Friday afternoon, the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in New York State stood at 7,845, according to the most recent data from the city and state — a jump of more than 2,000 from Thursday.

The state had performed 10,000 tests overnight, bringing the total number of people tested in New York to 32,427, officials said. Around 1,250 people were hospitalized, a hospitalization rate of 18 percent, the governor said.

Mr. Cuomo said New York was now testing more people per capita than China or South Korea.

As testing has ramped up rapidly in the state and the virus spreads, confirmed cases have grown at a breathtaking pace: When the week began, there were only about 700 cases in the state. Now there are about 10 times that.

Mr. Murphy said on Friday that 890 people in New Jersey had tested positive for the virus and that 11 had died, up from nine on Thursday. In Connecticut, officials reported 35 new confirmed cases on Friday, bringing the state’s total to 194. Four Connecticut residents have died of the virus.

Broadway, closed by pandemic, reaches a short-term pay deal.

Broadway producers have agreed to pay hundreds of actors, musicians, stagehands and others for the first few weeks of the industry’s shutdown, and to cover their health insurance for at least a month.

The “emergency relief agreement,” which was announced late Friday, was negotiated by the Broadway League, a trade group, with 14 labor unions representing various workers, including ushers, makeup artists and publicists.