Tony N’ Tina Are Getting Hitched at the Presidio Theatre and You’re Invited!
Tony N’ Tina’s Wedding is the long-running off-Broadway comedy staged as a festive celebration in which the audience doesn’t just watch the show but participates directly in the fun as members of the family or friends of the bride and groom. From the wedding ceremony to the reception, join Tony and Tina’s colorful and madcap Italian-American families in a show you won’t soon forget.
Five Performances ONLY!
Thu, July 23, 7pm
Fri, July 24, 7pm
Sat, July 25, 1pm & 7pm
Sun, July 26, 1pm
$185 “You’re Practically a Member of the Family Ticket” includes ceremony and reception, “front row” priority seating next to the stage and dance floor, one drink of your choice (cash bar for additional drinks), Italian dinner served right to your table, interaction with members of the wedding party and photo opps, plus a take-away wedding souvenir.
$150 “Wedding Guest” ticket includes ceremony, reception and Italian dinner served right to your table. Cash bar.
All performances are limited to 200 guests and take place in a heated tent in the Presidio Theatre Performing Arts Center’s outdoor plaza.
Attendees will sit at tables of ten, “family style”, mingling with other wedding guests and delightfully blurring the line between fantasy and reality. Tony N’ Tina’s Wedding works its magic and draws the audience into eating, drinking, dancing and conversing, just like a real wedding. Be part of the surprises and drama of Tony and Tina’s celebration and get caught up in the party with the rest of the bride and groom’s family and friends.
That’s how Tony N’ Tina’s Wedding has won the hearts of thousands of audiences since it first opened in New York City and has become the longest-running off-Broadway show, enjoying engagements around the world with performances in over 100 cities across the US, Europe, and Asia.
The San Francisco Chronicle loved the Presidio Theatre presentation in 2025:
“Some of the touches are exquisite. The bridal party chews gum throughout the ceremony. The wedding singer (Tony Lauria), opening ‘At Last,’ slides from the first to the second note so slowly and unctuously it feels like it should be rated R. The groomsmen have to become shirtless, and that has to happen during the Isley Brothers’ ‘Shout.’
