERE

HEAR THE
EVOLUTION OF AN ICON

STARTING OUT WITH SONNY

Everything changed when young Cherilyn Sarkisian met Salvatore Bono at a small coffee shop in L.A. in 1962. Hear the songs that started it all, and made Sonny and Cher a household name.

UPDATES

STYLE LOOKBOOK

Look back on some of Cher's most iconic and thrilling fashion moments.

Bell-bottoms and Counterculture

Bell-bottoms and Counterculture

When Cher first came on the scene as part of a duo with Sonny Bono in the 1960s, their looks were iconic of the free-love, freewheeling era. Her long, straight locks changed the game for those still wearing beehives.

Bell-bottoms and Counterculture
Matching Furs (1968)

Matching Furs (1968)

Bang, bang! As a duo, Cher and Sonny often matched in unisex takes on hippie fashion. Items like fur vests gave their looks textures and proportions and shapes that were unconventional for the era.

Matching Furs (1968)
Pop Goddess (1972)

Pop Goddess (1972)

It would be the start of a lifelong trend of strategically placed sequins and fabulous headdresses. This Bob Mackie creation lit up The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour.

Pop Goddess (1972)
Belly Barer (1973)

Belly Barer (1973)

Cher often revealed her belly button on the Sonny and Cher TV show, which got her in trouble with the network but eventually helped change the rules. Red carpet looks like this, once daring, are now the norm.

Belly Barer (1973)
The Naked Dress (1974)

The Naked Dress (1974)

This daring look created for Cher by Bob Mackie was simply groundbreaking, and has since become a rite of passage for female performers. According to Mackie, it was never about being naked; it was about being bold.

The Naked Dress (1974)
Luau at the Oscars (1974)

Luau at the Oscars (1974)

Ever one to eschew black-tie formality, Cher showed up to the 1974 Academy Awards® in a gorgeous floral-print two-piece more evocative of a sarong than a dress, but still high fashion with a couture headpiece and choker.

Luau at the Oscars (1974)
Behold the Unitard (1978)

Behold the Unitard (1978)

The pop-star wardrobe staple all began with a bold move from a very body-forward disco diva.

Behold the Unitard (1978)
Nearly Naked Butterfly (1979)

Nearly Naked Butterfly (1979)

For her album “Prisoner,” Cher went nearly naked once again, in a shimmering Mackie headpiece cascading seamlessly into a matching beaded dress.

Nearly Naked Butterfly (1979)
Risky Red Carpet (1986)

Risky Red Carpet (1986)

Cher challenged the Academy Awards® dress code as a presenter in this memorable costume — turning heads and daring to be taken seriously as an actress.

Risky Red Carpet (1986)
Moonstruck (1988)

Moonstruck (1988)

Her provocatively simple shock dress was the perfect look for clinching the Oscar®. The diva had arrived.

Moonstruck (1988)
Channeling Cleopatra (1988)

Channeling Cleopatra (1988)

At a Halloween party in Century City, Cher channeled Cleopatra with a wig-headpiece hybrid that screamed statuesque.

Channeling Cleopatra (1988)
Haute Headpiece (1998)

Haute Headpiece (1998)

Never comfortable with the commonplace, her gorgeous, woven gown got a bold matching topper at the Academy Awards — a nod to her famous headwear of years past.

Haute Headpiece (1998)
Bigger Is Better (2000)

Bigger Is Better (2000)

Who can top a Cher headpiece better than Cher, with this mohawk meets Mad Max tribal warrior crown?

Bigger Is Better (2000)
Return to Form (2010)

Return to Form (2010)

Cher stole a page out of her own stylebook and subsequently stole the show at the VMAs paying tribute to the big hair, body-baring unisuit, high boots and leather jacket immortalized in her 1988 “If I Could Turn Back Time” music video.

Return to Form (2010)
Tribal Vibes (2014)

Tribal Vibes (2014)

Cher channeled her tribal heritage and diva status in her “Dressed to Kill Tour.”