Theater Superstitions on Friday the 13th

Why are actors told to break a leg? Why is Macbeth called The Scottish Play inside a theater? Why can’t you whistle in a theater? What is the ghost light all about?

In honor of Friday the 13th today — which is viewed in Western superstition as an unlucky day (and is occurring three times in 2026, which is so far indeed shaping up to be an unlucky year) — I bring back Rebekah Lazaridis, explaining the most familiar theatrical superstitions in the video below. She did this while taking me on a tour of her art exhibition on the subject at the Sheen Center for Thought and Culture, entitled “Broken Legs.” The title was not just because of the odd way theater people wish each other good luck. An actress since the age of 12 and a painter of stage sets, Lazaridis created each of her art pieces in the exhibition using discarded theatrical scenery. “Each piece is painted in black and white on old tattered black velvet theater curtains, also known as ‘legs'” (!) “They are then spliced (broken), skewed and reoriented, then stitched back together transforming into an entirely new image.”

“Broken Legs,” was her first solo exhibition in New York. She has gone on to other things in the decade since. But theatrical superstitions — and Western superstitions in general — live on, sometimes merged. It was on a Friday the 13th that I saw a play at the Flea called “The Fre” — right afterward, all theater shut down in New York for the next eighteen months.

 

Author: New York Theater

Jonathan Mandell is a 3rd generation NYC journalist, who sees shows, reads plays, writes reviews and sometimes talks with people.

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