Coney Island Circus Sideshow

Admission

$15 adults
$12 children under 12
Coney Island Museum Combo ticket $18 adults and $15 kids*
FREE for Coney Island USA Members

*Museum Combo ticket is only available when the Museum is open

Tickets can be purchased in the Gift Shop or at our Surf Ave. entrance.
Advance tickets coming soon.

The next chance to catch the Sideshow will be Memorial Day weekend when we open for the 2024 summer season!

Memorial Day Weekend, May 25-27
Showtimes: 2pm, 3:15pm, 4:30pm, and 5:45pm

The Sideshow will be running every weekend from June 1 to the end of August
Showtimes: 2pm, 3:15pm, 4:30pm, and 5:45pm

July 1- August 2
Thursday, Friday, and Monday | Showtimes: 2:00, 3:15 and 4:30
Saturday and Sunday | 2:00, 3:15, 4:30 and 5:45

August 9- September 2
Friday and Monday | 2:00, 3:15 and 4:30
Saturday and Sunday | 2:00, 3:15, 4:30 and 5:45

Dates are subject to change

Plan your visit!

Check here for all other upcoming events

2023 Coney Island Circus Sideshow cast photo by Eliza Rinn

Coney Island USA’s Sideshows by the Seashore Theater, located at 1208 Surf Avenue, is home to the last permanently housed Circus Sideshow in the USA.

Our family friendly shows feature classic sideshow acts and cirque feats presented by New York's finest and most talented sword swallowers, fire eaters, glass walkers aerial and variety artists.

We carry on the best of the Sideshow's long standing traditions- but with a postmodern twist. In other words, we're rooted in 1923 but we realize it's 2024. The diverse cast and employees want you to know that everyone is welcome here!

So step right up! We look forward to seeing your smiling faces in our air cooled theater this season.

See ya in Coney Island!

This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

About The Sideshow

Sideshows, freak shows, string shows and ten-in-ones — these presentations of the strange, the unusual, the bizarre and unconventionally beautiful have been woven into the fabric of American culture since the days of P.T. Barnum, and a part of the Coney Island landscape for more than a century. Each of Coney Island’s three major parks (Steeplechase, Luna Park, and Dreamland) featured sideshow performances.

The day after Dreamland burned to the ground in 1911, the park’s general manager, Samuel Gumpertz, pitched a tent on the still-smoldering soil and opened the Dreamland Circus Sideshow. For more than twenty years, the Dreamland Circus Sideshow was the flagship for the world of sideshow. Whereas most sideshows offered up ten acts in their shows (which is why they are called “ten-in-ones”), the Dreamland show featured as many as twenty acts in each performance.

Historically, sideshow managers recruited the unusual, the hideous, and the bizarre to capture the fascination of the public. Most “freaks” were ordinary people defined by their extraordinary appearances - victims of accidents, or those suffering from birth defects, disease or physical deformities. Far from being exploited, these “born different’ performers found a community within their shows, and an opportunity to make a living that might otherwise have been denied to them. The shows also included acts of amazing dexterity and unthinkable risk, including sword swallowers, fakirs, blockheads, strongmen, and fire-eaters. 

Numerous ten-in-one sideshows operated in Coney Island, including Hubert’s Museum, the Steeplechase Circus Big Show, the Strand Museum, the Wonderland Circus Sideshow, and Sam Wagner’s World Circus Freak Show. 

The Wonderland Sideshow, located at 1208 Surf Avenue.

By the 1970’s, the tradition of the sideshow in Coney Island had died out. But in 1985, Coney Island USA invited carnival showman John Bradshaw to perform for the Labor Day weekend. The shows were so successful that Bradshaw was invited back the following year to do a full summer season — and sideshow returned to Coney Island. Bradshaw brought a full troupe of sideshow acts with him, including such legendary performers as Melvin Burkhart and Otis Jordan. After five seasons, Bradshaw decided to not return, but Coney Island USA continues to produce its sideshow — very much as it had been produced 35 years earlier, and since the turn of the last century. 

A nostalgic construct, the tradition of the tent sideshow traveling through the backroads of America has all but vanished, and the continuous admission, ten-in-one model has since been replaced by scheduled performances. But you can still experience the thrills and wonder of the traditional, ten-in-one sideshow at Coney Island USA’s Sideshow By the Seashore Theater.

Photo by Martin Fishman