"Omigod! Winning!" shouted Twin Cities attorney Alex Reyes.
Reyes had just scored four tickets to the long-awaited Minneapolis debut of "Hamilton" after sleeping overnight on Hennepin Avenue. She and her friend, Missy Chinn, passed the hours by singing songs from the Broadway blockbuster — and fortifying themselves with nibbles and beverages.
"I saw it in Arizona once with my mom and didn't know much about it going in," Reyes said. "Now I wouldn't miss it. I'm a total, ironclad fan of what is the greatest piece of art I've ever experienced."
Reyes and Chinn were among 200 people who bought tickets at the State Theatre box office Thursday morning for the Aug. 29-Oct. 7 run of Lin-Manuel Miranda's musical about U.S. founding father Alexander Hamilton.
Thousands more battled online for the roughly 100,000 tickets that went on sale Thursday morning. A new Ticketmaster system aimed at blocking scalpers worked for some, but not others. Adding to their frustration, hundreds of scalper tickets popped up almost immediately on sites such as StubHub, where main-floor seats were going for nearly $2,000.
"I tried for an hour and asked for all price ranges, any tickets — whatever was available. I got nothing," said business analyst Shannon Ralph of Minneapolis, who missed a chance to see the show in New York two years ago when breast cancer forced a change in plans. "It's very irritating."
Ralph did exactly what hopeful fans were directed to do: She preregistered last week through Ticketmaster's Verified Fan system, and was one of the lucky ones who received an access code to purchase seats.
All the people who lined up at the box office Thursday morning were able to buy tickets, however. Some said they had failed to score tickets online. "I couldn't get through, and so here we are," said Shannon McGinnis of New Brighton.