Producers from Australia, Canada, America and the United Kingdom have visited the Pop-up Globe in the past few months.
Some 180,000 tickets have been sold in 18 months to see the Shakespearean plays, so a signal that overseas dates are imminent will be no surprise to industry insiders.
Pop-up Globe's current season at Ellerslie Racecourse is among the longest running theatrical events staged in New Zealand, sitting alongside the likes of Rob Guest's production of The Phantom of the Opera that ran for about six months in the '90s and the first production of Les Miserables that spent four months in the Auckland theatre.
So why have we become such lovers of the Bard?
Shakespeare scholar and Pop-up Globe head of production David Lawrence says one of the main reasons it has been so successful is because it puts the plays in the environment for which they were originally written.
"When the actors can see the audience as well as the audience can see the actors, and when they can talk to them rather than just at them, the plays don't just lift off the page; they explode.
"The actors behave like rock stars and the audience behave like they're at a concert or a sports match.
"For generations Shakespeare has been taught as highbrow 'literature' but at Pop-up Globe, whole new audiences experiencing him for the first time are seeing that live Shakespeare can be thrilling, spectacular, accessible and inclusive."