The musical opened on May 4, 1976, at the
Mark Hellinger Theatre and closed on May 8, 1976, after 7 performances and 13 previews. It was co-directed and co-choreographed by Gilbert Moses and
George Faison. The musical examined the establishment of the
White House and its occupants from 1800 to 1900. Primarily focusing on race relations, the story depicted (among other incidents)
Thomas Jefferson's then-alleged
affair with a black slave,
James Monroe's refusal to halt slavery in Washington, the aftermath of the
American Civil War and
Andrew Johnson's impeachment. Throughout the show, the leading actors performed multiple roles:
Ken Howard played all the presidents,
Patricia Routledge all the First Ladies, and
Gilbert Price and
Emily Yancy played the White House servants, Lud and Seena. Future Broadway stars
Reid Shelton,
Walter Charles,
Beth Fowler and
Richard Muenz appeared in ensemble roles, as did the young
African American baritone Bruce Hubbard. The show was originally intended to be performed as a
play-within-a-play, with the show's actors stepping out of character to comment on the plot and debate race relations from a modern standpoint. But this concept was almost entirely removed during the show's out-of-town tryouts in Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. The musical's original director,
Frank Corsaro, choreographer,
Donald McKayle, and set and costume designer,
Tony Walton, left the production during these tryouts. By the time the show opened on Broadway, little of the metatheatrical concept remained, aside from certain scenic and costume elements and a few musical references (most notably, the opening number "Rehearse!"). Discouraged by the critical and public response to the work and angry that during the tryouts much of his music had been condensed and edited without his consent, Bernstein refused to allow a cast recording of the musical. ==Critical reaction==