Madison Square Garden was buzzing Wednesday as thousands of people packed into the famous arena, but it wasn’t because of the Knicks or the Rangers.

About 18,000 middle and high school students, hailing from New York City public schools in all five boroughs, filled the stadium for a free performance ofAaron Sorkin’s Broadway smashTo Kill a Mockingbird.

The performance marked the first ever play to perform at Madison Square Garden, requiring more ear monitors, microphones and speakers than most rock concerts. The script was unchanged for the Broadway production, which currently featuresEd Harris(Westworld) asAtticus Finch, but the staging was adapted for the arena and the show was broadcast on big screens so everyone could see.

Executive chairman and CEO of the Madison Square Garden Company, James L. Dolan, donated the venue rent free as well as all in-house expenses.

To Kill a Mockingbirdfrequently sells out in its regular home at the Shubert Theater and has become the highest grossing American play in Broadway history. The students, filing in with palpable excitement, proved to be a lively audience for the adaptation of the classic Harper Lee novel.

Little Fang

To Kill A Mockingbird Madison Square Garden February 26, 2020

Jenny Anderson

To Kill A Mockingbird Madison Square Garden February 26, 2020

New York City MayorBill de Blasioand first lady Chirlane McCray introduced the show before Oscar-winning filmmaker and New York nativeSpike Leegave his own opening remarks.

ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty

Ed Harris(C)is seen during Harper Lee’s “To Kill A Mockingbird”, a new play by Aaron Sorkin at Madison Square Garden on February 26, 2020 in New York City. - The performance is the first-ever Broadway play performed at Madison Square Garden with an entirely free performance for 18,000 New York City public school students

To Kill A Mockingbird Madison Square Garden February 26, 2020

Lee urged the students to “please listen to the words” of the play after sharing that his mother “dragged” him to Broadway plays and movies as a child, ultimately informing his decision to become a filmmaker.

“There’s gonna be somebody here today who says, ‘I want to be a playwright,’” Lee said, to which someone in the audience responded, “Me!”

“‘I want to act,’ ‘I want to spend the rest of my life being an artist,’” the director, 62, continued. “Don’t let anybody tell you you can’t be an artist.”

For tickets toTo Kill a Mockingbirdon Broadway,visit the play’s website.

source: people.com