Events for night owls and early birds:
This week at Lincoln Center Presents
This week at Lincoln Center Presents
Experience art and culture any time of day at this week's FREE events. Start your morning supporting student artists, spend your lunch break at a self-paced augmented reality experience, or dance the night away at the basement party of the year. Hope we see you there!
We're offering FREE Fast Track reservations today at 12:00 pm for all events at the David Rubenstein Atrium this week! To learn more and reserve Fast Track visit
LincolnCenter.org/FastTrack.
Friday, May 2 at 7:30 PM
David Rubenstein Atrium
FREE: General Admission + Fast Track
We're showing love the Brooklyn way with a basement dance party for the ages, featuring MR. LIFE OF YOUR PARTY on the decks all night at the David Rubenstein Atrium.
Saturday, May 3 at 11:00 AM
David Rubenstein Atrium
FREE: General Admission + Fast Track
Students from arts education programs all around New York City gather at Lincoln Center to share songs, dances, scenes, poetry, and original pieces.
Archive of Dance
An Augmented Reality Experience
Monday to Saturday, 10:00am–8:00 pm;
Sunday, 12:00 pm–6:00 pm
Josie Robertson Plaza
FREE
Experience Lincoln Center's outdoor space like never before as the buildings transform into an immersive, multi-dimensional canvas. Scan the QR code at The Welcome Center at David Geffen Hall on your mobile device to access the installation and explore the Archive of Dance.
Join us from June 11–August 9 for Lincoln Center's fourth annual Summer for the City, offering hundreds of free and Choose-What-You-Pay performances and cultural activities for all ages. We invite you to come as you are, experience global rhythms, and embrace new perspectives—all without ever leaving New York!

Limited-run through June 22
Lincoln Center Theater
NY Times Critic's Pick, FLOYD COLLINS "reaches the sublime." See Jeremy Jordan in "his finest performance to date" (Wall Street Journal) in this gripping and powerful musical based on the true story of a cave explorer in 1925 Kentucky.