‘We will be back!” a dozen singers proclaimed in the middle of New York City’s Times Square, in a pop-up event commemorating the one-year anniversary of Broadway going dim. A clear sense of optimism filled the air – despite the “Closed” signs still darkening the doors of nearby theatres.

With the latest wave of Covid-19 now under control, amid a massive vaccination programme and as some theatres partially reopen, the US city is “definitely starting to get some more life right now”, said Ryann Redmond, who performed in the musical Frozen before the pandemic forced Broadway’s closing on March 12, last year.

“People need it more than I think the whole world understands,” Redmond said as she participated in the event alongside three or four dozen other actors and dancers.

Despite a decision by New York state governor Andrew Cuomo to allow theatres to reopen at 33 per cent capacity, with a maximum of 100 people indoors as of April 2, the hard reality is that Broadway, with its compact theatres and huge production costs, won’t be joining them right away.

“We’re thrilled that he’s doing it,” Charlotte St Martin, president of The Broadway League association of producers and theatre managers, said of the governor’s plan, but “we’re still looking at the fall”.

Broadway theatres need to fill at least 75 per cent of their seats if reopening is to make any economic sense, she said.

And despite the governor’s announcement, local authorities, she added, have yet to decide when, or under what conditions, theatres can reopen.

Everyone is counting on an indication from Anthony Fauci, the White House coronavirus adviser, who said in January that theatres should be able to reopen by “early to mid-fall” with an end to the pandemic finally in sight.

“There has to be a plan,” said Clayton Craddock, a drummer who was working with the musical Ain’t Too Proud until the theatres shut down.

Despite losing 12 months of revenue and probably six more to come, only a handful of productions – three musicals and two plays – have definitively thrown in the towel.

That leaves 31 shows positioned to start up again in the fall, along with a few new additions, including a revival of The Music Man and MJ: The Musical, with music and lyrics by Michael Jackson.

Musicians, actors and technicians are largely surviving on unemployment benefits, most with no health insurance, though the stimulus package passed this week by the US Congress might help, St Martin said.

But some performers or stage hands have given up for good. Craddock took some software classes, and he almost became an insurance agent.

“But I realised my talents are not in financial services, insurance and information technology,” he said.

“I have honed my skills, playing drums for the past 45 years. I’m not going to give this up. This is what I do best.”

Nor has a year out of the spotlight dampened the passions of many other Broadway professionals.

On March 12 at Times Square, when the first familiar notes of George Benson’s On Broadway sounded, a powerful chorus of voices – some quavering with emotion – quickly joined in.

“It was wonderful,” said Peppermint, who in 2018 became the first transgender woman to play the leading role in a Broadway musical Head Over Heels.

“I can sing in the shower all day long,” she said. “But when you get to hear somebody, see somebody’s reaction and see that it affects them, and then if that affects you, that’s an emotional exchange.”

Redmond has found work only on television and in cinema for the past year, but there’s no rust in her voice, which she lent to the character of Olaf the snowman in Broadway’s Frozen.

“You know, we’ve been doing a lot of Zoom musicals and lots of voice recordings at home,” she said. “So I’ve just been trying to keep it going, because it is a muscle, like an athlete – so just trying to do it every day.”

Disney permanently cancelled Frozen last May, but Redmond said she hopes to find “something else” when Broadway reopens.

Even if the performers gathered at Times Square on March 12 seemed ready to return to the stage at the drop of a hat, St Martin said most Broadway productions need at least three or four months to resume operations.

“So ideally,” she added, “we’ll be told June 1 if we’re going to be able to open in September.”