Climate activists halt Jeremy Strong, Michael Imperioli Broadway play ‘An Enemy of the People’ mid-show

· New York Post

A trio of climate protestors were the enemy of the audience on Broadway.

At Thursday night’s performance of “An Enemy of the People” on Broadway, starring Jeremy Strong and Michael Imperioli, three environmental activists interrupted the start of the second act with shouts of “no theater on a dead planet!” 

The Post witnessed one person walk onto the stage of the Circle In The Square Theatre on W. 50th Street, where the “Succession” and “Sopranos” stars were in the middle of a tense scene.

The man spoke briefly before being escorted off by security and cast members.

Rebels disrupted Enemy of the People on Broadway starring Jeremy Strong and Michael Imperioli on Thursday. Extinction Rebellion NYC /X

“I am very, very sorry to interrupt your night and this amazing performance. I am a theater artist,” he said.

“The oceans are rising. It will follow this city and this entire theater whole. I am putting my career on the line because we are not doing anything about this crisis. The water is coming for us!”

Imperioli later shouted and another, “Go back to drama school!” 

But Strong, remaining in character, said “Let them speak.”

A group called Extinction Rebellion appeared to take credit for the demonstration on X, posting video of the event with the caption, “#BREAKING – Rebels disrupted #AnEnemyOfThePeople on #Broadway. #Cimlate activists aren’t the enemy; it’s fossil fuel criminals like Exxon & Chevron. If we don’t #EndFossilFuels now, there’ll be #NoTheatreOnADeadPlanet.”

A group called Extinction Rebellion appeared to take credit for the demonstration on X. Extinction Rebellion NYC /X
Imperioli shouted, “Go back to drama school!” FilmMagic

Because the second half of Henrik Ibsen’s play begins at a raucous town meeting, concerns poisoned water and, in this production, already involves audience participation, many in the theater believed the shouters were a part of the show.

One audience member, Ashley Wolfgang, wrote on X, “You know you’ve seen too much experimental theatre when you immediately assume climate protestors in the middle of ‘Enemy of the People’ is part of it.”

However, when the final activist was escorted out, much of the room applauded.

Many in the theater believed the shouters were a part of the show. Extinction Rebellion NYC /X

An announcement instructed the actors to leave the stage, but most of the cast stood their ground.

The Post has reached out to a spokesman of “An Enemy of the People” for comment.