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One or Two Tickets to a Roaring '20s Dinner Show at Tommy Gun's Garage Dinner Theater (40% Off)

Tommy Gun's Garage Dinner Theater
4.7

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After a sit-down dinner, an interactive 1920’s musical comedy review complete with gangsters and flappers unfolds; appropriate for all ages

Choose from Four Options

  • $39 for one ticket to a Roaring ’20s dinner show, valid Thursday and Sunday ($65 value)
  • $78 for two tickets to a Roaring ’20s dinner show, valid Thursday and Sunday ($130 value)
  • $42 for one ticket to a Roaring ’20s dinner show, valid Friday ($70 value)
  • $84 for two tickets to a Roaring ’20s dinner show, valid Friday ($140 value)
  • See the menu here.

Thursdays arrive 6-6:30 for dinner, show runs 7:30-9pm
Fridays arrive 7-7:30 for dinner, show runs 8:30-10pm
Sundays 5:30-6 for dinner, show runs 7-8:30pm

Need To Know Info

Promotional value expires 360 days after purchase. Amount paid never expires. Offer valid only for times available on Groupon.com. Reservation must be scheduled/booked through Groupon.com. Offer valid only at scheduled reservation time. No refunds if you do not show up for your reservation. Changes or cancellations to your reservation must be done through Groupon.com at least 48 hours in advance. Limit 1 per person. Limit 1 per visit. Limit 1 per table. Valid only for option purchased. One show available per night on Thursday 6-9pm, Fridays 7-10pm and Sundays 5:30-8:30. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services. Offer is not eligible for our promo codes or other discounts. Learn about Strike-Through Pricing and Savings

About Tommy Gun's Garage Dinner Theater

It's still the 1920s inside Tommy Gun's Garage Dinner Theater, and they're openly flouting Prohibition laws. The venue features a full bar serving a variety of hooch, a flapper- and gangster-studded comedy and theater show, and waiters who drive 1928 Model Fords (or who at least tell you they do). It feels a bit like a perfectly preserved speakeasy.

The theater really is steeped in history, just not 90 or so years' worth of it. Originally founded by a Chicago policeman in 1987, it is the longest-running dinner theater show in Chicago. It's interactive, too, which means guests do more than just eat dinner and watch the show. They also interact with the performers, who are always in character as a flapper, gangster, or fringe salesman.

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