A good Blue Man Group show should make a room full of people agree to be weird together. That is still the point at the new Orlando production, now open at ICON Park.
Theme Park Shark reporter Jay attended the May 21, 2026 VIP night, and his quick read was simple: the new home works. The theater keeps the show close to the crowd, the side screens help the whole room feel included, and the production still has the loud, physical, interactive rhythm people expect from Blue Man Group.

“Overall, Blue Man Group Orlando at ICON Park was a really good time,” Jay said after the event.
The room works for the show
ICON Park’s official Blue Man Group page describes the venue as a 500-plus-seat theater built for a multi-sensory performance, with state-of-the-art acoustics and an immersive setup. Jay said the actual capacity is 578 seats, compared with about 600 seats at the former Universal Orlando Soundstage 18 location.
That is a modest difference, and Jay said it was not especially noticeable once inside. His bigger point was that the room feels larger than the building suggests from the outside.
“The new theater is way larger on the inside than what you would expect based on the outside,” Jay said.

For returning fans, that is the useful comparison. Jay did not frame the move as a major scale change. Based on his first look, the ICON Park theater keeps the production close to the audience without making the show feel boxed in.
The side screens help the whole room feel included
The biggest technical detail Jay called out was the use of screens along the sides of the theater. They help the show reach beyond the stage, especially for guests who are not sitting directly in the center.
“There are a lot of screens on the side, which I thought was really cool, and it really helped add to the immersion no matter where you sit in the theater,” Jay said.
That matters for this specific show. Blue Man Group is built around music, visual comedy, audience reaction and controlled chaos. The official ICON Park description calls it a “multi-sensory experience” with music, laughter and surprises, and Jay’s first look lined up with that.
Jay’s seat advice: do not overthink it
Jay’s strongest planning note is the kind guests actually need before buying tickets: seat location may matter less here than people expect.
The performers come out into the crowd, which keeps the room connected to the action instead of making the best moments feel locked to the front rows.
“It’s a really good spot because the performers come out into the crowd to interact with you,” Jay said. “There’s no bad seat in the house based upon that.”

That is helpful for families and tourists deciding how much to spend. Jay said tickets start around $60 and go up to about $100 depending on the seat and performance. The official Blue Man Group Orlando ticketing page currently lists Orlando tickets starting at $62, including taxes and fees, with child pricing available.
The show has a current edge
Jay also said the new production feels current in a way that goes beyond the venue. His read was that the show touches on artificial intelligence, screen time and the need for actual human interaction.
That is a natural fit for Blue Man Group. The act has always worked best when the Blue Men are trying to make sense of whatever humans are doing now. Phones, screens and AI give the Orlando version a modern target without making it feel like a lecture.
Instead of playing like a simple relocation of the old Universal Orlando show, Jay’s takeaway was that the ICON Park version feels adjusted for this moment.
Runtime, concessions and merchandise

Jay said the show ran about 90 minutes. Concessions were available at the theater, and merchandise was available during the event.
The merchandise stood out more than expected. Jay said there were “a lot of cool options” for families and tourists, which fits the show’s new placement inside ICON Park, one of Orlando’s busiest visitor-focused entertainment districts.
The May 21 VIP night also included an afterparty on The Lawn at ICON Park, according to the event email. That was specific to the VIP event, so regular guest experiences may vary by ticket or performance.
The bottom line
Blue Man Group gives ICON Park another recognizable live entertainment anchor on International Drive. For guests, the practical takeaway from Jay’s first look is that the theater feels close without feeling cramped, the side screens help the whole room stay involved, and seat location may matter less than expected because the performers use the room.
For families, tourists and returning Orlando fans, that makes the ICON Park version easy to understand: a 90-minute indoor show with concessions, merchandise, audience interaction and a familiar Orlando name in a walkable dining and attractions district.

Source: Theme Park Shark reporter Jay on site at the May 21, 2026 VIP night, Blue Man Group Orlando ticketing page, ICON Park’s Blue Man Group page, and Blue Man Group Orlando VIP Night email from Will Wellons Communications. Images by Jay for Theme Park Shark.
Discover more from Theme Park Shark
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
