According to Vosk, the individual entered her dressing room at the Majestic Theatre with a group that had been invited backstage after the performance, then admitted they were not supposed to be there. The fan reportedly said, “I shouldn’t be here,” before explaining that they had snuck in.
Vosk’s message was clear: fans should never attempt to access backstage areas or performers’ private spaces without permission. “It’s really scary for us. It might not be for you, but it is for us,” she said.
The incident is similar to one that occurred in 2023 during the Broadway run of Here Lies Love, when a group of fans reportedly made their way backstage and approached Lea Salonga after claiming they knew someone connected to the production. Salonga later spoke publicly about the need for boundaries, reminding fans that buying a ticket does not grant backstage access.
And this is where Broadway theatres need to take a much harder look at what is happening backstage.
Yes, the fan is absolutely responsible for sneaking in. That part is not complicated. This was inappropriate, invasive, and entitled behavior. A performer’s dressing room is not a bonus stage door. It is a private workplace, and performers have every right to feel safe there.
But the larger question is how this person got that far in the first place.
Someone at the Majestic should have checked. Someone should have been responsible for knowing who was in that invited group and who was not. If a person can simply blend into a group, walk through restricted areas, and end up inside a Broadway star’s dressing room, that is a theatre security problem.
Come on. This is Broadway. Usually, theatre staff and security know how to control access when they want to. They know how to manage donors, producers, press, celebrities, investors, VIPs, and invited guests. So why, in this situation, was a performer apparently left to discover the breach herself?
That should not happen.
Fans matter. No one is saying otherwise. Theatre fans keep shows alive. They buy the tickets, tell their friends, come back again, and build the kind of word-of-mouth every production hopes for. But being a fan does not erase boundaries.
And if some fans cannot respect those boundaries on their own, then theatres need to make sure those boundaries are enforced.
Most importantly, we’re glad Jessica Vosk is okay, and we hope she knows how many people are standing with her on this.
She should not have had to go on TikTok to remind people that sneaking into a dressing room is scary. That should already be understood by anyone old enough to buy a ticket.
But apparently the reminder is necessary. And now the bigger reminder belongs to the theatre: performers should never be the last line of defense in their own dressing rooms.


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