Premieres The
one-act,
verse version of
A View from the Bridge opened on Broadway on September 29, 1955, at the Coronet Theatre (now the
Eugene O'Neill Theatre);
Marilyn Monroe was in the audience. It ran for 149 performances. This production was directed by
Martin Ritt and the cast included
Van Heflin as Eddie and
Eileen Heckart as Beatrice. Its two-act version premiered in
London's West End under the direction of
Peter Brook. It opened at the
New Watergate theatre club (currently Harold Pinter Theatre) on October 11, 1956, and the cast included
Richard Harris as Louis and
Anthony Quayle as Eddie, with lighting design by
Lee Watson.
Revivals in New York Dustin Hoffman acted as assistant director and stage manager for a successful 1965 production of the play
Off-Broadway at the
Sheridan Square Playhouse in New York City. The play's director, Ulu Grosbard, suggested to Arthur Miller that Hoffman would one day make a great
Willy Loman (a role that Hoffman would later play to great acclaim). Miller was unimpressed and later wrote "My estimate of Grosbard all but collapsed as, observing Dustin Hoffman's awkwardness and his big nose that never seemed to get unstuffy, I wondered how the poor fellow imagined himself a candidate for any kind of acting career." Another production in New York opened on February 3, 1983, at the
Ambassador Theatre, with
Tony Lo Bianco as Eddie and directed by
Arvin Brown. It ran for 149 performances. The production won the
Tony Award for:
Best Revival of a Play;
Best Leading Actor in a Play (LaPaglia); it also won
Drama Desk Awards for
Outstanding Revival,
Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play (Janney), and Outstanding Direction of a Play. A revival at the
Cort Theatre on Broadway in 2009 starred
Liev Schreiber,
Scarlett Johansson and
Jessica Hecht. The limited, 14-week engagement, directed by
Gregory Mosher, began with previews on December 28, 2009, and officially opened on January 24, 2010. It ran until April 4, 2010. Johansson won a Tony Award for her performance. From October 2015 through February 2016, a production of the play that originated at the
Young Vic Theatre in London
in 2014 ran on Broadway at the
Lyceum Theatre featuring its original London cast. It won the Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play; the director,
Ivo van Hove won the
Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play.
Revivals in London The
National Theatre of Great Britain staged a production in 1987 at the
Cottesloe Theatre. It was directed by
Alan Ayckbourn and
Michael Gambon gave an acclaimed performance as Eddie.
Time Out called the production "near perfect" and the
New Statesman called it "one of the finest events to be presented at the National Theatre since it moved to the South Bank." Another West End production was staged at the
Duke of York's Theatre, opening in previews on January 24, 2009, and officially on February 5. It ran until May 16, 2009. It was directed by
Lindsay Posner, with
Ken Stott as Eddie,
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio as Beatrice,
Hayley Atwell as Catherine and
Harry Lloyd as Rodolpho. , Belgian director
Ivo van Hove and lead actors
Mark Strong (as Eddie),
Phoebe Fox (Catherine), and
Nicola Walker (Beatrice) revived the play to huge success at the
Young Vic. This revival won three
Laurence Olivier Awards in April 2015, for Best Actor (Mark Strong), Best Revival, and Best Director (Ivo van Hove). The Young Vic production transferred to Broadway with its British cast intact. In 2024,
Lindsay Posner directed
Dominic West as Eddie and
Kate Fleetwood as Beatrice.
Callum Scott Howells plays the role of Rodolpho. This production began at
Theatre Royal Bath Ustinov Studio, before transferring to the
Theatre Royal Haymarket.
Other revivals In 1992, the
Royal Exchange, Manchester staged a production directed by
Greg Hersov with Jonathan Hackett,
Michael Sheen and Kate Byers, the same year that the Royal Theatre Northampton produced an acclaimed production directed by Michael Napier-Brown, designed by Ray Lett and a cast featuring David Hargreaves (Eddie), Kathrine Schlesinger, Nicola Scott, Richard Harradine, Colin Atkins and Duncan Law. After the Ivo van Hove 2015 production closed on Broadway, it was restaged by the Centre Theatre Group of Los Angeles with a new cast that included
Frederick Weller (Eddie), Andrus Nichols (Beatrice), Catherine Combs (Catherine), Alex Esola (Marco), and David Register (Rodolpho); this cast then toured to the
Kennedy Center in Washington. In 2017, van Hove directed the play at the
Goodman Theatre in Chicago. Combs and Nichols reprised their roles, joined by Ian Bedford as Eddie. In 2023 the
Chichester Festival Theatre staged a production with
Jonathan Slinger as Eddie, Nancy Crane as Alfieri, Kirsty Bushell as Beatrice, Rachelle Diedericks as Catherine, and
Luke Newberry as Rodolpho. ==Adaptations==