Megan Thee Stallion made her Broadway debut on March 24 at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre in New York, stepping into the role of Harold Zidler in Moulin Rouge! The Musical. With the casting, she became the first female-identifying performer to play the character in any production of the show worldwide, a distinction that extended beyond Broadway to every staging of the musical that has ever been mounted.
Zidler is the show’s charismatic emcee and narrator, the figure who anchors the spectacle at the center of a fictional Parisian nightclub. The role has previously been held by performers including Danny Burstein, Tituss Burgess, Boy George, Wayne Brady, and Bob the Drag Queen, whose run ended two days before Megan’s began. She took the stage alongside Kelsie Watts, who plays Satine, and Christian Douglas in the role of Christian.
Her limited engagement runs through May 17.
A curtain call that made the debut unmistakably hers
Megan did not ease into opening night. At the curtain call, she brought snippets of her own songs, including “WAP,” “Body,” and “Savage,” into her first Broadway bow, giving audiences a finale that felt entirely her own. The moment landed as both a personal signature and a statement about what her presence in the show was meant to represent.
When her casting was announced earlier this year, Megan described stepping onto Broadway as an absolute honor and framed the production as a new creative challenge she was eager to take on. Producer Carmen Pavlovic called the casting a significant development for the show as it moved into its final months.
After the performance, fans greeted Megan outside the theater with flowers. She had dressed for the occasion, wearing a sheer metallic embroidered halter gown and black knee-high boots with gold metallic embroider.
Megan’s music woven into a show built for reinvention
Megan Thee Stallion performing ‘Body’ and ‘Savage’ as Zidler tonight for Moulin Rouge! pic.twitter.com/HGrvRbXJWt
— Stallion Stats (@MegansStats) March 25, 2026
Moulin Rouge! The Musical is based on Baz Luhrmann’s 2001 film and has built its reputation on layering contemporary pop across a turn-of-the-century Parisian backdrop. The production functions as a jukebox musical, pulling songs from multiple decades and blending them into a single theatrical experience. Megan’s songs have been incorporated into select moments of the show, including the high-energy curtain call, making her contributions audible throughout the performance in ways that go beyond her role as a character.
The show is scheduled to close on July 26 after a seven-year run on Broadway, and Megan’s involvement arrives during its final stretch. Her presence is expected to draw audiences who have not previously attended the production, particularly younger theatergoers and fans of hip-hop.
Broadway as the next lane in an already expanding career
For Megan, the debut adds a significant credit to a resume that has already moved well beyond music. She has built acting experience through appearances in the Marvel series “She-Hulk: Attorney at Law” and the film Dicks: The Musical, but Broadway operates on a different set of demands. Eight shows a week, live performance with no second takes, and a role that requires holding the energy of an entire production from the moment the curtain rises.
She has won multiple Grammy Awards and built one of the most recognizable voices in contemporary hip-hop since breaking through with viral freestyles and mixtapes. Her persona, centered around confidence and self-expression, maps easily onto a role built around theatrical extravagance. Whether that instinct translates across eight weeks of live performance is the question the rest of her run will answer.

